- Title
- Hemingway's Marlin and Pound's Canto 40
- Author/Creator
- John Beall
- Publication Details
- Hemingway Review, Vol.41(2), pp.120-129
- Annotation
- This essay focuses on an allusion to Hemingway's deep-sea fishing in Pound's Canto 40. The most direct source for Pound's allusion is probably Hemingway's letter to Pound dated 22 July 1933, in which he refers to his catching a world-record seven marlin in one day. Set in context, Pound's line about the record-setting, unnamed marlin fisherman groups him with monopolists who "extracted" natural resources such as oil for their private profits at the expense of the common good. Pound's reference in Canto 40 to Hemingway as a record-breaking marlin fisherman reflects tensions between the two writers that deepened in the 1930s.
- Academic Unit
- Hemingway Bibliography
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Record Identifier
- 991015131209103691
Journal article
Hemingway's Marlin and Pound's Canto 40
Hemingway Review, Vol.41(2), pp.120-129
04/01/2022
Appears in Hemingway Bibliography
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