T.S.
Eliot’s The Waste Land is an epoch making poem that presents a complete
break with 19th century poetic tradition in its style, diction,
theme and versification and opens a new one. 20th century poetry
experiences several ups and downs. It is the period when literary “modernism”
comes into being, people’s life got shattered by world wide violence which
ultimately created anguish, barrenness, fragmentation and alienation in
every aspect of life. The new poetry is realistic and the poet’s consciousness
of the grim realities of life has shattered all illusions and romantic dreams.
The tragedy of everyday life has induced in the poet a mood of disillusionment
and so the poetry is bitter and pessimistic. The Waste Land projects
this tragic gloom, terrifying vision of modern chaotic times and troubled lives
through social, religious and moral decays of modern people.
T.
S. Eliot’s poem, The Waste Land, depicts an image of post-war modern
world through the perspective of a man finding himself hopeless and confused
about the condition of the society. Through its fragmented and allusive nature,
The Waste Land illustrates the contemporary waste land as a metaphor of
modern Europe.
Post-War
Europe: The Real Waste Land:
“The
Waste Land is fundamentally a poem about Europe”. The connection between
the poem and the historical context of the modern era reveals that the poem
metaphorically illustrates the actual condition of modern Europe; the barren
and lifeless waste land is a metaphor of Europe after World War I. Eliot uses
this “dialectic of analogies” to metaphorically depict the condition of postwar
European society, demonstrating the “disillusionment of a generation”.
Technique/Form:
Eliot
chooses a technique that suits to his theme. As the theme of the poem is
anguish, barrenness,
fragmentation and alienation of modern people, so Eliot expresses this by
employing myth, religious symbolism, juxtaposition, objective correlative,
colloquial language and literary allusions.
If we look at the structure of the poem, we see the first part of the first section
of the poem is largely in unrhymed iambic pentameter lines, or blank verse. As
the section proceeds, the lines become increasingly irregular in length and
meter, giving the feeling of disintegration, of things falling apart.
Fragmentation:
The
single most prominent aspect of both the form and content of The Waste Land is
fragmentation. Eliot used fragmentation in his poetry both to demonstrate the
chaotic state of modern existence and to juxtapose literary texts against one
another. In Eliot’s view, humanity’s psyche had been shattered by World War I
and by the collapse of the British Empire. Eliot wants his poetry to express
the fragile psychological state of humanity in the twentieth century. Critics
read the following line from The Waste Land as a statement of Eliot’s
poetic project: “These fragments I have shored against my ruins”.
At the very beginning
of the poem, we see
the natural cycle of death and rebirth traditionally associated with the month
of April appears tragic to Eliot’s speaker:
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.
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.
For Eliot’s speaker, April’s showers are cruel, not sweet. The “us” in line 5—“Winter kept us warm”—seems to link the poet himself to the earth that is covered with snow. These opening lines, then, pose the question of the poet’s originality in relation to a tradition that seems barely capable of nourishing the “dull roots” of the modern poet’s sensibility. The poet lives in a modern waste land, in the aftermath of a great war, in an industrialized society that lacks traditional structures of authority and belief, in soil that may not be conducive to new growth. Even if he could become inspired, however, the poet would have no original materials to work with. His imagination consists only of “a heap of broken images,” in the words of line 22, the images he inherits from literary ancestors going back to the Bible. The modernist comes to write poetry after a great tradition of poetry has been all but tapped out. Despite this bleakness, however, the poem does present a rebirth of sorts, and the rebirth, while signifying the recovery of European society after the war, also symbolizes the renewal of poetic tradition in modernism, accomplished in part by the mixing of high and low culture and the improvisational quality of the poem as a whole.
Social Decay:
Closely allied to the central spiritual or
religious theme of The Waste Land is Eliot’s concern with the
socio-cultural scenario of post-war Europe. In
the poem, relationships between
people in the modern society are reduced to something that is sterile,
lifeless, and dry. The various characters that appear in the poem are unable to
carry a logical and coherent dialogue. As a part of the already fragmented
whole, any attempt for conversations between people reflects the fragmented and
incoherent structure and content of the poem. This impossibility of meaningful
communication corresponds to the dismal and hopeless reality of the modern
society and also intensifies and dramatizes the speaker’s anguish and
frustration at the isolation and loneliness in the modern world. For example,
the speaker’s attempt to have a conversation in the second part, “A Game of
Chess,” demonstrates the impossibility of communication and thus relationship: “Speak to me. Why do
you never speak. Speak. / what are you thinking of? What thinking? What? / I
never know what you are thinking. Think” (112-114).
The speaker of these lines is unable to communicate with the person he is
speaking to; this failure in communication reflects the isolation and lack of
connection that characterize relationships within the disillusioned and dismal
modern society.
Religious/
Spiritual Decay:
The Waste Land contains a troubled
religious proposition. In the second episode the speaker describes a true
wasteland of “stony rubbish”; in it, he says, man can recognize only “[a] heap
of broken images.” The vision consists only of nothingness—a handful of
dust—which is so profound as to be frightening; yet truth also resides here: No
longer a religious phenomenon achieved through Christ, truth is represented by
a mere void.
The
speaker is very much pessimistic about the future of the world. He says that we
cannot expect much from this modern world because
What are the roots that clutch, what branches grow
Out
of this stony rubbish?
Son of man,
You
cannot say, or guess, for you know only
A
heap of broken images, where the sun beats,
And
the dead tree gives no shelter, the cricket no relief,
And
the dry stone no sound of water. [The
Burial of the Death]
In this
segment one can hear again the voice of Tiresias, who depicts a sort of
spiritual waste land. It portrays an agonized world filled with "stony
rubbish," where "the sun beats" mercilessly down so that
"the dead trees give no shelter" and the shrill cry of the cricket
brings "no relief." In this desolate scenario "the dry
stone" gives "no sound of water."
The second and third parts
of the poem throw light on the failure of sex relationship in the modern waste
land. Sex has become a matter of intrigue and has become a mere source of
pleasure and lost its spiritual significance. The sexual life has lost
spirituality and it has become a work without any real pleasure of both body
and mind. The picture of the vulgar sexual life and low morality both of the higher
as well as the lower classes are drown in the Game of the Chess part.
The fire Sermon section also shows the lustful nature of the modern men. It
also reminds one of the Confessions of St Auguustine wherein he represents lust
as a burning cauldron. But the spiritually dead, modern humanity knows only
lust and no true love. The sterile burning of lust is brought out by different
sex experiences in the contemporary waste land.
To conclude, Eliot was deeply shocked by the moral,
social and moral degradation of the post-war people in Europe as well as other
parts of the world. The poem is a clear picture of that degradation. Here Eliot
juxtaposes what the past was like and the present conditions in order to show
how the world has undergone a radical, tragic change. The ending of the poem is
a reminiscence of Coleridge’s concerns in The Rime of the Ancient Mariner i.e.
the need for redemption through prayer, penance and self-abnegation after a
life of sin.