The Rules of Imagism
The Rules of Imagism
The Rules of Imagism
Ezra Pound
Ezra Pound was born on October 30, 1885 in Hailey, Idaho. He was the only child of Homer and Isabel
Pound. At the age of 15 Pound was accepted into the University of Pennsylvania's College of Liberal Arts
in 1901. He received his masters of Arts degree and graduated in 1906. After graduating from college
Pound started teaching French and Spanish at Wabash College in Indiana. He was dismissed for
deliberately provoking school authorities. Pound’s poetry reflects a deep interest in the past, particularly
of ancient cultures. He had a great interest and was influenced by Chinese, French, Japanese, and Spanish.
Pound in the company of Hilda Doolittle and her husband Richard Adlington, and Frank Flint started a
movement called “ Imagism” led by Pound to encourage authors to discard traditional forms, techniques,
and ideas. Imagist poets focused their writing on simple images and attempt to use words to paint pictures
in their readers’ minds. They were influenced by Japanese haiku poems of seventeen syllables which
usually present only two juxtaposed images.
Imagism is the usage of two juxtaposed images to create one. The poem must include four elements, time,
location, season, and the poet’s attitude.
We have two images in this poem as per imagist poems. The first one is in the first verse, “The apparition
of these faces in the crowd:” the speaker is in a crowded subway station, where people appear like
"apparitions"—or ghostly, fleeting images—as they pass by. The second image is in the second verse,
“Petals on a wet, black bough.” Which suggests umbrellas that are wet under the rain and then we
combine both and get the full image of a crowded metro station which people holding umbrellas in a
rainy day. This poet sympathizes with these hardworking people on the train everyday from home to work
and vice versa to make a living and they are often tired and sad do to the hard work they’re put under. We
have the 4 elements here, location, Paris metro station, season, spring, time of the day which is evening
and the poet’s attitude which is sympathizing with those workers. We have the 4 elements here, location,
a metro station in Paris, season, spring, time of the day which is evening and the poet’s attitude which is
sympathizing with those workers.
The first image here is of a fan of white silk which is the most expensive and rare type of silk that was
primarily in China. The title suggests that the poem is ancient, in the time where there were empires in
China. The fan is described as clear which suggests transparency, purity, and beauty just as the white
suggests but frost is only temporary, it is only as the sun rises it disappears. The second image a woman
lying beside the fan, thrown away. When the two images are juxtaposed, they make an image of a crying
woman, expensive, white, young woman thrown away in a very cold wintery morning with her fan when
her imperial lord was done abusing and using her and wanted someone. The also at the last verse suggests
the dehumanizing nature of this situation when she is compared to a fan thrown away when not needed or
wanted. We have the 4 elements here, location, Chinese empire, season, winter, time of the day which is
morning when the gates of the palace open and the poet’s attitude which is sympathizing this young and
beautiful lady being used by an emperor and treated like a slave and then thrown away.