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Thomas Stearns Eliot

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Thomas Stearns Eliot Notes Childhood obsessed with books It is self-evident that St. Louis affected me more deeply than any other environment has ever done. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Thomas Stearns Eliot


1
Thomas Stearns Eliot
  • Notes

2
Childhood
  • obsessed with books
  • It is self-evident that St. Louis affected me
    more deeply than any other environment has ever
    done. I feel that there is something in having
    passed one's childhood beside the big river,
    which is incommunicable to those people who have
    not. I consider myself fortunate to have been
    born here, rather than in Boston, or New York, or
    London.

3
  • studied Greek, Latin, German and French
  • started writing poetry at school
  • 1906 1909 studied Philosophy at Harvard
  • (Bachelors degree in three years)
  • 1908 discovered Arthur Symons's The Symbolist
    Movement in Literature (1899). This introduced
    him to Jules Laforgue, Arthur Rimbaud, and Paul
    Verlaine

4
  • worked as a philosophy assistant at Harvard
  • 1910 - 1911 studied Philosophy at the
    Sorbonne, Paris
  • Henri Bergsons lectures
  • Alain Fourniers poetry
  • 1911 1914 back at Harvard (Indian philosophy
    and Sanskrit)

5
  • was awarded a scholarship for Merton College,
    Oxford
  • first went to Germany (wanted to take a course
    there), but WWI made him go to Oxford
    immediately
  • didnt like university life moved to London, met
    Ezra Pound
  • married Vivienne Haigh-Wood in June 1915
  • worked as a teacher

6
  • To her, the marriage brought no happiness. To
    me, it brought the state of mind out of which
    came The Waste Land.
  • 1917 started working at Lloyds Bank
  • Paris, August 1920 met James Joyce
  • 1925 left his bank post, joined the publishers
    Faber and Faber
  • June 1927 converted to Anglicanism ( became a
    British subject)
  • defined himself classicist in literature,
    royalist in politics, and anglo-catholic in
    religion

7
  • 1932 separated from his wife
  • 1947 she died, while in a mental hospital
  • 1948 Nobel Prize for Literature "for his
    outstanding, pioneer contribution to present-day
    poetry"
  • January 1957 (at 68) married Esmé Valerie
    Fletcher (32)
  • died in January 1965
  • since his death his wife has preserved his
    legacy, edited his letters, published a facsimile
    of the draft of The Waste Land

8
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10
Depersonalization
  • The progress of an artist is a continual
    self-sacrifice, a continual extinction of
    personality.(...) Poetry is not a turning loose
    of emotion, but an escape from emotion it is not
    the expression of personality, but an escape from
    personality. (...) The poet has not a personality
    to express, but a particular medium, which is
    only a medium and not a personality, in which
    impressions and experiences combine in peculiar
    and unexpected ways. The emotion of art is
    impersonal. And the poet cannot reach this
    impersonality without surrendering himself wholly
    to the work to be done.
  • (Tradition and the Individual Talent, 1919)

11
Objective correlative
  • The only way of expressing emotion in the form of
    art is by finding an "objective correlative" in
    other words a set of objects, a situation, a
    chain of events which shall be the formula of
    that particular emotion such that when the
    external facts, which must terminate in sensory
    experience, are given, the emotion is immediately
    evoked.
  • (Elizabethan Dramatists Hamlet, 1919)

12
The mythical method
  • It is simply a way of controlling, of ordering,
    of giving shape and significance to the immense
    panorama of futility and anarchy which is
    contemporary history. (...) Psychology,
    ethnology, and "The Golden Bough" (James Frazer,
    1890) have concurred to make possible what was
    impossible even a few years ago. Instead of the
    narrative method, we may now use the mythical
    method. (Ulysses, Order and Myth, 1923)

13
Tradition, time and literature
  • Tradition involves the historical sense (...)
    which involves a perception, not only of the
    pastness of the past, but of its presence the
    historical sense compels a man not merely with
    his own generation in his bones, but with a
    feeling that the whole of the literature of
    Europe from Homer and within it the whole of the
    tradition of his own country has a simultaneous
    existence and composes a simultaneous order.
    (...) No poet, no artist of any art, has his
    complete meaning alone. His significance, his
    appreciation is the appreciation of his relation
    to the dead poets and artists.
  • (Tradition and the Individual Talent, 1919)

14
Poetry
  • Poetry is of course not to be defined by its
    uses. (...) It may effect revolutions in
    sensibility such as are periodically needed it
    may help to break up the conventional modes of
    perception and valuation which are perpetually
    forming, and make people see the world afresh, or
    some new part of it. It may make us from time to
    time a little more aware of the deeper, unnamed
    feeelings which form the substratum of our being,
    to which we rarely penetrate for our lives are
    mostly a constant evasion of ourselves, and an
    evasion of the visible and sensible world. But to
    say all this is only to say what you know
    already, if you have felt poetry and thought
    about your feelings.
  • (The Use of Poetry and the Use of Criticism)

15
  • A thought to Donne was an experience it modified
    his sensibility. When a poet's mind is perfectly
    equipped for its work, it is constantly
    amalgamating disparate experience the ordinary
    man's experience is chaotic, irregular,
    fragmentary. The latter falls in love, or reads
    Spinoza, and these two experiences have nothing
    to do with each other, or with the noise of the
    typewriter or the smell of cooking in the mind
    of the poet these experiences are always forming
    new wholes. (...) In the seventeenth century a
    dissociation of sensibility set in, from which we
    have never recovered .
  • (The Metaphysical Poets, 1921)

16
The Waste Land
  • Nam Sybillam quidem Cumis ego ipse oculis meis
  • vidi in ampulla pendere, et cum illi pueri
    dicerent
  • S?ß???a t? ?e?e?? respondebat illa ap??a?e??
    ?e??.

17
  • THE BURIAL OF THE DEAD
  • APRIL is the cruellest month, breeding 
  • Lilacs out of the dead land, mixing 
  • Memory and desire, stirring 
  • Dull roots with spring rain. 
  • Winter kept us warm, covering         
  • Earth in forgetful snow, feeding 
  • A little life with dried tubers.

18
  • a picture of a materialistic age dying of lack of
    belief in anything
  • analogy between
  • aridity/sterility of the earth
  • crisis of civilization
  • failure of the human condition
  • a sort of door into European literature a
    concise summary of a civilization contrasted
    sharply with the present age

19
THEMES
  • meaningful link with the past
  • mythical historical
  • however, significant
  • the juxtaposition with the present shows it as
    squalid, lifeless, meaningless
  • emptiness, sterility of modern life

20
  • emptiness, sterility of modern life
  • natural the land is barren
  • social no real communication is possible
    inability to love
  • spiritual no religious values give effective
    answers materialism

21
STRUCTURE
  • no plot, a series of images, often ambiguous,
    apparently disconnected, open to different
    interpretations
  • link association of ideas

22
a DIFFICULT poem (essay The Metaphysical Poets)
  • lack of explicit links
  • rapidly shifting point of view
  • unfinished thoughts
  • mingling of past, present and future
  • frequent quotes from European Asian literatures
  • lines echoing virtually all English poets of the
    past
  • religious symbolism

23
  • language used (verse often sounds like prose
    lyrical, narrative, autobiographical passages,
    different tones)
  • no regular metrical pattern (a kind of free verse
    derived from blank verse)
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