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Olga Rudge & Ezra Pound: "What Thou Lovest Well..."

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327 Notes to Pages 284–290<br />

p. 284 The Women of Trachis, by Sophocles, tr. <strong>Ezra</strong> <strong>Pound</strong>, New Directions,<br />

1957.<br />

p. 284 <strong>Ezra</strong> <strong>Pound</strong> Memorial Trust: (draft) in Jane Rylands to OR, 28 Sept 1985,<br />

1996 addition, ORP/YCAL.<br />

p. 285 ‘‘skulduggery, the gondolieri’’: McNaughton, author interview, Hong<br />

Kong, Jan 1994.<br />

p. 285 Centennial celebration in Idaho: Ardinger, ed., ‘‘<strong>What</strong> <strong>Thou</strong> <strong>Lovest</strong> <strong>Well</strong><br />

Remains,’’ 1–3; see also Hailey, Idaho, Sun Times, 20 Oct 1985.<br />

p. 286 ‘‘pushed through all of us’’: C. Terrell, Paideuma, 1989.<br />

p. 287 ‘‘<strong>Olga</strong>, you are growing old gracefully’’: I Ching notebooks.<br />

coda: it all coheres<br />

p. 289 ‘‘My memory isn’t so good’’: OR, author interview, Oct 1992.<br />

p. 289 Last day of her life: MdR to author, Apr 1996.<br />

p. 290 ‘‘her constancy towards <strong>Pound</strong>’’: A. D. Moody, ‘‘Outlook,’’ The Guardian,<br />

30 Mar 1996.<br />

p. 290 ‘‘I think of my dead’’: I Ching notebooks, 13 May 1980.

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