T.S. Eliot DOI: /

Similar documents
DOI: / Swift s Satires on Modernism

Seeing Film and Reading Feminist Theology

On the Familiar Essay

The Rhetoric of Religious Cults

Letters between Forster and Isherwood on Homosexuality and Literature

Human Rights Violation in Turkey

Hauntings: Psychoanalysis and Ghostly Transmissions

Educational Institutions in Horror Film

DOI: / William Corder and the Red Barn Murder

Literature and Journalism

English Renaissance Literature and Contemporary Theory

The Elegies of Ted Hughes

American Film Satire in the 1990s

Blake and Modern Literature

Imagining the Audience in Early Modern Drama,

Existentialism and Romantic Love

Romanticism, Medicine and the Natural Supernatural

DOI: / Shakespeare and Cognition

U ly s s e s E x p l a i n ed

Saturday Night Live, Hollywood Comedy, and American Culture

The New European Left

Defining Literary Criticism

JOHN XIROS COOPER is Professor of English and Associate Dean in the Faculty of Arts at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver.

EROS AND SOCRATIC POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY

British Women Writers and the Short Story,

Re-Reading Harry Potter

The Search for Selfhood in Modern Literature

Cyber Ireland. Text, Image, Culture. Claire Lynch. Brunel University London, UK

The Films of Martin Scorsese,

Eugenics and the Nature Nurture Debate in the Twentieth Century

DOI: / Open-Air Shakespeare

Britain, Europe and National Identity

Heritage, Nostalgia and Modern British Theatre

DOI: / The Rationalism of Georg Lukács

Literature and Politics in the 1620s

God and Elizabeth Bishop

Theatre, Communication, Critical Realism

Narrative Dimensions of Philosophy

Klein, Sartre and Imagination in the Films of Ingmar Bergman

The Philosophy of Friendship

Controversy in French Drama

T h e P o s t c o l o n i a l a n d Imperial Experience in American Transcendentalism

Calculating the Human

This page intentionally left blank

Marx s Discourse with Hegel

This page intentionally left blank

RESOLVING THE CYPRUS CONFLICT

Logic and the Limits of Philosophy in Kant and Hegel

Towards a Post-Modern Understanding of the Political

Readability: Text and Context

ETHEREGE & WYCHERLEY

Global Political Thinkers Series Editors:

Rock Music in Performance

Working Time, Knowledge Work and Post-Industrial Society

George Eliot: The Novels

New Formalist Criticism

The Contemporary Novel and the City

Prison Narratives from Boethius to Zana

W riting Performances

Melville and Aesthetics

Salman Rushdie and Indian Historiography

JAMES BALDWIN AND TONI MORRISON

Cultural Diplomacy in U.S.-Japanese Relations,

Death in Henry James. Andrew Cutting

A Hybrid Theory of Metaphor

Modular Narratives in Contemporary Cinema

Towards a Poetics of Literary Biography

Bret Stephens, Foreign Affairs columnist, the Wall Street Journal

Corpus Approaches to Critical Metaphor Analysis

DOI: / No Symbols Where None Intended

The Many Faces of Judge Lynch

Public Sector Organizations and Cultural Change

Feminine Subjects in Masculine Fiction

JACOBEAN POETRY AND PROSE

Postnarrativist Philosophy of Historiography

Russia s Postcolonial Identity

Industrializing Antebellum America

R e a d i n g a n d t h e B o d y

Victorian Celebrity Culture and Tennyson s Circle

Cultural Constructions of Madness in Eighteenth Century Writing

Dickens the Journalist

Descartes Philosophical Revolution: A Reassessment

Dialectics for the New Century

New Critical Essays on James Agee and Walker Evans

Transnational Activism and the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict

The Films of Wes Anderson

Women, Authorship and Literary Culture,

Migration Literature and Hybridity

Thomas Hardy, Sensationalism, and the Melodramatic Mode

British Women s Life Writing,

GRAPHING JANE AUSTEN

Performance Anxiety in Media Culture

Femininity, Time and Feminist Art

Procedural Form in Postmodern American Poetry

Star Actors in the Hollywood Renaissance

CONTESTING THE NIGERIAN STATE

T. S. ELIOT AND DANTE

Conrad s Eastern Vision

This page intentionally left blank

This page intentionally left blank

Transcription:

T.S. Eliot DOI: 10.1057/9781137444462.0001

Also by G. Douglas Atkins THE FAITH OF JOHN DRYDEN: Change and Continuity READING DECONSTRUCTION/DECONSTRUCTIVE READING WRITING AND READING DIFFERENTLY: Deconstruction and the Teaching of Composition and Literature (co-edited with Michael L. Johnson) QUESTS OF DIFFERENCE: Reading Pope s Poems SHAKESPEARE AND DECONSTRUCTION (co-edited with David M. Bergeron) CONTEMPORARY LITERARY THEORY (co-edited with Laura Morrow) GEOFFREY HARTMAN: Criticism as Answerable Style ESTRANGING THE FAMILIAR: Toward a Revitalized Critical Writing TRACING THE ESSAY: Through Experience to Truth READING ESSAYS: An Invitation ON THE FAMILIAR ESSAY: Challenging Academic Orthodoxies LITERARY PATHS TO RELIGIOUS UNDERSTANDING: Essays on Dryden, Pope, Keats, George Eliot, Joyce, T.S. Eliot, and E.B. White T.S. ELIOT AND THE ESSAY: From The Sacred Wood to Four Quartets READING T.S. ELIOT: Four Quartets and the Journey toward Understanding E.B. WHITE: The Essayist as First-Class Writer T.S. ELIOT MATERIALIZED: Literal Meaning and Embodied Truth SWIFT S SATIRES ON MODERNISM: Battlegrounds of Reading and Writing ALEXANDER POPE S CATHOLIC VISION: Slave to no sect T.S. ELIOT AND THE FAILURE TO CONNECT: Satire and Modern Misunderstandings T.S. ELIOT, LANCELOT ANDREWES, AND THE WORD: Intersections of Literature and Christianity SWIFT, JOYCE, AND THE FLIGHT FROM HOME: Quests of Transcendence and the Sin of Separation DOI: 10.1057/9781137444462.0001

T.S. Eliot: The Poet as Christian G. Douglas Atkins DOI: 10.1057/9781137444462.0001

t.s. eliot Copyright G. Douglas Atkins, 2014. Softcover reprint of the hardcover 1st edition 2014 978-1-137-44688-6 All rights reserved. First published in 2014 by PALGRAVE MACMILLAN in the United States a division of St. Martin s Press LLC, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010. Where this book is distributed in the UK, Europe and the rest of the world, this is by Palgrave Macmillan, a division of Macmillan Publishers Limited, registered in England, company number 785998, of Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire RG21 6XS. Palgrave Macmillan is the global academic imprint of the above companies and has companies and representatives throughout the world. Palgrave and Macmillan are registered trademarks in the United States, the United Kingdom, Europe and other countries. ISBN: 978 1 137 44446 2 PDF ISBN: 978-1-349-49613-6 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available from the Library of Congress. A catalogue record of the book is available from the British Library. First edition: 2014 www.palgrave.com/pivot doi: 10.1057/9781137444462

Contents Preface and Acknowledgments vi 1 Toward a full juice of meaning : Eliot s Christian Poetics in Practice 1 2 The Present Unattended: The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock and The Waste Land 23 3 For thy closer contact : Gerontion, The Hollow Men, and Ash-Wednesday: Six Poems 42 4 On Turning and Not-Turning: Ash-Wednesday: Six Poems and A Song for Simeon 55 5 The Letter, the Body, and the Spirit: Animula and Ash-Wednesday: Six Poems 69 6 The Ecstasy of Assent (and Ascent): Marina, Triumphal March, and The Cultivation of Christmas Trees 82 Bibliography 102 Index 106 DOI: 10.1057/9781137444462.0001 v

Preface and Acknowledgments I have written a good deal about Old Possum recently, revealing at least two faults: a near-obsession with the poet, the essayist, and the dramatist, and a stubborn, relentless ongoing essai to get him right. The present book follows from, without repeating or replacing, the most recent, a study of Eliot and his relation to the particular ways of both writing and reading embodied in the sermons of the seventeenth-century Anglican Divine Lancelot Andrewes. Bishop Andrewes s way of writing and reading has been succinctly described by (my fellow-eighteenth-century scholars) John Butt and Geoffrey Tillotson, introducing the Cambridge University Plain Texts edition of Andrewes s sermons on the Resurrection: Andrewes business here is exegesis. His interest lies only in the text and he does not consider his work finished until every word has directed a separate pencil of light into the heart of his subject.... It is his theme which masters Andrewes.... His style progresses with the imperturbable tattoo of a Morse signal. He escapes the muddiness of many of Donne s sermons and has no use for his ecstasies. Where everything is equally important there is no need for rhetoric. In his brilliant commentary in the 1928 book that he prefaced with the famous announcement that he was classicist in literature, royalist in politics, and anglo-catholic in religion, Eliot himself opens the way for Professors Butt and Tillotson by demonstrating in theory and practice Bishop Andrewes s squeezing and squeezing of a word until it yields a full juice of meaning which we should never vi DOI: 10.1057/9781137444462.0002

Preface and Acknowledgments vii have supposed any word to possess. Although the procedure is obviously susceptible to abuse, it constitutes the focal point of my reading of Eliot s poems. Lancelot Andrewes s writing is also the basis of Eliot s understanding of the Incarnation and of a complementary and entailed way of writing (and reading): philological, comparative, and meditative. What we might call Eliot s theology of the word becomes a theology of the Word (and perhaps vice versa). I take from Bishop Andrewes that intensely verbal concentration; from Eliot, I take the complementary comparative, or intra-textual, manner. Inter-textuality enhances the play of intra-textuality, with the result that I am constantly following Eliot s further advice and weighing one thing by another, often its apparent opposite. From Andrewes and Eliot together, then (but not necessarily in the order of my listing of debts), I take an (Incarnational) understanding, based in paradox and impossible union (Four Quartets), with which I approach the writing and the reading of poetry. Incarnation forms the thematic heart and soul as well as the structural pattern represented and dramatized in Eliot s post-conversion poems. Comparing Ash-Wednesday: Six Poems with the Ariel poems, the works in verse closest in time to Andrewes s most profound and revealing effects on Eliot s understanding and his writing opens up fresh new perspectives on the situation, burden, responsibilities, and opportunities faced by the poet who is (also) a Christian. In order to delineate and define the way of the poet writing as a Christian, I compare the new writing, post-conversion, with that done under the old dispensation, in the process discovering differences and similarities heretofore scanted in previous commentary. The complex, both/and nature of Christianity poses particular problems and difficulties for the poet at once true to his or her understanding and responsible and scrupulous as a poet and thus a steward of words. This book is, then, fundamentally about T.S. Eliot s perhaps most under-read, misread, and most challenging and demanding works, the so-called conversion poem and five Ariel Poems (counting the oftdismissed The Cultivation of Christmas Trees, included among Faber and Faber s new Ariel poems in 1954, a sort of second-coming that bookends with the story of the first coming, and the coming to it, Journey of the Magi). The present volume also engages in de-confining critical procedures by (paradoxically) returning attention to the primary units of attention, those things composed of mere letters, the literal facticity of DOI: 10.1057/9781137444462.0002

viii Preface and Acknowledgments words themselves. I subscribe completely to Old Possum s little-noticed declaration that the letter giveth life. I gratefully acknowledge my debts once more to Brigitte Shull at Palgrave Macmillan, who supports, encourages, facilitates, and opens a way; Erin Ivy, who introduced me to Palgrave Macmillan; Pam LeRow and Lori Whitten, who make my work easier; Leslie, Christopher, Kate, Oliver, Craig, and Sharon, who make me proud; and my wife Rebecca, who not only makes me proud but also makes both my work and my life easier and happier. DOI: 10.1057/9781137444462.0002