If "Cogito Ergo Sum" of René Descartes embodies the essence of unity and reasonable Descartes' meaning, T.S. Elliott's "mountain of broken statues" enthusiastically incorporates contemporary things that are scattered and alienated (post). The message conveyed by this sentence was resonating throughout the poem from that poem "The Waste Land" to the last slogan "Shantih shantih shantih". All words, phrases, sentences (or simply images) that make up this poem seem to be in the Levi-Strauss word. "Because the image of Elliot means not to use a fixed meaning, it makes me thinking reminiscent
Abandoned land, TS Eliot (1922) 1931, TS Eliot (1888-1965) wrote 434 lines of poet divided into five parts. Symbol and extensive scope After World War I, literature reproduced the sense of social, cultural and personal division suffered by civilization. This verse contrasts past ideas and moral grandness with vulgar, decadent and worthless phenomena. This poem means that modern life is a great waste of spirit. Since Elliot was first published and became one of the main metaphors of the 20th century, this term has been used in countless short stories, novels, poems, and plays. Watanabe, Silvia (1953-)
Facts about companions of American short story document, 2nd edition (literary series companion)
Elliott wrote "Wasted Land" in 1921 after he recovered from the collapse of tension. "It is considered to be the most important poem of the 20th century, and T. S. Eliot's" The Waste Land "is a kind of slope for despair and purpose of modern Western civilization. I thought Hal could move, but I think that The Waste Land is very interesting and sometimes lyrical, but I think that it is often difficult to understand. Successfully, I can not understand the passage of French and German, I feel that there is a tendency for Elliot and the editor of the book to reversibly give up.
Waste land - the last thing. If T. J. Eckleburg and his ashes sound like T. S. Eliot and his "Wildland", A + is for you: you are obviously very concerned about the English lesson. T. J. Eckleburg is a nod to Fitzgerald's modernist poet T. S. Eliot and his view on the society after the First World War is as irritable as Fitzgerald. So, what about this hypothesis? Does Fitzgerald make Elliot a Prophet of his generation? Or was he indirectly tied Elliott to Ash Valley?
Maybe he was born - Tom's family is really rich. It is not as wealthy as the family of Nick, not as wealthy as Gatsby, but they are rich and money came back. In addition, he used it as a luxury and crazy thing, like bringing a polypony yarn to the woods' lake.