16- ] American Literature
T.S. Eliot 1888 – 1965
Thomas
Stearns Eliot was an American-born, British, poet, essayist, playwright,
critic, now regarded as one of the twentieth century’s major poets. He received
more rewards than almost any other writer of the past two centuries, including
the Nobel prize, the Dante Gold Medal, the Goethe prize, the US Medal of
Freedom and the British Order of Merit.
T.S.
Eliot, in full Thomas Stearns Eliot, (born September 26, 1888, St. Louis,
Missouri, U.S.—died January 4, 1965, London, England), American-English poet,
playwright, literary critic, and editor, a leader of the Modernist movement in
poetry in such works as The Waste Land (1922) and Four Quartets (1943). Eliot
exercised a strong influence on Anglo-American culture from the 1920s until
late in the century. His experiments in diction, style, and versification
revitalized English poetry, and in a series of critical essays he shattered old
orthodoxies and erected new ones. The publication of Four Quartets led to his
recognition as the greatest living English poet and man of letters, and in 1948
he was awarded both the Order of Merit and the Nobel Prize for Literature.
It
was in London that Eliot came under the influence of his contemporary Ezra
Pound, who recognized his poetic genius at once, and assisted in the
publication of his work in a number of magazines, most notably “The Love Song
of J. Alfred Prufrock,” which appeared in Poetry magazine in 1915. Eliot’s
first book of poems, Prufrock and Other Observations, was published in London
in 1917 by The Egoist, and immediately established him as a leading poet of the
avant-garde. With the publication of The Waste Land (Boni & Liveright) in
1922, now considered by many to be the single most influential poetic work of
the twentieth century, Eliot’s reputation began to grow to nearly mythic
proportions. By 1930, and for the next thirty years, he was the most dominant
figure in poetry and literary criticism in the English-speaking world.
As
a poet, Eliot transmuted his affinity for the English metaphysical poets of the
seventeenth century (notably, John Donne) and the nineteenth-century French
Symbolist poets (including Charles Baudelaire and Jules Laforgue) into radical
innovations in poetic technique and subject matter. His poems, in many
respects, articulated the disillusionment of a younger post-World War I
generation with the values and conventions—both literary and social—of the
Victorian era. As a critic, he had an enormous impact on contemporary literary
taste, propounding views that, after his conversion to orthodox Christianity in
the late 1930s, were increasingly based in social and religious conservatism.
His major later poetry publications include Four Quartets (Harcourt, Brace and
Company, 1943) and Ash Wednesday (Faber & Faber, 1930). His books of
literary and social criticism include Notes Towards the Definition of Culture
(Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1949); After Strange Gods (Harcourt, Brace and
Company, 1934); The Use of Poetry and the Use of Criticism (President and
Fellows of Harvard College, 1933); and The Sacred Wood (Methuen & Co.,
Ltd., 1920). Eliot was also an important playwright, whose verse dramas include
the comedy The Cocktail Party (Faber & Faber, 1950); The Family Reunion
(Faber & Faber, 1939), a drama written partly in blank verse and influenced
by Greek tragedy; and Murder in the Cathedral (Harcourt, Brace & Company,
1935).
Early
years
Eliot
was descended from a distinguished New England family that had relocated to St.
Louis, Missouri. His family allowed him the widest education available in his
time, with no influence from his father to be “practical” and to go into
business. From Smith Academy in St. Louis he went to Milton, in Massachusetts;
from Milton he entered Harvard in 1906; he received a B.A. in 1909, after three
instead of the usual four years. The men who influenced him at Harvard were
George Santayana, the philosopher and poet, and the critic Irving Babbitt. From
Babbitt he derived an anti-Romantic attitude that, amplified by his later
reading of British philosophers F.H. Bradley and T.E. Hulme, lasted through his
life. In the academic year 1909–10 he was an assistant in philosophy at
Harvard.
He
spent the year 1910–11 in France, attending Henri Bergson’s lectures in
philosophy at the Sorbonne and reading poetry with Alain-Fournier. Eliot’s
study of the poetry of Dante, of the English writers John Webster and John
Donne, and of the French Symbolist Jules Laforgue helped him to find his own
style. From 1911 to 1914 he was back at Harvard, reading Indian philosophy and
studying Sanskrit. In 1913 he read Bradley’s Appearance and Reality; by 1916 he
had finished, in Europe, a dissertation entitled “Knowledge and Experience in
the Philosophy of F.H. Bradley.” But World War I had intervened, and he never
returned to Harvard to take the final oral examination for the Ph.D. degree. In
1914 Eliot met and began a close association with the American poet Ezra Pound.
Early
publications
Eliot
was to pursue four careers: editor, dramatist, literary critic, and
philosophical poet. He was probably the most erudite poet of his time in the
English language. His undergraduate poems were “literary” and conventional. His
first important publication, and the first masterpiece of Modernism in English,
was “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock” (1915):
Although
Pound had printed privately a small book, A lume spento, as early as 1908,
“Prufrock” was the first poem by either of these literary revolutionists to go
beyond experiment to achieve perfection. It represented a break with the
immediate past as radical as that of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William
Wordsworth in Lyrical Ballads (1798). From the appearance of Eliot’s first
volume, Prufrock and Other Observations, in 1917, one may conveniently date the
maturity of the 20th-century poetic revolution. The significance of the
revolution is still disputed, but the striking similarity to the Romantic
revolution of Coleridge and Wordsworth is obvious: Eliot and Pound, like their
18th-century counterparts, set about reforming poetic diction. Whereas
Wordsworth thought he was going back to the “real language of men,” Eliot
struggled to create new verse rhythms based on the rhythms of contemporary
speech. He sought a poetic diction that might be spoken by an educated person,
being “neither pedantic nor vulgar.”
For
a year Eliot taught French and Latin at the Highgate School; in 1917 he began
his brief career as a bank clerk in Lloyds Bank Ltd. Meanwhile, he was also a
prolific reviewer and essayist in both literary criticism and technical
philosophy. In 1919 he published Poems, which contained the poem “Gerontion,” a
meditative interior monologue in blank verse; nothing like this poem had
appeared in English.
The Waste Land and criticism
With
the publication in 1922 of his poem The Waste Land, Eliot won an international
reputation. The Waste Land expresses with great power the disenchantment,
disillusionment, and disgust of the period after World War I. In a series of
vignettes, loosely linked by the legend of the search for the Grail, it
portrays a sterile world of panicky fears and barren lusts, and of human beings
waiting for some sign or promise of redemption. The poem’s style is highly
complex, erudite, and allusive, and the poet provided notes and references to
explain the work’s many quotations and allusions. This scholarly supplement
distracted some readers and critics from perceiving the true originality of the
poem, which lay rather in its rendering of the universal human predicament of
man desiring salvation, and in its manipulation of language, than in its range
of literary references. In his earlier poems Eliot had shown himself to be a
master of the poetic phrase. The Waste Land showed him to be, in addition, a
metrist of great virtuosity, capable of astonishing modulations ranging from
the sublime to the conversational.
The
Waste Land consists of five sections and proceeds on a principle of “rhetorical
discontinuity” that reflects the fragmented experience of the 20th-century
sensibility of the great modern cities of the West. Eliot expresses the
hopelessness and confusion of purpose of life in the secularized city, the
decay of urbs aeterna (the “eternal city”). This is the ultimate theme of The
Waste Land, concretized by the poem’s constant rhetorical shifts and its
juxtapositions of contrasting styles. But The Waste Land is not a simple
contrast of the heroic past with the degraded present; it is, rather, a
timeless simultaneous awareness of moral grandeur and moral evil. The poem’s
original manuscript of about 800 lines was cut down to 433 at the suggestion of
Ezra Pound. The Waste Land is not Eliot’s greatest poem, though it is his most
famous.
Eliot
said that the poet-critic must write “programmatic criticism”—that is,
criticism that expresses the poet’s own interests as a poet, quite different
from historical scholarship, which stops at placing the poet in his background.
Consciously intended or not, Eliot’s criticism created an atmosphere in which
his own poetry could be better understood and appreciated than if it had to
appear in a literary milieu dominated by the standards of the preceding age. In
the essay “Tradition and the Individual Talent,” appearing in his first
critical volume, The Sacred Wood (1920), Eliot asserts that tradition, as used
by the poet, is not a mere repetition of the work of the immediate past
(“novelty is better than repetition,” he said); rather, it comprises the whole
of European literature, from Homer to the present. The poet writing in English
may therefore make his own tradition by using materials from any past period,
in any language. This point of view is “programmatic” in the sense that it disposes
the reader to accept the revolutionary novelty of Eliot’s polyglot quotations
and serious parodies of other poets’ styles in The Waste Land.
Also
in The Sacred Wood, “Hamlet and His Problems” sets forth Eliot’s theory of the
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 for that particular emotion; such that, when the
external facts, which must terminate in sensory experience, are given, the
emotion is immediately evoked.
Eliot
used the phrase “objective correlative” in the context of his own impersonal
theory of poetry; it thus had an immense influence toward correcting the
vagueness of late Victorian rhetoric by insisting on a correspondence of word
and object. Two other essays, first published the year after The Sacred Wood,
almost complete the Eliot critical canon: “The Metaphysical Poets” and “Andrew
Marvell,” published in Selected Essays, 1917–32 (1932). In these essays he
effects a new historical perspective on the hierarchy of English poetry,
putting at the top Donne and other Metaphysical poets of the 17th century and
lowering poets of the 18th and 19th centuries. Eliot’s second famous phrase
appears here—“dissociation of sensibility,” invented to explain the change that
came over English poetry after Donne and Andrew Marvell. This change seems to
him to consist in a loss of the union of thought and feeling. The phrase has
been attacked, yet the historical fact that gave rise to it cannot be denied,
and with the poetry of Eliot and Pound it had a strong influence in reviving
interest in certain 17th-century poets.
The
first, or programmatic, phase of Eliot’s criticism ended with The Use of Poetry
and the Use of Criticism (1933)—his Charles Eliot Norton lectures at Harvard.
Shortly before this his interests had broadened into theology and sociology;
three short books, or long essays, were the result: Thoughts After Lambeth
(1931), The Idea of a Christian Society (1939), and Notes Towards the
Definition of Culture (1948). These book-essays, along with his Dante (1929),
an indubitable masterpiece, broadened the base of literature into theology and
philosophy: whether a work is poetry must be decided by literary standards;
whether it is great poetry must be decided by standards higher than the
literary.
Eliot’s
criticism and poetry are so interwoven that it is difficult to discuss them
separately. The great essay on Dante appeared two years after Eliot was
confirmed in the Church of England (1927); in that year he also became a
British subject. The first long poem after his conversion was Ash Wednesday
(1930), a religious meditation in a style entirely different from that of any
of the earlier poems. Ash Wednesday expresses the pangs and the strain involved
in the acceptance of religious belief and religious discipline. This and
subsequent poems were written in a more relaxed, musical, and meditative style
than his earlier works, in which the dramatic element had been stronger than
the lyrical. Ash Wednesday was not well received in an era that held that
poetry, though autonomous, is strictly secular in its outlook; it was
misinterpreted by some critics as an expression of personal disillusion.
Later
poetry and plays of T.S. Eliot
Eliot’s
masterpiece is Four Quartets, which was issued as a book in 1943, though each
“quartet” is a complete poem. “Burnt Norton” was the first of the quartets; it
had appeared in the Collected Poems of 1936. It is a subtle meditation on the
nature of time and its relation to eternity. On the model of this, Eliot wrote
three more poems—“East Coker” (1940), “The Dry Salvages” (1941), and “Little
Gidding” (1942)—in which he explored through images of great beauty and haunting
power his own past, the past of the human race, and the meaning of human
history. Each of the poems was self-subsistent, but when published together
they were seen to make up a single work, in which themes and images recurred
and were developed in a musical manner and brought to a final resolution. This
work made a deep impression on the reading public, and even those who were
unable to accept the poems’ Christian beliefs recognized the intellectual
integrity with which Eliot pursued his high theme, the originality of the form
he had devised, and the technical mastery of his verse. This work led to the
award to Eliot, in 1948, of the Nobel Prize for Literature.
An
outstanding example of Eliot’s verse in Four Quartets is the passage in “Little
Gidding” in which the poet meets a “compound ghost,” a figure composite of two
of his masters: William Butler Yeats and Stéphane Mallarmé. The scene takes
place at dawn in London after a night on duty at an air-raid post during an air
attack; the master speaks in conclusion:
From
wrong to wrong the exasperated spirit
Proceeds,
unless restored by that refining fire
Where
you must move in measure, like a dancer.
The
day was breaking. In the disfigured street
He
left me, with a kind of valediction,
And
faded on the blowing of the horn.
The
passage is 72 lines, in modified terza rima; the diction is as near to that of
Dante as is possible in English; and it is a fine example of Eliot’s belief
that a poet can be entirely original when he is closest to his models.
Eliot’s
plays, which begin with Sweeney Agonistes (published 1926; first performed in
1934) and end with The Elder Statesman (first performed 1958; published 1959),
are, with the exception of Murder in the Cathedral (published and performed
1935), inferior to the lyric and meditative poetry. Eliot’s belief that even
secular drama attracts people who unconsciously seek a religion led him to put
drama above all other forms of poetry. All his plays are in a blank verse of
his own invention, in which the metrical effect is not apprehended apart from
the sense; thus he brought “poetic drama” back to the popular stage. The Family
Reunion (1939) and Murder in the Cathedral are Christian tragedies—the former a
tragedy of revenge, the latter of the sin of pride. Murder in the Cathedral is
a modern miracle play on the martyrdom of Thomas Becket. The most striking
feature of this, his most successful play, is the use of a chorus in the
traditional Greek manner to make apprehensible to common humanity the meaning
of the heroic action. The Family Reunion (1939) was less popular. It contains
scenes of great poignancy and some of the finest dramatic verse since the
Elizabethans, but the public found this translation of the story of Orestes
into a modern domestic drama baffling and was uneasy at the mixture of
psychological realism, mythical apparitions at a drawing-room window, and a
comic chorus of uncles and aunts.
After
World War II, Eliot returned to writing plays with The Cocktail Party in 1949,
The Confidential Clerk in 1953, and The Elder Statesman in 1958. These plays
are comedies in which the plots are derived from Greek drama. In them Eliot
accepted current theatrical conventions at their most conventional, subduing
his style to a conversational level and eschewing the lyrical passages that
gave beauty to his earlier plays. Only The Cocktail Party, which is based upon
the Alcestis of Euripides, achieved a popular success. In spite of their
obvious theatrical defects and a failure to engage the sympathies of the
audience for the characters, these plays succeed in handling moral and
religious issues of some complexity while entertaining the audience with
farcical plots and some shrewd social satire.
Eliot’s
career as editor was ancillary to his main interests, but his quarterly review,
The Criterion (1922–39), was the most distinguished international critical
journal of the period. He was a “director,” or working editor, of the
publishing firm of Faber & Faber Ltd. from the early 1920s until his death
and as such was a generous and discriminating patron of young poets.
Eliot
rigorously kept his private life in the background. In 1915 he married Vivien
Haigh-Wood. After 1933 she was mentally ill, and they lived apart; she died in
1947. In January 1957 he married Valerie Fletcher, with whom he lived happily
until his death and who became his literary executor. She was responsible for
releasing a range of editions of Eliot’s work and letters, and she also
approved Andrew Lloyd Webber’s adaptation of Eliot’s light verse from Old Possum’s
Book of Practical Cats (1939) into the musical Cats (1981).
From
the 1920s onward, Eliot’s influence as a poet and as a critic—in both Great
Britain and the United States—was immense, not least among those establishing
the study of English literature as an autonomous academic discipline. He also
had his detractors, ranging from avant-garde American poets who believed that
he had abandoned the attempt to write about contemporary America to traditional
English poets who maintained that he had broken the links between poetry and a
large popular audience. During his lifetime, however, his work was the subject
of much sympathetic exegesis. Since his death (and coinciding with a wider
challenge to the academic study of English literature that his critical precepts
did much to establish), interpreters have been markedly more critical, focusing
on his complex relationship to his American origins, his elitist cultural and
social views, and his exclusivist notions of tradition and of race.
Nevertheless, Eliot was unequaled by any other 20th-century poet in the ways in
which he commanded the attention of his audience.
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