"Autobiographies of great nations are written in three manuscripts – a book of deeds, a book of words, and a book of art. Of the three, I would choose the latter as truest testimony." - Sir Kenneth Smith, Great Civilisations

"I must write each day without fail, not so much for the success of the work, as in order not to get out of my routine." - Leo Tolstoy

I have never believed that one should wait until one is inspired because I think the pleasures of not writing are so great that if you ever start indulging them you will never write again. - John Updike

"The life of every man is a diary in which he means to write one story, and writes another; and his humblest hour is when he compares the volume as it is with what he vowed to make it." - J.M. Barrie, Peter Pan

Poetry is the shadow cast by our streetlight imaginations." - Lawrence Ferlinghetti


[Note - If any article requires updating or correction please notate this in the comment section. Thank you. - res]


Showing posts with label TS Eliot - The Four Quartets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TS Eliot - The Four Quartets. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 28, 2022

T.S. Eliot - The Four Quartets 2 - East Coker



T.S. Eliot - The Four Quartets
East Coker

R.E. Slater, My Class Notes;
with due thanks to English Professor Michael Stevens

Please Note - These are my class notes. I am in the process of reading Eliot with the help of a quarter-term quasi-college community class. These notes might not be correct as I have written them. Please utilize the additional resources I will list here and in other parts of this poetry website as I refer to them. Thanks! - re slater



@copyright Dr. Michael Stevens - all rights reserved

@copyright Dr. Michael Stevens - all rights reserved

@copyright Dr. Michael Stevens - all rights reserved

In East Coker, Eliot reveals his cryptic inner self through his poetry. Since Burnt Norton five years have gone by without continuation of its motifs (in publication years, 1937-1942). Eliot has attempted no lyric poetry.
An Aside: The Criterion closed upon Eliot's physical and emotional exhaustion. The intensity of writing Burnt Norton had left Eliot himself as his own wasteland so that in 1939, in the build up to WW2, and in a state of despair with Society at large, Eliot required a rest of another kind. Hence his push into the literary world of publishing contemporary magazines as he wrote and lectured. By the end of Burnt Norton, it was this activity alone with managed his emotional comeback into the world of poetry:
The Criterion was a British literary magazine published from October 1922 to January 1939.[1] The Criterion (or the Criterion) was, for most of its run, a quarterly journal, although for a period in 1927–28 it was published monthly. It was created by the poet, dramatist, and literary critic T. S. Eliot who served as its editor for its entire run.[2]
Eliot's goal was to make it a literary review dedicated to the maintenance of standards and the reunification of a European intellectual community.[3] Although in a letter to a friend in 1935 George Orwell had said "for pure snootiness it beats anything I have ever seen",[4] writing in 1944 he referred to it as "possibly the best literary paper we have ever had".[5] The first issue of the magazine, of which 600 copies were printed,[6] included Eliot's The Waste Land. In its first year, it received contributions from Luigi Pirandello, Virginia Woolf, Ezra Pound, E. M. Forster, and W. B. Yeats.[7] Other contributors over the years included Wyndham Lewis, Herbert Read, John Middleton Murry, John Gould Fletcher, W. H. Auden, Stephen Spender, and Hart Crane. Nine contributions in 1924 and 1925 were made, pseudonymously, by Eliot's first wife, Vivienne Haigh-Wood,[8] who suggested the journal's name.[9] The Criterion became the first English periodical to publish Marcel Proust, Paul Valéry and Jean Cocteau.[7][10]

Lady Rothermere (Mary Lilian Share, the wife of the London newspaper magnate Harold Harmsworth, Viscount Rothermere) originally financed the journal, but on reading the first issue, she wrote three letters to Eliot criticizing it, and suggested ideas for later issues, including a story by Katherine Mansfield.[6] After four years she withdrew her support and the magazine was acquired by Eliot's employer, Faber and Gwyer Publishing (later Faber & Faber). From January 1926, when Faber became the publisher, though January 1927 the journal was titled The New Criterion. The issues from May 1927 though March 1928 were titled The Monthly Criterion.[11]

Some of Eliot's other contributions include his short story "On the Eve", commentaries, and poems, including early versions of "The Hollow Men" and "Ash Wednesday".

Together with its rival, Adelphi, edited by John Middleton Murry, it was the leading literary journal of the period.[12] While the former's definitions of literature were based on romanticism allied to liberalism and a subjective approach, Eliot used his publication for expounding his defense of classicism, tradition, and Catholicism.[7] In this contest Eliot emerged a clear victor, in the sense that in the London of the 1930s he had taken the centre of the critical stage.[13]

@copyright Dr. Michael Stevens - all rights reserved

East Coker is a small village in which Eliot discovers his ancestral home of many, many years earlier. The films, A Room with a View or I Am Home may reflect on how Eliot feels about his new discovery (though they are not his own story) and begins to reflect on "The world that was" vs "The world that is". In Eliot's words, "My beginning is my end."
Here then, surrounding Eliot, he finds a very old elm tree and reflects upon the fields and streams and woods, and how they have changed over the years; been destroyed at the village's growth; have become lost to his generation's experience of the past.

At Eliot's death, the repose he found in his connection with his descendancy in East Coker gave him a sense of peace whereby he left his corpse to be buried upon the church grounds near the ancient elm.

@copyright Dr. Michael Stevens - all rights reserved

Spunned phraseologies such as "A time for..." now leaps across the poetic page as Eliot hearkens alike with the exclamations of the Bible from Job, Proverbs, and Ecclesiastes. He sees the spectra of war as a furtherance of the cycles of death and rebirth. How that it is the linguist's duty as that of the common man him/herself, to break down cultural relics of war-mindedness and to paste back together the baggage of old wounds, of unresolved difficulties, or estrangement. These are the old foes which never die but must if humanity is to have a chance of finding the best of itself under the ruins of a fallen world.
Here, at last, is the Eliot he has been looking for... He is "this life self-contained"; a "Wastelands" of energy and hope; one who recycles again and again and again and again from pugatories of hopelessness to paradisios' of hope, fruition, completeness, wholeness... of a fellowship with the divine and eternity through the earth and its inhabitants. It is a paradise which feints in-and-out of his life, but never long, and always in a hurry. It is to this vision Eliot longs for, seeks, cries out for....
In the end, Eliot finds comfort that his place in this life is to be a warrior-hearler. One who dissents to society's many distracted wastelands and announces through his body of work himself as a healer to society's many self-inflicted, if not deadly, wounds. Though Eliot has found great disappointment with himself and those about him in this life even so he presents hope-filled actions against harm and death.

@copyright Dr. Michael Stevens - all rights reserved

@copyright Dr. Michael Stevens - all rights reserved

Literary critic David Moody says that in Eliot the world has found a new voice arising. One who is speaking from the ancient past to the world about itself foretelling its deeds and failures and pride. A voice auguring the future crying out for action to the ideals of love, goodness, fellowship, and the reunification of humanity to itself and to the creation about itself by way of forgiveness, reparation, cooperation, and community. - re slater

@copyright Dr. Michael Stevens - all rights reserved


@copyright Dr. Michael Stevens - all rights reserved

Here, Eliot speaks to the "Wisdom of Humility." That like all poets, he speaks to his Great Society's traditions in a new way. That is man's chaotic condition s/he does not need to despair but stand up! And make New Societies of hope, peace, and love against all that would ruin it, and in everyway possible, with all whom we meet.

That humility must ever be endless in itself. And that the very word itself speaks to both humiliation (despair) and hope (love). [dipthongs:  "u | uuu | u" ]

@copyright Dr. Michael Stevens - all rights reserved


Each of the four sections held with SECTION 3 are set up as rhetorical paradoxical statements utilizing late modern metaphors by exchanging one set of ideas out for another set of ideas. To Eliot, in the face of socio-politico Facism, Communism, Stalinism, Naziism, the very mottos and banners, charters and resolutions of Democracy have seem to become a frail thing. A way of living with one another which is too quickly dying on the vines of peaceful coexistence in order to bring power and wealth to a class of ambitious individuals with no designs for peace or fellowship, but of war, extermination, abandonment, and betrayal.

In contradiction to the follies of men's hearts comes Jesus' words that "To Die is to Live". Or the farmer-poet Wendell Berry who speaks to "The Way of Ignorance is the way to Humility".

@copyright Dr. Michael Stevens - all rights reserved

@copyright Dr. Michael Stevens - all rights reserved


@copyright Dr. Michael Stevens - all rights reserved



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East Coker (poem)

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East Coker is the second poem of T. S. Eliot's 1943 book Four Quartets. It was started as a way for Eliot to get back into writing poetry and was modelled after Burnt Norton. It was finished during early 1940 and printed in the UK in the Easter edition of the 1940 New English Weekly, and in the US in the May 1940 issue of Partisan Review. The title refers to a small community that was directly connected to Eliot's ancestry and was home to a church that was later to house Eliot's ashes.

The poem discusses time and disorder within nature that is the result of humanity following only science and not the divine. Leaders are described as materialistic and unable to understand reality. The only way for mankind to find salvation is through pursuing the divine by looking inwards and realizing that humanity is interconnected. Only then can people understand the universe.

Background

In 1939 T. S. Eliot thought that he would be unable to continue writing poetry. In an attempt to see if he could still, he started copying aspects of Burnt Norton and substituted another place: East Coker, a place that Eliot visited in 1937 with the St Michael's Church, where his ashes were later kept.[1] The place held a particular importance to Eliot and his family because Andrew Eliott, Eliot's ancestor, left the town to travel to America in 1669.[2] A plaque dedicated to Eliot and his ashes reads "In my beginning is my end. Of your kindness, pray for the soul of Thomas Stearns Eliot, poet. In my end is my beginning."[3]

He managed to complete two sections by February 1940, but finished the rest during that month. John Davy HaywardHerbert Read and others helped review and edit it. East Coker was published in the March 1940 New English Weekly for its Easter edition. It was later reprinted May and June,[4] and it was published on its own by Faber and Faber in September.[5] With the completion of the poem, Eliot began creating the Four Quartets as a series of four poems based on the same theme with Burnt Norton as the first in the series and East Coker as the second.[6]

Poem

East Coker is described as a poem of late summer, earth, and faith.[7] As in the other poems of the Four Quartets, each of the five sections holds a theme that is common to each of the poems: time, experience, purgation, prayer, and wholeness.[8] The time theme is stated in the first section as 'In my beginning is my end' which, given proper attention, might prove to lead into the eternal moment.

The second section discusses disorder within nature, which is opposite to the discussion of order within nature found in the second section of Burnt Norton.[9] Also, rational knowledge itself is described as being inadequate for explaining reality. Those who pursue only reason and science are ignorant. Even our progress is not progress as we continue to repeat the same errors as the past.[10]

The third section discusses the rulers of secular society and their flaws. The fourth, which is a formal section, deploys a series of Baroque paradoxes in the context of the Good Friday mass. This past manner is regarded ironically by the poet in the fifth section as he looks back on his period of experimentation in 'the years of l'entre deux guerres' as 'largely wasted'. He welcomes approaching old age as a new opportunity to find renewal, although it might only be a rediscovery of 'what has been lost and found and lost again'.

Despite the poem's doubt and darkness, a note of hope is struck by the first line of the fifth section, 'So here I am in the middle way'. This refers to the first line of Dante's Inferno, 'Midway in our life's journey, I went astray'.[11] Although the descent is predicated on going astray, so also is persevering beyond it into the light.

Themes

East Coker gives a message of hope that the English communities would survive through World War II.[12] In a letter dated 9 February 1940, Eliot stated, "We can have very little hope of contributing to any immediate social change; and we are more disposed to see our hope in modest and local beginnings, than in transforming the whole world at once... We must keep alive aspirations which can remain valid throughout the longest and darkest period of universal calamity and degradation."[13] The poem also relied on the war as a way to connect to Eliot's idea that there was a united humanity. In particular, Stephen Spender claimed that "the war modified [Eliot's] attitude by convincing him that there was a Western cause to be positively defended. And after the war there was a Germany to be brought back within the Western tradition".[14]

The poem served as a sort of opposite to the popular idea that The Waste Land served as an expression of disillusionment after World War I, even though Eliot never accepted this interpretation.[15] World War II itself has a direct mention in only a few of Eliot's writings.[16] However, World War II does affect the poem, especially with the disruption caused by the war being reflected within the poem as a disruption of nature and heaven.[9] The poem describes society in ways similar to The Waste Land, especially with its emphasis on death and dying. The place is connected to where Eliot's family originates, and, as such, is also the place where his family will symbolically end. In the second part of the poem, nature is experiencing disorder, and it is suggested that humans too may burn, and also that reason, knowledge, and science cannot save people. The errors of our past become the reasons for war and conflict and we need to become humble in order to escape the destruction. However, darkness consumes the rulers of the world and society. This is, in part, due to Adam's fall, and the resulting concept of original sin. Christ is our savior and we need to seek redemption to overcome our human failings. Eliot states that he has been involved with fighting for humanity and trying to help mankind learn what is important. Only through Christ is man able to be redeemed.[17]

In a twist from expectation, Eliot's poem suggests that old men should go out and explore. He warns that people should trade wisdom for pointless experience and argues that men should explore human experience itself. This concept is hinted of in The Waste Land and draws from the ideas within Dante's Convivio. Dante argues that old men are supposed to return to God and describes the process in a way similar to the travels of Odysseus. Unlike Homer's hero, Dante argues that men should not travel in the material world but in the spiritual world. Both Dante and Eliot put forth a similar view to St. Augustine when they focus on internal travels.[18] Through these travels, mankind is able to have faith in salvation and able to see that there is more to the world than darkness. Eliot explains within the poem that we are all interconnected through time and that we must realize this. Only through this realization is mankind able to understand the truth of the universe. This, in turn, would allow humanity to break free from the burden of time. As Russell Kirk explains: "That end, for those who apprehend a reality superior to 'birth, copulation, and death'—a reality transcending the rhythms of physical nature—is to know God and enjoy Him forever."[19]

Family and family history also play an important role in the poem. Eliot found information on his family from Sketch of the Eliot Family, which described how Eliot's family lived in East Coker for 200 years. When Andrew Eliott left, he disrupted the family history. Similarly, Eliot broke from his own family when he travelled away from his family, a family that he saw was declining. Within the poem, Eliot emphasizes the need for a journey and the need for inward change.[20]

Sources

According to Eliot the poetic aspects of the poem are grounded in the tradition of John ClevelandEdward BenlowesWilliam Blake, and William Butler Yeats's early work.[15] Additionally, many of the images are connected to the poetry of StĂ©phane MallarmĂ©.[9] In terms of theology, Eliot is orthodox in his theory and relies primarily on the writings of St Augustine. There are some additional influences from the works of Thomas Browne and Saint John of the Cross. In applying these views upon society, Eliot was heavily influenced by the writings of Christopher Dawson and Dawson's reliance on understanding God as the first step to a better society.[19]

Besides the many literary sources, Eliot also draws on his personal feelings and experience, especially on the great stress that he felt while composing the poem.[21] Similarly, Eliot used the image of pilgrims coming to America and the stories of them that were common throughout his childhood. In particular, his mother wrote poems about the pilgrims arriving in New England, and Eliot found information related to his family's history in a book called Sketch of the Eliot Family. The location, East Coker, was where Andrew Eliott, T. S. Eliot's ancestor, left when joining the pilgrimage.[22]

Part two of the poem also finds inspiration in the motto of Mary Stuart, Queen of Scots, "In my end is my beginning," which was woven on tapestries (arras) in the various residences she occupied while she lived in exile in England. Like Mary Stuart several centuries earlier, Eliot was an ex-pat poet living as a Catholic in England.

Reception

East Coker sold almost 12,000 copies during its initial publication. Eliot's response was to claim that its popularity proved that it was a bad poem. Regardless of the truthfulness of the statement, he enjoyed the fact that the poem could inspire people during the war.[15] Upon receiving an essay from a schoolboy analysing East Coker, Eliot wrote a complimentary reply, praising the boy's review despite his interpretation of the poem differing from Eliot's.[23][24] Eliot's friend, Emily Hale, liked the poem so much that she read the poem to her Smith College students "as if it were a love-letter from God".[25]

Early reviews focused on discussing the poem in terms of its content and not its style. In the Southern Review, James Johnson Sweeney, Spring 1941, and Curist Bradford, Winter 1944, discussed paraphrases of the poems[which?] and the sources of various passages.[26] However, Andrews Wanning, Spring 1941, stated that Burnt Norton was a better poem than East Coker and that "'Burnt Norton' is a poem of suggestion, 'East Coker' a poem of argument and explanation".[27] Another American critic, Delmore Schwartz, did not appreciate the tone within East Coker, especially that expressed in the fifth section.[28]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Ackroyd 1984 p. 254
  2. ^ Pinion 1986 p. 6
  3. ^ Kirk 2008 p. 250
  4. ^ Ackroyd 1984 pp. 254–255
  5. ^ Bergonzi 1972 p. 150
  6. ^ Pinion 1986 p. 219
  7. ^ Kirk 2008 p. 248
  8. ^ Bergonzi 1972 pp. 164–166
  9. Jump up to:a b c Pinion 1986 p. 223
  10. ^ Kirk 2008 pp. 250–251
  11. ^ John Ciardi's translation, New York, 1954, p.28
  12. ^ Gordon 2000 p. 353
  13. ^ Gordon 2000 qtd. p. 353
  14. ^ Bergonzi 1972 qtd p. 150
  15. Jump up to:a b c Ackroyd 1984 p. 255
  16. ^ Bergonzi 1972 p. 151
  17. ^ Kirk 2008 pp. 250–252
  18. ^ Manganiello 1989 pp. 31–33
  19. Jump up to:a b Kirk 2008 pp. 252–253
  20. ^ Gordon 2000 pp. 348–349
  21. ^ Manganiello 1989 p. 41
  22. ^ Gordon 2000 pp. 346–348
  23. ^ "UoB Calmview5: Search results"calmview.bham.ac.uk. Retrieved 2021-06-01.
  24. ^ "UoB Calmview5: Search results"calmview.bham.ac.uk. Retrieved 2021-06-01.
  25. ^ Gordon 2000 qtd p. 344
  26. ^ Grant 1997 p. 43
  27. ^ Grant 1997 qtd. p. 43
  28. ^ Grant 1997 p. 46

References

  • Ackroyd, Peter. T. S. Eliot: A Life. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1984.
  • Bergonzi, Bernard. T. S. Eliot. New York: Macmillan Company, 1972.
  • Gordon, Lyndall. T. S. Eliot: An Imperfect Life. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2000.
  • Grant, Michael. T. S. Eliot: The Critical Heritage. New York: Routledge, 1997.
  • Kirk, Russell. Eliot and His Age. Wilmington: ISA Books, 2008.
  • Manganiello, Dominic. T. S. Eliot and Dante. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1989.
  • Pinion, F. B. A T. S. Eliot Companion. London: MacMillan, 1986.