» Subscribe Today!
The Power of Information
Home
The Ledger - EST. 1978 - Nashville Edition
X
Skip Navigation LinksHome > Article
VOL. 39 | NO. 51 | Friday, December 18, 2015

‘Too late came the uncertainty of knowing nothing’

Print | Front Page | Email this story

On Nov. 27, 1945, a poet named Pound, married to a woman named Shakespear, was arraigned before a judge named Laws. No joke.

The Honorable Bolitha J. Laws, chief judge of the District of Columbia District Court, saw Ezra Pound sit mute as the treason indictment was read. Pound’s lawyer, Julien Cornell, had filed an affidavit asserting Pound’s insanity and asking that he be released for treatment.

Denying bail, Judge Laws did transfer Pound from the Washington Asylum to a mental hospital for observation and treatment. In “The Trial of Ezra Pound,” Cornell reports that Pound’s friends painted the following portrait of him: “A brilliant literary genius who lived in a rarefied atmosphere of his own creation, kind and generous toward his friends, vituperative and scurrilous toward his fancied enemies, including public figures whom he did not even know ….” Some called him eccentric, some said he was mentally abnormal.

Cornell hired a prominent psychiatrist. The government hired three. These four were appointed by the court to examine the defendant. They concluded that Pound “exhibits extremely poor judgment … insists that … all of his radio activities … stemmed from his … mission to ‘save the Constitution.’” Further, they noted that “his personality, for many years abnormal,” had deteriorated “to the extent that he is now suffering from a paranoid state which renders him mentally unfit to … participate intelligently and reasonably in his own defense.”

There was clamoring in the public that Pound was faking. Yielding to pressure, the Department of Justice requested a sanity hearing. Before a jury!

The jury reached its verdict in three minutes: “Unsound mind.”

The court confined Pound to St. Elizabeth’s Hospital for the Criminally Insane in Washington, D.C. After a few weeks in harsh confinement, looser arrangements came about, and within weeks he was productive again – running his business, so to speak, from the visiting areas, with the help of wife Dorothy mistress Olga and daughter Mary.

The Pound family returned to Italy and took up residence in a small castle (his daughter had married a prince, no lie). Difficulties led to relocation in 1959.

Pound became tired, depressed, lonely and silent. Paranoid about his health, he stopped speaking, almost completely, around 1960. Dorothy gave up on him and left him with Olga. In 1961-1965, he lost close friends Ernest Hemingway, E. E. Cummings, William Carlos Williams and T. S. Eliot.

In a 1963 interview, he said, “Too late came the uncertainty of knowing nothing.” In the same time frame, he wrote Robert Lowell: “To begin with a swelled head and end with swelled feet.” In a 1967 conversation with Allen Ginsberg, he said, “The worst mistake I made was that stupid suburban prejudice of anti-Semitism. All along that spoiled everything.”

He died in Venice in 1972, shortly after his 87th birthday, with Olga at his side.

Vic Fleming is a district court judge in Little Rock, Ark., where he also teaches at the William H. Bowen School of Law. Contact him at [email protected].

Follow us on Facebook, Twitter & RSS:
Sign-Up For Our FREE email edition
Get the news first with our free weekly email
Name
Email
TNLedger.com Knoxville Editon
RECORD TOTALS DAY WEEK YEAR
PROPERTY SALES 0 0 0
MORTGAGES 0 0 0
FORECLOSURE NOTICES 0 0 0
BUILDING PERMITS 0 0 0
BANKRUPTCIES 0 0 0
BUSINESS LICENSES 0 0 0
UTILITY CONNECTIONS 0 0 0
MARRIAGE LICENSES 0 0 0