The
Waste Land-T.S.Eliot.
Summary.
It's not the cheeriest
of starts, and it gets even drearier from there. The poem's speaker talks about
how spring is an awful time of year, stirring up memories of bygone days and
unfulfilled desires. Then the poem shifts into specific childhood memories of a
woman named Marie. This is followed by a description of tangled, dead trees and
land that isn't great for growing stuff. Suddenly, you're in a room with a
"clairvoyant" or spiritual medium named Madame Sosostris, who reads
you your fortune.
2.
A Game of Chess
You are transported to
the glittery room of a lavish woman, and you notice that hanging from the wall
is an image of "the change of Philomel" a woman from Greek myth
who was raped by King Tereus and then changed into a nightingale. Some
anxious person says that their nerves are bad, and asks you to stay the night.
This is followed by a couple of fragments vaguely asking you what you know and
remember. The section finishes with a scene of two women chatting and trying to
sneak in a few more drinks before closing time at the bar.
3.The
Fire Sermon
Section three opens with
a speaker who's hanging out beside London's River Thames and feeling
bad about the fact that there's no magic left in the world. The focus swoops
back to the story of Philomel for a second, then another speaker talks
about how he might have been asked for weekend of sex by a "Smyrna
merchant" . Next, you're hearing from Tiresias, a blind prophet from
myth who was turned into a woman for seven years by the goddess Hera. they
hear about a scene where a modern young man and woman both not much to look at are
having this really awful, loveless sex. Finally, you overhear someone singing a
popular song, which in the context of this poem just sounds depressing.
4.Death
By Water
In a brief scene, you
watch as a dead sailor named Phlebas decays at the bottom of the ocean, and the
poem tells you to think of this young man whenever you start feeling too proud.
5.What
the Thunder Said
Section five takes you
to a stony landscape with no water. There are two people walking, and one
notices in his peripheral vision that a third person is with them. When he
looks over, though, this other person disappears (it's like one of those
squiggly lines that dance in the corner of your eye). In a dramatic moment,
thunder cracks over the scene, and its noise seems to say three words in
Sanskrit: Datta, Dayadhvam, and Damyata, which command you to
"Give," "Sympathize," and "Control." This is
followed by a repetition of the word Shantih, which means "the peace
that passeth all understanding." After all that slogging, T.S. maybe gives
us a little hope with this final word.
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