Important Features of T.S. Eliot's Poetry
Important Features of T.S. Eliot's Poetry
Important Features of T.S. Eliot's Poetry
Eliot's Poetry
Introduction
When T.S. Eliot died, wrote Robert Giroux, "the world became a lesser
place." Certainly the most imposing poet of his time, Eliot was revered by Igor
Stravinsky "not only a great sorcerer of words but as the very key keeper of the
language." For Alfred Kazin he was "the mana known as 'T.S. Eliot', the model
poet of our time, the most cited poet and incarnation of literary correctness in
the English-speaking world." Northrop Frye simply states: "A thorough
knowledge of Eliot is compulsory for anyone interested in contemporary
literature. Eliot attracted widespread attention for his poem "The Love Song of
J. Alfred Prufrock", which was seen as a masterpiece of the Modernist
movement. It was followed by some of the best-known poems in the English
language, including The Waste Land, "The Hollow Men", "Ash Wednesday",
and Four Quartets. Important features of his poetry are as following;
4. 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 1 and by the
collapse of the British Empire. Collaging bits and pieces of dialogue, images,
scholarly ideas, foreign words, formal styles, and tones within one poetic work
was a way for Eliot to represent humanity's damaged psyche and the modern
world. Every line in The Waste Land echoes an academic work or canonical
literary text, and many lines also have long footnotes. These echoes and
references are fragments themselves, since Eliot includes only parts, rather
than whole texts from the Canon. Using these fragments, Eliot tries to highlight
recurrent themes and images in the literary tradition, as well as to place his
ideas about the contemporary state of humanity along the spectrum of
history.