The
Summary
The
final section of The Waste
Land is dramatic in both its imagery and its events. The first
half of the section builds to an apocalyptic climax, as suffering people become
"hooded hordes swarming" and the "unreal" cities of
The
scene then shifts to the Ganges, half a world away from
Form
Just
as the third section of the poem explores popular forms, such as music, the
final section of The Waste
Land moves away from more typical poetic forms to experiment with
structures normally associated with religion and philosophy. The proposition
and meditation structure of the last part of this section looks forward to the
more philosophically oriented Four Quartets, Eliot's last major work. The
reasoned, structured nature of the final stanzas comes as a relief after the
obsessively repetitive language and alliteration ("If there were water / And no rock / If there were rock / And also water...")
of the apocalyptic opening. The reader's relief at the shift in style mirrors
the physical relief brought by the rain midway through the section. Both
formally and thematically, then, this final chapter follows a pattern of
obsession and resignation. Its patterning reflects the speaker's offer at the
end to "fit you," to transform experience into poetry
("fit" is an archaic term for sections of a poem or play; here,
"fit" is used as a verb, meaning "to render into a fit," to
make into poetry).
Commentary
The
initial imagery associated with the apocalypse at this section's opening is
taken from the crucifixion of Christ. Significantly, though, Christ is not
resurrected here: we are told, "He who was living is now dead." The
rest of the first part, while making reference to contemporary events in
Release
comes not from any heroic act but from the random call of a farmyard bird. The
symbolism surrounding the Grail myth is still extant but it is empty, devoid of
people. No one comes to the ruined chapel, yet it exists regardless of who
visits it. This is a horribly sad situation: The symbols that have previously
held profound meaning still exist, yet they are unused and unusable. A flash of
light--a quick glimpse of truth and vitality, perhaps--releases the rain and
lets the poem end.
The
meditations upon the Upanishads give Eliot a chance to test the potential of
the modern world. Asking, "what have we
given?" he finds that the only time people give is in the sexual act and
that this gift is ultimately evanescent and destructive: He associates it with
spider webs and solicitors reading wills. Just as the poem's speaker fails to
find signs of giving, so too does he search in vain for acts of sympathy--the
second characteristic of "what the thunder says": He recalls
individuals so caught up in his or her own fate--each thinking only of the key
to his or her own prison--as to be oblivious to anything but "ethereal rumors" of others. The third idea expressed in the
thunder's speech--that of control--holds the most potential, although it
implies a series of domineering relationships and surrenders of the self that,
ultimately, are never realized.
Finally
Eliot turns to the Fisher King himself, still on the shore fishing. The
possibility of regeneration for the "arid plain" of society has been
long ago discarded. Instead, the king will do his best to put in order what
remains of his kingdom, and he will then surrender, although he still fails to
understand the true significance of the coming void (as implied by the phrase
"peace which passeth understanding"). The
burst of allusions at the end can be read as either a final attempt at
coherence or as a final dissolution into a world of fragments and rubbish. The
king offers some consolation: "These fragments I have shored against my
ruins," he says, suggesting that it will be possible to continue on
despite the failed redemption. It will still be possible for him, and for
Eliot, to "fit you," to create art in the face of madness. It is
important that the last words of the poem are in a non-Western language:
Although the meaning of the words themselves communicates resignation
("peace which passeth understanding"), they
invoke an alternative set of paradigms to those of the Western world; they
offer a glimpse into a culture and a value system new to us--and, thus, offer
some hope for an alternative to our own dead world.