"After such knowledge, what forgiveness?"after the knowledge that worldly caresses "Weave the wind." Something else, some love, or Love, has been neglected. Whose heart was the gerontion once "near . . . removed therefrom / To lose beauty in terror, terror in inquisition"? Was it male or female? Still in the mother's force field, in the wrath world of matter, the gerontion imagines the dead as "fractured atoms" ''whirled / Beyond the circuit of the shuddering Bear." As for Christ, his energy seems fiercely material ("Christ the tiger"). What is still missing from Eliot's spiritual exploration is an utterly incorporeal Other, a mother-free "you."
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In his greatest poem, The Waste Land , the poet finds this Other in the Eastern indifference to incarnation. The poem dedicates itself to the Om, the Eternal Silence, of the Upanishads, but chiefly by bitter negation, by portraying the human world as a tower of Babel. This required many voicesvoices too much, or too little, satisfied with themselves. It required (in both senses) a rendering of incoherence. The poem tips the reader off to its method: "Why then Ile fit you. Hieronymo's mad againe." To "fit," as Thomas Kyd's Hieronymo does, is to devise a deluding language farrago in which sinners, at first unknowing, will be trapped and killed. Eliot thus pointed to the poem's deep coherent purpose. Relatively few readers have seen this. Many speak of the poet's mere grouse against life (quoting Hieronymo Eliot on this score), not recognizing how Eliot invites their hearts to beat obedient to controlling hands, including his own.
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Here is the fullest development of his patch-and-jump cinematic method. From the first this poet, who composed in fragments, practiced an evasion of any "whole" that, like a nursing breast or beat, would ease him into being here. His instinctprotective, brilliantwas to touch and abandon. Superficially, the movement of "Prufrock" and "Gerontion" resembles that of, say, Lawrence's "Fish," but the meaning has been reverseddisjunction is brokenness, mimesis handles only wormy apples. This world is something to have done with.
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To address a few of the reasons that The Waste Land is a great poem: one is the way Eliot's typical touch-and-go movement expands here to take in a variety of countries, cityscapes, landscapes, personalities, classes, idioms, periods, texts, moods, perspectives, and levels of intensity. Nothing like this perplexed and perplexing heterogeneity had ever appeared in English. ( Ulysses , published in the same year, 1922, is perplexing but not perplexed.) The Waste Land is the great poem of the age
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