Abandoned land: Abandoned lands resembling other myths summarize the legend of the Holy Grail by maintaining the main events and not adapting them to the modern environment, not the usual order. Eliot's "From James Ceremony to Romance" wrote to Sir James Fraser and Jesse Weston (he could not delete the copy of pages 138 - 39 and 142 - 43 of that book) the debt of the book in his note It is recognized. Jessie L. Weston's assertion is that the legend of Grail is the survival record of the opening ceremony.
Kingfisher is an infertile myth, juxtaposed with many other myths and stories of the wasteland. In this myth, when a curse is placed in the king due to some sort of wound, the great kingdom will be desolate. A great hero must complete his challenge and prove his worth so that King Fisher can heal. Hero who proved his worth and accomplished that work became King of Fisher by his actions. Usually King Fisher is associated with King Arthur's legend and the pursuit of the Holy Grail. However, the actual story of King Fisher might be derived from a pagan birth ceremony or Celtic myth.
The most important similarity in the myths of King Fisher in the wasteland is the story of the death and resurrection of Christ. Through Christ's sacrifice, the world returns to spiritual affluence. After the world has witnessed atrocities and the fear of war, society needs to ensure that God is still there. In 'wasteland', Elliot showed us this desire to heal the social spirit. Elliott uses these heroes and legends to propose a mysterious journey that leads us to the kingdom of Kingfisher. All these stories are related to the sufferings of King Fisher and the resulting collapse of the land.
In his "Wastelands" note, Elliot refers to Kingfisher's myth (1969, 76 pages). In Perceval, when ChrétiendeTroyes injured his legs, the land of the king got ruined (7: 435-440). The manhood of his masculinity helps to interfere with the fertility of the land. Fischer's injured reproductive ability is a parable of the loss of life in modern life, as explained in "Wasted Land". By using such a fable Elliott tried to blame the ongoing inhumanization of the modern era. The separation that modern people experienced represents spiritual death in life.
The publication of "The Waste Land" is an important event in the development of contemporary British poetry. It contrasts the past myth with the current psychological stagnation. It has been proved to be a good tool for meditation civilization after the First World War. Eliot also fights against sin, like strengthening himself like reason and ransom