Thomas Eliot
T.S. Eliot was a very influential pessimist, always and constantly
thriving on
his hatred of little things and his love life. Eliot was born in
St. Louis
Missouri - 1888 ad. His parents were both writers and loved the
arts, most
effectively passing on the genes to their son. While growing up he
learned many
things, his parents were extremely social and intellectual and
they pushed him
to achieve the highest of statuses. He went to college at
Harvard University and
then moved to London to go to Oxford. He then became a
citizen of England in
1915. While in England Eliot held many jobs to keep
the payments on his 5th
floor English apartment and his college tuition.
Eliot quickly became popular
with Britain and was known as a great poet and a
literal critic. Eliot is best
known for two of his works: The Waste Land
(1922) and The Love Song of J. Alfred
Prufrock (1915). Actually the Love
song is the beginning of the Waste Land. The
Waste Land is in 5 parts, so
it is more of a story in poetical form. In the Love
Song, Eliot actually
sounds a bit like a optimist, quite frankly though his own"waste land"steps in
half way through. This is his only poetic work I like.
But it will never
be at the top of any of my lists. In this "song" , JAP (J.
Alfred
Prufrock) is writing a letter to his honey, the girl he is in love
with.
In this poem Eliot uses a lot of visual imagery, he is very good
with his
adjectives and brings such a happy correlation of thought into a
grim reality he
would call his "Waste Land". He talks of how : In the room
the women come
and go Talking of Michelangelo. - TLSJAP stanza 13 and 14 It
has been my thought
that this may signify his "type". Eliot, again was an
intellectual and then
so he would most likely hang out where the smart people
were and get away from:
Of restless nights in one-night cheap hotels And
sawdust restaurant with
oyster-shells: Streets that follow like a tedious
argument Of insidious intent.
- stanzas 6-9 He actually gives the evidence to
where he found his women, and
how he likes to stroll through the outdoors and
ending up in places of
eloquence, and "High Society". Even though he had a
medium amount of money.
He was still accepted in places for lower pay
because of his high intelligence
and the intelligence of his women. People
enjoyed his company. He goes on
talking about how there will always be time
for us referring to the love that
which he shares for her, and that there
will always be time for things, but
letting each other look at the joy as
present and the escape from his "Waste
Land". He goes on in stanza 37 -
48 telling how they would grow old together,
while still with the people that
surround them that they love so dearly. He then
tells of how he "knows"
things and how life always goes (evidence of
realism) in stanzas 49 - 54. Now
here you can start to sense his pessimistic
side shed a bit, talking of the:
To spit out all the butt-ends of my days and
ways, And how should I presume?
Stanza 60 & 61 Of course I guess you could
take that as a repentance line
but, I don’t think so, lets go on. From stanzas
70 - 86 it shows what I
think is his deep side and talking as if he were
actually a Realist which he
probably was, at least to me. He humbles himself a
great deal , which is good
, but talks of how things slowly fade , referring a
lot to his baldness and
how age takes a toll on relationships. This is my
favorite part of the poem,
because he brings you into his soul, not just letting
you taste the action .
I feel that this is how he lived life. Always leaving
people to taste the
good stuff around him but behind his eyes ly his brain and
behind his brain
his heart and when his company least expected it, "I could
see him waving his
hands and saying", "Come all! Come! Come!...come and feel
my pain...come and
pity me...come and think I am humble.....even though I
don’t care much of any
of you." That is the picture I get of JAP who is also
Eliot, in life, but
yet his background, his unnoticeable conscience. In stanza
87 - 98 he
speaks of his anxiousness to ask people into his "Waste land" ,
his wanting
to let them see his truth. Then he tries to cover for himself by
saying:
Should I say: "That is not what I meant at all, That is not it, at
all."
stanzas 97 & 98 In stanzas 119 and finishing the poem at 131 he ends
off,
sorry to say, in a pessimistic tone of self pity and morbidity. He
talks
about his age weighing on his soul and never being what he wants to
look like in
the eyes of others and his eagerness in death by saying: We have
lingered in the
chambers of the sea By sea-girls wreathed with seaweed red
and brown Till human
voices wake us, and we drown. stanzas 129 - 131 That is
a great background on
how Eliot viewed life. Realistically and fading into
the distance with love
meaning nothing at all. Well, on to what is called
T.S. Eliot’s "Waste
Land". To brief you on my thoughts I very much
dislike this poem for many
reason which will be laid out in the next couple
paragraphs. The poem is simply
a look in to the soul of Eliot, a man with
great writing capabilities but uses
them for the pleasure of striking his
enemy and hiding the truth without being
up-front, using stories of ancient
myths in German and Latin to convey his
apathy. Eliot throughout this whole
poems loves to mock and scorn his ex-wife.
"Her sexual desire he could
not satisfy and whose love he cannot return." -
T.S. Eliot’s Waste land.
Page 98 by: James E. Miller. Jr. He uses many
sexually explicit gestures in
the writing because that was the only way his
fantasies could be
met...through writing. "I think the man is sick, he’s
full of crap!" - Eric
Paoletti But he reveals his hatred toward her in these
lines: More sinned
against than sinning , bruised and marred, The lazy laughing
Jenny of the
Bard. (The same eternal and consuming itch Can make a martyr and a
consuming
bitch) There is much more but as you can see not very appropriate at
all.
Again this man won a Nobel Prize and was loved by Americans and
the
English. "How on Earth did he achieve that?" Probably because that is
what
the world is hungry for. Explains acts of fantasizing date rape and the
hatred
of his wife that he loved so much in the Love Letter, than leading
into divorce.
Overall if you ask me, T.S. Eliot didn’t need fame, fortune
and the Nobel
Prize. He needed serious mental help and most importantly,
the God he talked of
so vaguely throughout his
writing.
Bibliography
T.S. Eliot’s Personal waste land. By: James
E. Miller Jr. Copyright 1977
Published by: The Penn. State University
Press, University Park and London
Thomas Sterns Eliot (1888 - 1965)