T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)
Contributing Editor: Sam S. Baskett
Classroom Issues and Strategies
For the uninitiated reader, Eliot's poems present a number of difficulties:
erudite allusions, lines in a number of foreign languages, lack of narrative
structure compounded by startling juxtapositions, a sense of aloofness
from the ordinary sensory universe of day-to-day living. For the more sophisticated,
Eliot's "modernism," his quest for "reality," may seem
dated, even "romantic"; the vision of the waste land, stultifying
and bleak; the orthodoxy of "The Dry Salvages" a retreat from
the cutting edge of late twentieth-century thought and poetic expression.
To address these problems, explain the most difficult and essential
passages, providing some framework and background, without attempting a
line-by-line gloss of all the references and their ramifications. The poems,
especially
The Waste Land, should not be treated as puzzles to be
solved, but rather, the early poems at least, as typical "modernism"
which Eliot "invented" in
The Waste Land and "Prufrock,"
a product of symbolism, images, and aggregation. Emphasize that this is
all the expression of a personal, intense, even romantic effort by Eliot
to get things "right" for himself in his search for order in
his life, a validation of his existence, in a word, for "salvation."
Emphasize continuing themes, continuing and changing techniques as Eliot
attempts to translate, as he said of Shakespeare, his own private agony
into something rich, strange, and impersonal.
Students often ask why Eliot is so intentionally, even perversely, difficult.
Why the erudite allusions, the foreign languages, the indirectness? What
is his attitude toward women? What of the evidence of racial prejudice?
What of his aloofness from and condescension to the concerns of ordinary
human existence?
Major Themes, Historical Perspectives, and Personal Issues
The symbolism of the waste land, garden, water, city, stairs, etc.,
as Eliot expresses the themes of time, death-rebirth, levels of love (and
attitude toward women), the quest motif on psychological, metaphysical,
and aesthetic levels. Dante's four levels--the literal (Eliot's use of
geographic place is more basic than has been given sufficient attention),
allegorical, moral, and anagogic--are interesting to trace throughout Eliot's
developing canon. The relations between geographic place and vision, between
the personal, individual talent and the strong sense of tradition, are
also significant.
Significant Form, Style, or Artistic Conventions
Eliot's relation to romanticism, his significance in the development
(with
Ezra Pound) of
modernism, his role as an expatriate effecting a "reconciliation with
America" in "The Dry Salvages" are all important considerations.
His techniques of juxtaposition, aggregation of images, symbolism, the
use of multiple literary allusions, the influence of Dante are all worth
attention, as is his use of "free verse" and many various poetic
forms. Note also the musicality of his verse, his use of verbal repetition
as well as clusters of images and symbols.
Original Audience
When Eliot's works first appeared, they seemed outrageously impenetrable
to many, although he quickly became recognized as the "Pope of Russell
Square." This recognition was partly through Pound's efforts, as well
as Eliot's magisterial pronouncements in his criticism. Even as he challenged
the literary establishment, he was in effect a literary "dictator"
during much of his life, despite the shock felt by his followers when he
announced in 1927 that he was "catholic, royalist and a classicist."
With the religious emphasis of
Ash Wednesday (1930) and
Four
Quartets (1943), as well as in his plays of the '30s and '40s, it seemed
to many that he had become a different writer. A quarter of a century after
his death, it is possible to see the continuing figure in the carpet, Eliot
as a major figure in modernism, a movement superseded by subsequent developments.
His eventual importance has been severely questioned by some critics (e.g.,
Harold Bloom).
Comparisons, Contrasts, Connections
Compare Eliot with
Ezra
Pound,
Robert Frost,
William Carlos Williams,
Wallace Stevens. Pound
for his influence as "the better craftsman" and for his early
recognition of and plumping for Eliot; all of these poets for their combined
(but differing) contribution to modernism and the search for reality as
a way out of "the heart of darkness." Williams and Stevens (Adamic
poets) make interesting contrasts with their different goals and techniques:
Williams criticizing Eliot's lack of immediacy, Stevens commenting that
Eliot did not make the "visible a little difficult to see."
Questions for Reading and Discussion/Approaches to Writing
1. What are the similarities and differences in Eliot's protagonists?
What is the continuing fundamental theme in his work?
Is "The Dry Salvages" essentially different from his early
poems? How so? Are there any continuities?
Consider the thrust of a particular poem on literal, allegorical, moral,
and anagogic levels.
What is Eliot's attitude toward women?
What are the techniques by which Eliot's poems achieve intensity?
2. Compare and contrast the protagonists of two poems.
Trace the quest motif through Eliot's poems.
How do the late poems ("DS") differ from "Prufrock"?
The Waste Land?
Discuss Eliot's attitude toward death as expressed in the poems.
Discuss Eliot's symbolism, the use of water as a symbol.
Bibliography
Baskett, Sam S. "Eliot's London." In
Critical Essays on
The Waste Land. London: Longman Literature Guides, 1988, 73-89.
--. "Fronting the Atlantic:
Cape Cod and 'The Dry Salvages.'"
The New England Quarterly LVI, no. 2 (June 1983): 200-19.
Drew, Elizabeth.
T. S. Eliot: The Design of His Poetry. New York:
Charles Scribner's Sons, 1949. Especially pp. 1-30.
Gordon, Lyndall.
Eliot's Early Years. Athens: Ohio University
Press, 1977.
--.
Eliot's New Life. Athens: Ohio University Press, 1988.
Julius, Anthony.
T.S. Eliot: Anti-Semitism and Literary Form.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995.
Kermode, Frank. "A Babylonish Dialect." In
T. S. Eliot,
edited by Allen Tate, 231-43. New York: Delacorte Press, 1966.
Litz, A. Walton, ed.
Eliot in His Time. London, 1973. Several
useful, illuminating essays.
Martin, Jay, ed.
A Collection of Critical Essays on The Waste Land.
Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice Hall, Twentieth Century Interpretations,
1968. Several useful, illuminating essays.
Miller, J. Hillis.
Poets of Reality. Cambridge: Belknap Press
of Harvard University, 1965. 1-12.
Moody, A. D.
T. S. Eliot. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1979.
Ricks, Christopher.
T. S. Eliot and Prejudice. London: Faber,
1994.
Williamson, George.
A Reader's Guide to T. S. Eliot. New York:
Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1967.