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THOMAS STEARNS ELIOT
The best
known and most influential literary personality of the period between World
Wars I and II, was Thomas Stearns Eliot
who born in
He studied
at Harvard, Paris and
In 1910 he first went to
At the
outbreak of the First World War he settled in
After the collection of poems Prufrock and other Observations(1917),which
contains a satirical portrait of the emptiness and pessimism that characterized
life in those years, in 1922 he
founded "The Criterion", thus
beginning his career as an editor, and published all his writings encouraging
also the production of young poets such as Ezra
Pound, W.H.Auden, Louis MacNeice
and Stephen Spender(1909-1995).
Throughout this time Vivien was in poor health and Eliot was under considerable
emotional strain. He spent some time in a Swiss sanatorium, in
Based on various legends, it portrays
In 1927 he became a British citizen and defined himself as "classicist in literature, monarchist in politics, Anglo-Catholic in religion". In the same year he joined the Church of England finding the answer to his own questionings and to the despair of a modern world lacking faith and religion. With the poem Ash Wednesday(1930)a new phase began in the poet's development: though the old attitude remains ,he finds hope in religious belief and in the stabilizing influence of the Christian religion. This poem is more lyrical in spirit, and the style is relaxed and musical with its repetition and assonance. Eliot finally decided to separate from his wife, who was committed to a mental asylum, where she died nine years later in 1947. Her death, however, created a terrible sense of guilt within the soul of the poet and unhappiness led him to write in a letter of his: "I have always known hell- it is in my bones".
In the Thirties and Forties, Eliot's essays
became more concerned society. His growing social concernes led him towards the
theatre and he became one of the chief exponents of poetic drama. In 1932 he wrote
a fragment, Sweeney Agonistes, in 1934 a play, The Rock, and in 1935 a
modern miracle play, Murder in the
Cathedral, on the well-known conflict between Henry II and Thomas Becket.
The latter play was notable for the moving
speeches of the Chorus in the traditional Greek manner. The Family
During the war Eliot passed again to poetry and in 1943 wrote Four Quartets, a group of four poems each of which is built on a musical pattern. The structure of the four poems is the same: the themes are developed through variations in the manner of a musical composition, and brought to a final resolution. Through images of magical beauty the poet recounts his past experiences, the collective past of mankind and the significance of human experience.
T.S. Eliot had by this time become
internationally acclaimed, and in 1948
he was awarded the Order of Merit and the Nobel
prize for literature. He wrote The Cocktail
Party in 1949, The Confidential Clerk in 1953, and The Elder Statesman in 1958.
In these plays he used a conversational
style, abolishing such devices as the use of the chorus and the lyrical
passages, which had characterized his earlier productions. With the poet and
the dramatist, it is worth remembering the critic. Eliot left several essays,
which greatly contributed to define the modern age and the role of culture. The
first of his critical books, The Sacred Wood, came out in 1920; four years later Homage to John Dryden was published,
also containing an essay on the Metaphysical Poets. The Selected Essays(1932)
can be considered the best of his work
and one of the most influential books of criticism of the 20th
century. His later cultural position is stated in The Idea of Christian Society(1939) and Notes Towards the Definition of Culture(1948). Eliot received honorary degrees from several universities in
He died in
THE WASTE LAND
The
In his introductory note on The Waste Land Eliot stated that the title, the plan and large part of the symbolism of the poem were suggested by Miss Jessie Weston's book on the Grail legend From Ritual Romance.
He also acknowledged the influence of another book, The Golden Bough, by Sir James Frazer(1854-1941), Which deals with the development of magical, religious and scientific thought and gives vast information about ancient religions and magical practices.
The poem, conceived as a monologue, basically presents a character going to a fortune-teller, receiving a response, and reading manifestations of this response in various episodes.
The Grail legend, to which Eliot refers, tells about a land which is barren because its king -The Fisher King-has been wounded by a spear thrust through his things, and sexually maimed. A young and pure knight goes in quest of the Holy Grail -the cup which had been used to collect the blood from the body of Christ - and reaches a Chapel where the Grail is kept. Only if this knight asks the meaning of the Grail and of the lance that sees during a procession will the king be healed, and the land reclaimed fertility.
Miss Weston found close correspondence between the Grail legend and the ancient symbolism of fertility rites. The Fisher King appears to be mediaeval version of the pre-Christian young men of young gods slain or drowned in the springtime and then symbolically revived. The fertility of the land was associated with their youth and strength (there are also the myths of Adonis, Attis, Osiris, Thiresias).
Moreover, Miss Weston found resemblance between this ancient fertility ritual and the Christian ritual, in that the central moment was for both Eucharistic: taking the Food of Life from sacred vessels.
In this prospective Eliot inserted the description of this own waste land.
The Waste Land consist of five parts:
Thus the whole poem starts with a state of paralysis(sections I, II, III) and proceeds with an allegorical journey(sections IV, V) towards the expectation of a symbolic rebirth, which is to come. All this fragmentary parts are run through by one main theme: the contrast between the fertility of a mythical past and the sterility of the present world, peopled by lost, alienated characters.
THE CONCEPT OF HISTORY
The past appears in the references to and quotations from many literary works belonging to different traditions and cultures, and religious texts and also languages. And if this last fact emphasized the character's inability to communicate because they cannot understand what is being said to them, it also makes his verse difficult to read. But it is also true that the quotations and allusions have great evocative power, and add a further dimension to the poem. Poetry does not have to be understood to convey its message; it can be enjoyed without a full understanding of it, in the same way as a music, or art, does not to be translated into words. This use of quotations reflects the concept Eliot had of tradition and history, that is, the repetition of the same events, and of "classicism", that is, the ability to see the past as a concrete premise for the present and "the poetic culture" as a "living unity" of all the poems written in different periods. Thus present and past exist simultaneously in The Waste Land, just as they do in the mind, and the continuous shifts of time and space are caused by the free associations of ideas and thoughts, as in Ulysses by James Joyce.
THE MYTICAL METHOD
In his evaluation of Western culture, Eliot went back to its origins, when legends were symptoms of spiritual attitudes which he regarded as extremely important. In modern society, however, old myths are present, but they have lost their deep meaning and have been betrayed, and it is especially through these mythical allusions that the contrast between present and past appears. Eliot contrast the present meaningless of life with allusions to Arthurian legend and the Quest for the Holy Grail. There are references also to the May festivities celebrating the rebirth of nature, and the Celtic myth, linked to the paradigm of fertility. Eliot found myth the framework for his own fragments.
STYLE
The style of The waste Land is fragmentary because of the mixture of different poetic styles, such as blank verse, the ode, the quatrain, the heroic couplet, and free verse, thus reproducing the chaos of present civilisation. The most effective analogies can be found in some "cubist images" or in some apparently unconnected cinematic shots used to express a certain emotional state: the meaning is not in the single fragment but in the whole. Instead of using simple, clear statements, Eliot requires the active participation of the reader/public, who experiences the same world as that of the speaker/poet by employing the technique of implication or by using quotations from different languages such as Latin, Italian, Sanskrit or French.
NEW TECNIQUES
Metaphor and symbol replace direct statement; to this end, Eliot adopted the technique of the "objective correlative", that is the attempt at communicating philosophical reflections and feelings by means of a simile, a description or a monologue by character in order to provide a vision of the world or a feeling of the lyrical "I". From French Symbolist poet Jules Laforgue, Eliot derived the technique of juxtaposition: squalid elements are juxtaposed with poetic ones, trivial elements with sublime ones. Another device widely used by Eliot is the repetition of words, images, and phrases from pages to page: they all give impression of completion increasing the musicality of the poem.
CRITICAL NOTES.
T.S.Eliot is considered one of the greatest exponents of Modernism. The publication of The Waste Land in 1922 was a literary event, because it voiced the spiritual and moral confusion of a period which found its appropriate definition in the title of a work by the poet W.H.Auden, The Age of Anxiety.
An American birth and a cosmopolitan by vocation and by education, Eliot possessed a wide and deep knowledge of the masterpieces of world literature. He acknowledge a special debt to Dante, whom he considered a model for his own poetry. What he admired in the Italian poet was the capacity to express a wide emotional experience -based not on individualism but on the entire cultural reality of his time - and at the same time the restraint, the perfect balance between the personal and the impersonal. Like Eliot, Dante had witnessed the disintegration of an age, the fall of the Empire, and he voiced the hope for salvation.
Eliot was keenly aware of the emotional and spiritual sterility of his time, and when family financial difficulties accumulated he was on the edge of nervous collapse. He found a way out in religion, and in 1927 this descendant of Puritan forbears became Anglo-Catholic. So while his early works are in the mood of disillusionment and convey irony and disgust for a trivial, sordid, empty world, Ash Wednesday marks the passage to a series of works which show growing concern with the supernatural and religion. If Dante was to him the Poet per excellence, Eliot also acknowledged other influences: the Metaphysical poets, notably John Donne, for the blend of emotion and though, immediacy and technical control( Eliot deplored the division between though and feeling - the "dissociation of sensibility"-which, in his opinion, impoverished English poetry from the 17th century onwards); the Symbolists, and Charles Baudelaire in particular with his division of the sordid aspects of the modern metropolis and his capacity to place side by side the squalid and the visionary, the images, for the concision in language and the freedom in versification. Ezra Pound played a very important role for Eliot: he constantly helped and encouraged him, revised The waste Land before publication, and advised Eliot to tighten his poem removing several explanatory and descriptive parts.
The Waste Land, dedicated to Ezra Pound, "il miglior fabbro", is a typical example of modernist art, and such as very difficult to define. It is not a narrative poem, nor dramatic, nor lyric. The main difficulty for the reader is to work out a meaning: there seems to be no beginning and no end; thoughts appear unfinished,; there are abrupt shifts; the characters are not clearly defined and the events cannot be located at a particular place; the past merges with the present, while fragmentation and juxtaposition challenge a logical evolution. The impression one receives is that of "a hap of broken images", that the poet puts together using a criterion similar to the cinema technique of montage. Gradually, the reader is impressed by certain themes and motifs.
For example, the theme of The Waste Land do no talk to one another: they recite monologues; sexual relationships are either a manifestation of lust and violence, or mechanical and boring. Eliot's Puritan ancestry is evident in the association of sin with sexuality; the most recurrent symbols are sterility are presented through cruel or unfilled sexual episodes. The barren land which must be restores to fertility, i.e. saved, is the human heart, full of selfishness and lust; the search for the Grail is the search for truth.
It is also
possible to discern the motif of pilgrimage
and of quest, following the
course of the Thames as if flows through London; the Thames is first associated
with the Rhine, the great river of
German mythology, and finally the journey through The Waste Land concludes with powerful allusions to the Ganges, the sacred river of India,
thus uniting Western and Eastern cultures. Like the rest of Eliot's early
works, The Waste Land presents
affinities with other important works of Modernism: the structure which breaks
away with the canons of traditional poetry reminds us of Joyce's bold experimentation in novel-writing, of Picasso in painting and Stravinsky in music; the sense of
emptiness, corruption, lack of communication, meaninglessness of life, is a
feature common to all modernist writers and artists, from James Joyce to William
Butler Yeats, from Ezra Pound to
Guillaume Apollinaire, from Franz Kafka to Joseph Conrad, from Thomas
Mann to Marcel Proust, and so on. An example is provided by the comparison
between the description of the
The effect of great poetry -and of great art in general - is mysteriously powerful.
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