РефератыИностранный языкThThe Wasteland Essay Research Paper Ceremonies are

The Wasteland Essay Research Paper Ceremonies are

The Wasteland Essay, Research Paper


Ceremonies are prevalent throughout T.S. Eliot?s poem “The


Waste Land”. Eliot relies on literary contrasts to illustrate the


specific values of meaningful, effectual rituals of primitive society


in contrast to the meaningless, broken, sham rituals of the modern


day. These contrasts serve to show how ceremonies can become broken


when they are missing vital components, or they are overloaded with


too many. Even the way language is used in the poem furthers the


point of ceremonies, both broken and not. In section V of The Waste


Land, Eliot writes,


“After the torchlight red on sweaty faces


After the frosty silence in the gardens


After the agony in stony places


The shouting and the crying


Prison and palace and reverberation


Of thunder of spring over distant mountains


He who was living is now dead” (ll. 322-328).


The imagery of a primal ceremony is evident in this passage. The last


line of “He who was living is now dead” shows the passing of the


primal ceremony; the connection to it that was once viable is now


dead. The language used to describe the event is very rich and vivid:


red, sweaty, stony. These words evoke an event that is without the


cares of modern life- it is primal and hot. A couple of lines later


Eliot talks of “red sullen faces sneer and snarl/ From doors of


mudcracked houses” (ll. 344-345). These lines too seem to contain


language that has a primal quality to it.


From the primal roots of ceremony Eliot shows us the contrast


of broken ceremonies. Some of these ceremonies are broken because


they are lacking vital components. A major ceremony in The Waste Land


is that of sex. The ceremony of sex is broken, however, because it is


missing components of love and consent. An example of this appears in


section II, lines 99-100, “The change of Philomel, by the barbarous


king/ So rudely forced”; this is referring to the rape of Philomel by


King Tereus of Thrace. The forcing of sex on an unwilling partner


breaks the entire ceremony of sex.


Rape is not the only way a broken sex ceremony can take place.


The broken ceremony can also occur when there is a lack of love, as


shown in lines 222-256. This passage describes a scene between “the


typist” and “the young man carbuncular”. What passes between these


two individuals is a sex ceremony that is devoid of love and emotion


(except for, perhaps, the emotion of lust on the part of the young


man). The typist is indifferent to the whole event and the young


man?s “vanity requires no response” (l. 241). For a ceremony to be


effective, the participants have to have some degree of faith in what


they are doing. They must believe that the ceremony will result in


something worthwhile. The participants in this broken ceremony had no


faith in what they were doing; they were just going through the


motions. This is made obvious when the secretary says “?Well now


that?s done: and I?m glad it?s over.?” (l. 252).


Another way that broken ceremonies (broken due to lack of


components) are presented in the poem, are ceremonies of nature. It


seems as though the waste land is always waiting for the ceremony of


rain, the bringing of water, to the dry land. For most of the poem


the water never arrives because there is always something missing. In


lines 331 and 332 Eliot says, “Here is no water but only rock/ Rock


and no water”. In line 342 there is, “dry sterile thunder without


rain”. The lack of water in ceremonies of nature that require it,


lead to a broken ceremony.. Even at the beginning of the poem Eliot


tells

us that we, “know only/ A heap of broken images, where the sun


beats,/ And the dead tree gives no shelter, the cricket no relief,/


And the dry stone no sound of water.” (ll. 21-24). Clearly this is


wrong, and this lack of water is a main theme, and a main broken


ceremony in The Waste Land.


Conversely, ceremonies can also be broken when there are too


many components in the ceremony, a something extra that serves to


break them. In The Waste Land this is demonstrated by the presence of


a third person in a ceremony that should contain only two. In lines


139-166, Eliot presents a scene with “one too many”. A husband


(Albert) and a wife (Lil) are about to be reunited after Albert?s four


year absence. What should be a happy reunion ceremony is broken by


the intrusion of a third person- Lil?s “friend”. She belittles Lil


and then threatens her by saying, “And if you don?t give it [a good


time] to him, there?s others will, I said./ Oh is there, she said.


Something o?that, I said./ Then I?ll know who to thank, she said, and


gave me a straight look.” (ll. 149-151).


For a true bond occur in a relationship there must be a true


connection between two people. If one of the people in the


relationship is cheating on the other, this is another example of a


third person breaking a two person ceremony. In lines 360-366, Eliot


writes,


“Who is the third who walks always beside you?


When I count, there are only you and I together


But when I look ahead up the white road


There is always another one walking beside you


Gliding wrapt in a brown mantle, hooded


I do now know whether a man or a woman


-But who is that on the other side of you?


This passage shows a relationship between two people. One of them


sees a third party. It is unknown if this is actually another person


(as in the case of unfaithfulness) or if it is a secret “wrapt in a


brown mantle, hooded” that is manifesting itself as an intruder on the


walking couple. Whatever it is, it is breaking the ceremony of the


relationship and obviously bothers the speaker who mentions “the other


walking beside you” three times in just seven lines.


Language is very important in the genre of poetry and Eliot


makes good use of it to show components of ceremonies. The way the


language is used in the poem creates broken parts everywhere in the


poem. Eliot?s use of anaphora is reminiscent of the chant that often


accompanies religious ceremonies. The repeating in lines 121-122 (Do


you know nothing? Do you see nothing? Do you remember nothing?) is


like a catechism in form. Lines 322-324 (After the…After


the…After the…) also further the ritualistic, ceremonious feeling


of the poem. The analectic style that Eliot employs gives the poem a


disjointed, broken feeling, almost as if the whole poem is a ceremony,


and all of the analects are little cracks in what is ultimately


broken. The fragmented use of allusions, combined with the foreign


languages and different speakers, help establish the “unwhole” feeling


of the poem. Eliot shows the dry, cracked waste land, but in the


ending of the poem he gives us hope with the ritualistic chant of,


“Shantih shantih shantih” (l. 434) which translates (according to the


notes) as The Peace which passeth understanding.


Ceremonies are prevalent throughout T.S. Eliot?s poem The


Waste Land. The contrast between rituals that contain too little and


rituals that contain too much show just how broken the waste land is.


The actual literary tools that Eliot uses helps give the poem an


apparent broken feel.


Bibliography


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