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  1. 1 de jan. de 2001 · Ezra Pound. The Cantos by Ezra Pound is a long, incomplete poem in 116 sections, each of which is a canto. Most of it was written between 1915 and 1962, although much of the early work was abandoned and the early cantos, as finally published, date from 1922 onwards. It is a book-length work, widely considered to be an intense and challenging read.

  2. As The Cantos Project is numbering the lines of The Cantos, references to cantos already glossed will be by canto number and line(s), as standard with classical works. Example: III: ll.7–17. For cantos that are not yet glossed within the project, the references will be by canto number slash page number, as standard in the research on the poem.

  3. I cantosEzra Pound. I Cantos ( The Cantos) di Ezra Pound è una vasta e complessa opera poetica che rimane una delle creazioni letterarie più ambiziose e controverse del XX secolo. Composta da 120 canti, l’opera non è mai stata completata nel modo in cui Pound aveva originariamente previsto. La pubblicazione dei Cantos si è estesa per ...

  4. 1 de fev. de 2023 · A Study of I-XXX of Ezra Pound’s Cantos. Epping: Bowker, 1983. 111-20. De Rachewiltz, Mary and Maria Ardizzone. “Commento: II.” Ezra Pound I Cantos. A cura di Mary de Rachewiltz. [Bilingual English-Italian edition]. Milano: Mondadori, 1985. 1505. Dennis, Helen. A New Approach to the Poetry of Ezra Pound Through the Medieval Provençal Aspect.

  5. Project News. Annotated canto 64 now online. Illustrated Companion from Ur-I to 52 now available. Detailed sources for all annotated cantos. Comprehensive bibliographies for the whole Cantos.

  6. Ezra Pound. “Provincialism the Enemy, Part II” ( New Age, 19 July 1917) in SP 163. Canto XIII defines the standard of an “illustrious” style with which the Cantos will treat examples of true virtue. Confucius is presented with unadorned, measured language and stately, graceful verse.

  7. Three Cantos. By Ezra Pound. Canto III appeared in the July, 1917 issue of Poetry. Originally part of what scholars call the "Ur-Cantos," this version of Canto III was later edited by Pound to become Canto I of his collected Cantos. The section that eventually became Canto I is highlighted in blue in the poem below. —THE EDITORS.