Pound's understanding and application of language has his own unique way. He believes that language is a tool to express human emotions and thoughts, and poetry should convey emotions and images through accurate, vivid and direct language. He advocates that poets should create new poetic forms by exploring and using various possibilities of language.
In Pound's poems, he often uses unconventional language forms and expressions, such as fragmentation, repetition, compression and metaphor, to break the traditional poetic structure and expression. His poetic language is concise and direct, but it also has depth and complexity, which can stimulate readers' imagination and thinking.
In a word, Pound's view of language advocates that poetry should use concise, vivid, direct and profound language to convey emotions and images, explore various possibilities of language and create new forms of poetry. This view of language has had a far-reaching impact on English poetry in the twentieth century, and it still has enlightenment significance for today's poets and literary creators.