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Ezra Pound On Gender Essay Research Paper (стр. 1 из 2)

Ezra Pound On Gender Essay, Research Paper

The following is Pound’s Introduction to his translation of

Remy de Gourmont’s The Natural Philosophy of Love

"Il y aurait peut-?tre une certain corr?lation entre la copulation compl?te et

profonde et le d?veloppement c?r?bral."

Not only is this suggestion, made by our author at the end of his

eighth chapter, both possible and probable, but it is more than likely that the brain

itself, is, in origin and development, only a sort of great clot of genital fluid held in

suspense or reserve; at first over the cervical ganglion, or, earlier or in other species,

held in several clots over the scattered chief nerve centres; and augmenting in varying

speeds and quantities into medulla oblongata, cerebellum and cerebrum. This hypothesis

would perhaps explain a certain number of as yet uncorrelated phenomena both psychological

and physiological. It would explain the enormous content of the brain as a maker or

presenter of images. Species would have developed in accordance with, or their development

would have been affected by the relative discharge and retention of the fluid; this

proportion being both a matter of quantity and of quality, some animals profiting hardly

at all by the alluvial Nile-flood; the baboon retaining nothing; men apparently stupefying

themselves in some cases by excess, and in other cases discharging apparently only a

surplus at high pressure; the imbecile, or the genius, the "strong-minded".

I offer an idea rather than an argument; yet if we consider that the power of the

spermatozoid is precisely the power of exteriorizing a form, and if we consider the lack

of any other known substance in nature capable of growing into brain, we are left with

only one surprise, or rather one conclusion, namely, in face of the smallness of the

average brain’s activity, we must conclude that the spermatozoic substance must have

greatly atrophied in its change from lactic to coagulated and hereditarily coagulated

condition. Given, that is, two great seas of this fluid, mutually magnetized, the wonder

is, or at least the first wonder is, that human thought is so inactive.

Chemical research may have something to say on the subject, if it be directed to

comparison of brain and spermatophore in the nautilus, to the viscous binding of the bee’s

fecundative liquid. I offer only reflections, perhaps a few data; indications of earlier

adumbrations of an idea which really surprises no one, but seems as if it might have been

lying on the study table of any physician or philosopher.

There are traces of it in the symbolism of phallic religions, man really the phallus or

spermatozoid charging, head-on, the female chaos; integration of the male in the male

organ. Even oneself has felt it, driving any new idea into the great passive vulva of

London, a sensation analogous to the male feeling in copulation.

Without any digression on feminism, taking merely the division Gourmont has given

(Aristotelian, if you like), one offers woman as the accumulation of hereditary aptitudes,

better than man in the "useful gestures", the perfections; but to man, given

what we have of history, the "inventions", the new gestures, the extravagance,

the wild shots, the impractical, merely because in him occurs the new upjut, the new

bathing of the cerebral tissues in the residuum, in la mousse of the life

sap.

Or, as I am certainly neither writing an anti-feminist tract, nor claiming

disproportionate privilege for the spermatozoid, for the sake of symmetry ascribe a

cognate role to the ovule, though I can hardly be expected to introspect it. A flood is as

bad as a famine; the ovular bath could still account for the refreshment of the female

mind, and the recharging, regracing of its "traditional aptitudes"; where one

woman appears to benefit by an alluvial clarifying, ten dozen appear to be swamped.

Postulating that the cerebral fluid tried all sorts of experiments, and, striking

matter, forced it into all sorts of forms, by gushes; we have admittedly in insect life a

female predominance; in bird, mammal and human, at least an increasing mate prominence.

And these four important branches of "the fan" may be differentiated according

to their apparent chief desire, or source of choosing their species.

Insect, utility; bird, flight; mammal, muscular splendour; man, experiment.

The insect representing the female, and utility; the need of heat being present, the

insect chooses to solve the problem by hibernation, i.e. a sort of negation of action. The

bird wanting continuous freedom, feathers itself, Desire for decoration appears in all the

branches, man exteriorizing it most. The bat’s secret appears to be that he is not the

bird-mammal, but the mammal-insect: economy of tissue, hibernation. The female principle

being not only utility, but extreme economy, woman, falling by this division into a male

branch, is the least female of females, and at this point one escapes from a journalistic

sex-squabble into the opposition of two principles, utility and a sort of venturesomeness.

In its subservience to the money fetish our age returns to the darkness of medievalism.

Two osmies may make superfluous eggless nests, but do not kill each other in contesting

which shall deposit the supererogatory honey therein. It is perhaps no more foolish to go

at a hermit’s bidding to recover an old sepulchre than to make new sepulchres at the

bidding of finance.

In his growing subservience to, and adoration of, and entanglement in machines, in

utility, man rounds the circle almost into insect life, the absence of flesh; and may have

need even of horned gods to save him, or at least of a form of thought which permits them.

Take it that usual thought is a sort of shaking or shifting of a fluid in the viscous

cells of the brain; one has seen electricity stripping the particles of silver from a

plated knife in a chemical bath, with order and celerity, and gathering them on the other

pole of a magnet. Take it as materially as you like. There is a sort of spirit-level in

the ear, giving us our sense of balance. And dreams? Do they not happen precisely at the

moments when one has tipped the head; are they not, with their incoherent mixing of known

and familiar images, like the pouring of a complicated honeycomb tilted from its

perpendicular? Does not this give precisely the needed mixture of familiar forms in

non-sequence, the jumble of fragments each coherent within its own limit?

And from the popular speech, is not the sensible man called "levelheaded",

has he not his "head" well screwed on or "screwed on straight"; and

are not lunatics and cranks often recognizable from some peculiar carriage or tilt of the

headpiece; and is not the thinker always pictured with his head bowed into his hand, yes,

but level so far as left to right is concerned? The upward-jaw, head-back pose has long

been explained by the relative positions of the medulla and the more human parts of the

brain; this need not be dragged in here; nor do I mean to assert that you can cure a

lunatic merely by holding his head level.

Thought is a chemical process, the most interesting of all transfusions in liquid

solution. The mind is an up-spurt of sperm, no, let me alter that; trying to watch the

process: the sperm, the form-creator, the substance which compels the ovule to evolve in a

given pattern, one microscopic, minuscule particle, entering the "castle" of the

ovule.

"Thought is a vegetable," says a modern hermetic, whom I have often

contradicted, but whom I do not wish to contradict at this point. Thought is a

"chemical process" in relation to the organ, the brain; creative thought is an

act like fecundation, like the male cast of the human seed, but given that cast, that

ejaculation, I am perfectly willing to grant that the thought once born, separated, in

regard to itself, not in relation to the brain that begat it, does lead an independent

life much like a member of the vegetable kingdom, blowing seeds, ideas from the paradisial

garden at the summit of Dante’s Purgatory, capable of lodging and sprouting where

they fall.

And Gourmont has the phrase "fecundating a generation of bodies as genius

fecundates a generation of minds".

Man is the sum of the animals, the sum of their instincts, as Gourmont has repeated in

the course of his book. Given, first a few, then as we get to our own condition, a mass of

these spermatozoic particles withheld, in suspense, waiting in the organ that has been

built up through ages by a myriad similar waitings.

Each of these particles is, we need not say, conscious of form, but has by all counts a

capacity for formal expression: is not thought precisely a form-comparing and

form-combining?

That is to say we have the hair-thinning "abstract thought" and we have the

concrete thought of women, of artists, of musicians, the mockedly "long-haired",

who have made everything in the world. We have the form-making and the form-destroying

"thought", only the first of which is really satisfactory. I don’t wish to be

invidious, it is perfectly possible to consider the "abstract" thought, reason,

etc., as the comparison, regimentation, and least common denominator of a multitude of

images, but in the end each of the images is a little spoiled thereby, no one of them is

the Apollo, and the makers of this kind of thought have been called dryasdust since the

beginning of history. The regiment is less interesting as a whole than any individual in

it. And, as we are being extremely material and physical and animal, in the wake of our

author, we will leave old wives’ gibes about the profusion of hair, and its chance

possible indication or sanction of a possible neighbouring health beneath the skull.

Creative thought has manifested itself in images, in music, which is to sound what the

concrete image is to sight. And the thought of genius, even of the mathematical genius,

the mathematical prodigy, is really the same sort of thing, it is a sudden out-spurt of

mind which takes the form demanded by the problem; which creates the answer, and baffles

the man counting on the abacus.

I question the remarks about the sphex in Chapter 19, "que le sphex s’est form?

lentement", I query this with a conviction for which anyone is at liberty to call me

lunatic, and for which I offer no better ground than simple introspection. I believe, and

on no better ground than that of a sudden emotion, that the change of species is not a

slow matter, managed by cross-breeding, of nature’s leporides and mules, I believe that

the species changes as suddenly as a man makes a song or a poem, or as suddenly as he starts

making them, more suddenly than he can cut a statue in stone, at most as slowly as a

locust or long-tailed Sirmione false mosquito emerges from its outgrown skin. It is not

even proved that man is at the end of his physical changes.

Say that the diversification of species has passed its most sensational phases, say

that it had once a great stimulus from the rapidity of the earth’s cooling, if one accepts

the geologists’ interpretation of that thermometric cyclone. The cooling planet contracts,

it is as if one had some mud in a tin pail, and forced down the lid with such pressure

that the can sprung a dozen leaks, or it is as if one had the mud in a linen bag and

squeezed; merely as mechanics (not counting that one has all the known and unknown

chemical elements cooling simultaneously), but merely as mechanics this contraction gives

energy enough to squeeze vegetation through the pores of the imaginary linen and to detach

certain particles, leaving them still a momentum. A body should cool with decreasing speed

in measure as it approaches the temperature of its surroundings; however, the earth is

still, I think, supposed to be warmer than the surrounding unknown, and is presumably

still cooling, or at any rate it is not proved that man is at the end of his physical

changes. I return to horned gods and the halo in a few paragraphs. It is not proved that

even the sort of impetus provided by a shrinking of planetary surface is denied one.

What is known is that man’s great divergence has been in the making of detached,

resumable tools.

That is to say, if an insect carries a saw, it carries it all the time. The "next

step", as in the case of the male organ of the nautilus, is to grow a tool and detach

it.

Man’s first inventions are fire and the club, that is to say he detaches his digestion,

he finds a means to get heat without releasing the calories of the log by internal

combustion inside his own stomach. The invention of the first tool turned his mind (using

this term in the full sense); turned, let us say, his "brain" from his own body.

No need for greater antennae, a fifth arm, etc., except, after a lapse as a tour de

force, to show that he is still lord of his body.

That is to say the crawfish’s long feelers, all sorts of extravagances in nature may be

taken as the result of a single gush of thought. A single out-push of a demand, made by a

spermatic sea of sufficient energy to cast such a form. To cast it as one electric pole

will cast a spark to another; to exteriorize; sometimes to act in this with more

enthusiasm than caution.

Let us say quite simply that light is a projection from the luminous fluid, from the

energy that is in the brain, down along the nerve cords which receive certain vibrations

in the eye. Let us suppose man capable of exteriorizing a new organ, horn, halo, Eye of

Horus. Given a brain of this power, comes the question, what organ, and to what purpose?

Turning to folk-lore, we have Frazer on horned gods, we have Egyptian statues,

generally supposed to be "symbols", of cat-headed and ibis-headed gods. Now in a

primitive community, a man, a volontaire, might risk it. He might want prestige,

authority, want them enough to grow horns and claim a divine heritage, or to grow a cat

head; Greek philosophy would have smiled at him, would have deprecated his ostentation.

With primitive man he would have risked a good deal, he would have been deified, or

crucified, or possibly both. Today he would be caught for a circus.

One does not assert that cat-headed gods appeared in Egypt after the third dynasty; the

country had a long memory and such a phenomenon would have made some stir in the valley.

The horned god would appear to have persisted, and the immensely high head of the Chinese

contemplative as shown in art and the China images is another stray grain of tradition.

But man goes on making new faculties, or forgetting old ones. That is to say you have

all sorts of aptitudes developed without external change, which in an earlier biological

state would possibly have found carnal expression. You have every exploited

"hyper-aesthesia", i.e. every new form of genius, from the faculty of hearing

four parts in a fugue perfectly, to the ear for money (vide Henry James in The

Ivory Tower, the passages on Mr. Gaw). Here I only amplify what Gourmont has indicated

in Chapter 20. You have the visualizing sense, the "stretch" of imagination, the

mystics–for what there is to them–Santa Theresa who "saw" the microcosmos,

bell, heaven, purgatory complete, "the size of a walnut"; and you have Mr. W., a

wool-broker in London, who suddenly at 3 a.m. visualizes the whole of his letter-file,

three hundred folios; he sees and reads particularly the letter at folder 171, but he sees

simultaneously the entire contents of the file, the whole thing about the size of two

lumps of loaf sugar laid flat side to flat side.

Remains precisely the question: man feeling this protean capacity to grow a new organ:

what organ shall it be? Or new faculty: what faculty?

His first renunciation, flight, he has regained, almost as if the renunciation, so

recent in terms of biology, had been committed in foresight. Instinct conserves only the

"useful" gestures. Air provides little nourishment, and anyhow the first great

pleasure surrendered, the simple ambition to mount the air has been regained and

regratified. Water was never surrendered, man with subaqueous yearnings is stiff, given a

knife, the shark’s vanquisher.

The new faculty? Without then the ostentation of an organ. Will? The hypnotist has

shown the vanity and Blake the inutility of willing trifles, and black magic its futility.