T. S. Eliot
Thomas Stearns Eliot was born in St. Louis,
Missouri of New England descent, on Sept. 26, 1888. He entered Harvard University in 1906,
completed his courses in three years and earned a master's degree the next year. After a year at the Sorbonne in Paris, he
returned to Harvard. Further study led
him to Merton College, Oxford, and he decided to stay in England. He worked
first as a teacher and then in Lloyd's Bank until 1925. Then he joined the London publishing firm of
Faber and Gwyer, becoming director when the firm became Faber and Faber in
1929. Eliot won the Nobel prize for
literature in 1948 and other major literary awards.
Eliot saw an exhausted poetic mode being
employed, that contained no verbal excitement or original craftsmanship, by the
Georgian poets who were active when he settled in London. He sought to make poetry more subtle, more
suggestive, and at the same time more precise.
He learned the necessity of clear and precise images, and he learned
too, to fear romantic softness and to regard the poetic medium rather than the
poet's personality as the important factor.
Eliot saw in the French symbolists how image could be both absolutely
precise in what it referred to physically and at the same time endlessly
suggestive in the meanings it set up because of its relationship to other
images. Eliot's real novelty was his
deliberate elimination of all merely connective and transitional passages, his
building up of the total pattern of meaning through the immediate comparison of
images without overt explanation of what they are doing, together with his use
of indirect references to other works of literature (some at times quite
obscure).
Eliot starts his poem "The Hollow
Men" with a quote from Joseph Conrad's novel the Heart of Darkness. The line "Mistah Kurtz-he dead"
refers to a Mr. Kurtz who was a European trader who had gone in the "the
heart of darkness" by traveling into the central African jungle, with
European standards of life and conduct.
Because he has no moral or spiritual strength to sustain him, he was
soon turned into a barbarian. He
differs, however, from Eliot's "hollow men" as he is not paralyzed as
they are , but on his death catches a glimpse of the nature of his actions when
he claims "The horror! the Horror!"
Kurtz is thus one of the "lost /Violent souls" mentioned in
lines 15-16. Eliot next continues with
"A penny for the Old Guy".
This is a reference to the cry of English children soliciting money for
fireworks to commemorate Guy Fawkes day, November 5; which commemorates the
"gunpowder plot" of 1605 in which Guy Fawkes and other conspirators
planned to blow up both houses of Parliament.
On this day, which commemorates the failure of the explosion, the likes
of Fawkes are burned in effigy and mock explosions using fireworks are
produced. The relation of this custom to
the poem suggests another inference: as the children make a game of make
believe out of Guy Fawkes , so do we make a game out of religion.
The first lines bring the title and theme into
a critical relationship. We are like the
"Old Guy", effigies stuffed with straw. It may also be noticed that the first and
last part of the poem indicate a church service, and the ritual service
throughout. This is indicated in the
passages "Leaning together...whisper together", and the voices
"quiet and meaningless" as the service drones on. The erstwhile worshippers disappear in a blur
of shape, shade gesture, to which normality is attached. Then the crucial orientation is developed,
towards "death's other Kingdom."
We know that we are in the
Kingdom of death, not as "violent souls" but as empty effigies,
"filled with straw", of this religious service.
Part two defines the hollow men in relation to
the reality with those "direct eyes have met". "Direct eyes" symbolizing those who
represent something positive (direct).
Fortunately, the eyes he dare not meet even in dreams do not appear in
"death's dream kingdom." They
are only reflected through broken light and shadows, all is perceived
indirectly. He would not be any nearer ,
any more direct, in this twilight kingdom.
He fears the ultimate vision.
Part three defines the representation of
death's kingdom in relationship to the worship of the hollow men. A dead, arid land, like it's people, it
raises stone images of the spiritual, which are implored by the dead. And again the "fading star"
establishes a sense of remoteness from reality.
The image of frustrated love which follows is a moment of anguished
illumination suspended between the two kingdoms of death. Lips that would adore, pray instead to a
broken image. The "broken
stone" unites the "stone images" and the broken column,"
which bent the sunlight.
Part four explores this impulse in relation to
the land, which now darkens progressively as the valley of the shadow of
death. Now there are not even hints of
the eyes (of the positive), and the "fading" becomes the
"dying" star. In action the
hollow men now "grope together / And avoid speech", gathered on the
banks of the swollen river which must be crossed to get to "death's other
kingdom". The contrast with part I
is clear. Without any eyes at all they
are without any vision, unless "the eyes" return as the
"perpetual", not a fading or
dying star. But for empty men this is
only a hope. As the star becomes a rose,
so the rose becomes the rose windows of the church; the rose as an image of the
church and multifoliate. Which is a
reference to Dante's Divine Comedy, where the multifoliate rose is a symbol of
paradise, in which the saints are the petals of the rose.
But Part Five develops the reality, not the
hope of the empty men; the cactus not the rose.
The nursery level make believe mocks the hope of empty men. In desire they "go round the prickly pear"
but are frustrated by the prickles. The
poem now develops the frustration of impulse.
At various levels, and in various aspects of life, there falls the
frustrating shadow of fear, the essential shadow of this land. Yet the shadow is more than fear: it
concentrates the valley of shadow into a shape of horror, almost a
personification of its negative character.
The passage from the Lord's Prayer relates the Shadow to religion, with
irony in the attribution. Next the
response about the length of life relates it to the burden of life. Lastly the Lord's Prayer again relates the
Shadow to the Kingdom that is so hard.
This repetition follows the conflict of the series that produces life
itself, frustrating the essence from descent to being. This is the essential irony of their impaired
lives. The end comes by way of ironic
completion as the nursery rhyme again takes up its repetitive round, and
terminates with the line that characterizes the evasive excuse. They are the whimpers of fear with which the
hollow men end, neither the bang of Guy Fawkes day nor the "lost violent
soul."
In part Five the frustration of reality is
described by the abstractions introduced in Part I; life is frustrated at every
level, and this accounts for the nature of the land and the character of its
people. By placing G-d in a casual
relation to this condition, the poem develops an irony which results in the
"whimper". But the most devastating
irony is formal: the extension of game ritual in liturgical form.
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