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Eliot's Poetry T. S. Eliot
Four Quartets:
"Little Gidding"
Summary
"Little Gidding" was the last of the Quartets to be written. It appeared
in print in 1942; in 1943, the four pieces were collected and published together.
"Little Gidding," named after a 17th-century Anglican monastery renowned for its
devotion, is the place where the problems of time and human fallibility are more
or less resolved. The first section describes a sunny winter's day, where
everything is dead yet blazing with the sun's fire. The poem considers those
who have come to the monastery, who come only "to kneel / Where prayer has been
valid." It is here that man can encounter the "intersection of the timeless"
with the present moment, often by heeding the words of the dead, whose speech is
given a vitality by a burning fire. The second section opens with a lyric on
the death of the four elements (air, earth, water, and fire) that have figured
so prominently in the previous quartets. The scene then shifts to the poet
walking at dawn. He meets the ghost of some former master, whom he does not
quite recognize. The two speak, and the ghost gives the poet the burdens of
wisdom: awareness of folly, a loss of perception of beauty, and shame at one's
past deeds. The spirit tells him that only if he is "restored by ...refining
fire" will he escape these curses. The spirit then leaves him with a
benediction, and a horn blows, which may be an air-raid siren. The third
section is more propositional in nature. The poet declares that attachment,
detachment, and indifference are all related; all three look alike but
indifference comes only through the exercise of memory to create abstractions.
The second part of this section asserts that, despite this, "all shall be well."
As the poet thinks on the people who have come to Little Gidding seeking
spiritual renewal and peace, he realizes that the dead have left us only "a
symbol," one that has been perfected but is nevertheless still only a
representation or an abstraction. The fourth section is a formal two-stanza
piece describing first a dove with a tongue of fire, which both purifies and
destroys; the second stanza then considers love as the chief torment of man,
which can redeem as well as torture. Either way, we are caught between two kinds
of fire. The final section of the poem, and of the whole of the
Quartets, brings the spiritual and the aesthetic together in a final
reconciliation. Perfect language results in poetry in which every word and
every phrase is "an end and a beginning." The timeless and the time-bound are
interchangeable and in the moment, if one is in the right place, like the chapel
at Little Gidding. All will be well when the fires that both destroy and redeem
come together to form a knot and "the fire and the rose"--divine wrath and
mercy--become one.
Form
This is the most dramatic of the Four Quartets, in that it is here that
the language most closely approaches the rhythms of everyday speech. The
diction is measured, intellectual, but always self-conscious in its
repetitiveness and in the palpable presence of the speaker. Certain sections of
"Little Gidding" ("And all shall be well and / All manner of thing shall be
well") borrow from liturgical language to create the effect of attending an
ideal religious service. The fourth section, like the fourth sections of the
other quartets, is a sustained formal piece that serves as a sort of
contrapuntal melody to the rest of the poem. Although not as elegant as
"Burnt Norton" or as musical as "East Coker," "Little Gidding" is perhaps the
most balanced of the quartets in its attention to imagery and language.
Commentary
Fire and roses are the main images of this poem. Both have a double meaning.
Roses, a traditional symbol of English royalty, represent all of England, but
they also are made to stand for divine love, mercy, and the garden where the
children in "Burnt Norton" hide (they reappear at the end of this poem). Fire
is both the flame of divine harshness and the spiritual ether capable of
purifying the human soul and bringing understanding. The series of double
images creates a strong sense of paradox: Just as one seemingly cannot exist
both in and out of time, one cannot be simultaneously both purified and
destroyed.
This sense of paradox leads to the creation of an alternative world, rendered
through spiritual retreat and supernatural figures. The dead, with their words
"tongued with fire," offer an alternative set of possibilities for the poet
seeking to escape the fetters of reality. By going to a place "where prayer has
been valid," Eliot proposes that imagination and a little faith can conquer the
strictures placed upon man by time and history; as the ghost in the third
section reminds the poet, escape is always possible. This is particularly
significant when we notice that the ghost's words are actually generated by the
speaker (who "assumed a double part"), actually engaged in a dialogue with
himself. While the dead can offer us only a "symbol," symbols nevertheless give
us an opportunity for interpretation and exercise of the imagination. By
allowing us a way to bypass the realities of our world, they open up a spiritual
freedom.
This poem, finally, celebrates the ability of human vision to transcend the
apparent limitations of human mortality. In a place set away from the world,
one can hear, if one chooses, the children laughing in the garden. War,
suffering, and the modern condition have provided Eliot with an opportunity for
spiritual reflection that ultimately transcends external events and the burden
of history. While not an overtly optimistic work, "Little Gidding" and Four
Quartets as a whole offer a reasoned sense of hope. Poetry may suffer from
language's inherent lack of precision, but it provides the aesthetic faculty
with an opportunity to disregard human limitations, if only for a moment.
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