Eliot
Eliot
Eliot
Biography
Born in 1888 in Missouri, Eliot was educated at Harvard. Had a both English and European
background. He studied Dante and learned Italian, and praised him because he is the poet who
best expressed a universal situation. In France he read Bergson and Symbolists in 1910. During
WWI he settled in London were he wrote philosophical essays. He married a dancer named Vivien,
who suffered of several diseases, which put Eliot under emotional strain. All this feelings are
expressed in The Waste Land, a poetic masterpiece published in 1922 that was his only refuge
through which he expressed all of his unhappiness and horror. In 1925 he then published The
Hollow Men, a sequel to TWL’s philosophical despair.
In 1927 he became British and a classicist and joined the Church of England which was the answer
to a world lacking faith and religion. Several years later he separated from his wife, who died later
in 1947. This created a terrible sense of guilt in Eliot and unhappiness. In 30s and 40s his social
concerns grew and became more interest in theatre becoming one of the exponents of poetic
drama. In 1948 he received the Nobel Prize for Literature. He died in London in 1965.
The Conversion
Two periods:
First period: Pessimistic vision of the world; no hope, faith, ideals or values.
Second period: Purification, hope and joy are key-words.
The Burial of the Dead, the opposition between life and death.
A Game of Chess, present squalor against past splendor.
The Fire Sermon, squalid sex which represent present alienation.
Death by Water, spiritual shipwreck.
What the Thunder said, religions evoked from East and West, leading to a solution in
sympathy with other human which doesn’t change the atmosphere of desolation.
Main Theme
It is the contrast between past fertility and present spiritual sterility and chaos of the world. The
fragmentation represents decay of western civilization caused by WWI and Modernity.