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In the Samizdat Tradition of Writing against the Machine |
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Critical Poetry—Ezra Pound For more highly critical verse, see Critical Poems.
Once... the rouud world brimmed with hate, Harried the weak, Long Past, long Past, praise God In these fair, peaceful, happy days. A Contemporary O smooth flatterer, go over sea, go to my country; Tell her she is “Mighty among nations”— do it rhetorically!
Say
there are no oppressions
Say
that the keepers of shops pay a fair wage to the All things:
You will not lack your reward. Say that I am a traitor and a cynic,
Say that the art is well
served by the ignorant pretenders:
You will not lack your reward.
Call this a time of peace, Speak well of amateur harlots, Speak well of disguised procurers, Speak well of shop-walkers, Speak well of employers of women, Speak well of exploiters,
Speak well of the men in
control,
You will not lack
your reward. Speak of the accuracy of reporters, Speak of the unbiased press, Speak of the square deal as if it always occurred.
Do all this and refrain from
ironic touches:
Say that you love your fellow men, O most magnanimous liar! You will not lack your reward. The American Dissident www.theamericandissident.org, a 501c3 nonprofit. |