“Both in Greece and in Provence the poetry attained its highest rhythmic and metrical brilliance at times when the arts of verse and music were most closely knit together, when each thing done by the poet had some definite musical urge or necessity bound up within it.”
"The Tradition", in Poetry, ed. by Harriet Monroe, III, 3 (Dec. 1913), p. 137; reprinted in Literary Essays of Ezra Pound (1968), p. 91.
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Ezra Pound 68
American Imagist poet and critic 1885–1972Related quotes
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English Prose Style (1928)
Literary Quotes

“When Music, heavenly maid, was young,
While yet in early Greece she sung.”
Source: The Passions, an Ode for Music (1747), Line 1.

“Dancing music, music sad,
Both together, sane and mad…”