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Dryness and Spiritual Decay in The Waste Land

2023-05-07 22:48:21

Dry land and spiritual decay T. Elliot uses his apocalyptic poem as a "waste land" to contrast clearly with previous fertile implications with modern drought and unconscious images. Elliott's words detail in detail the fragile era of war's body and sex, spiritual fragmentation, cultural collapse, dryness and dustiness. He stated that King Fisher and the mysterious vegetation ritual meant that the world of the 20th century needed a quest to irrigate the land. "Waste land" refuses to provide a simple solution; the attributes of the language help to create ambiguous stories and conclusions, which are fragmented as confusingly as the Elliott era itself.

Love and sex in wasteland are one of the theme of this poem. Eliot Abandoned Land Papers] Electronic resources for research in the 19th century Electronic resources (and humanities) in the research of the 19th century are now best explained by commitment and danger. As we all know, I will say "this moment" because any description on today's real electronic text may be fake tomorrow. As we know, electronic media is a miracle that I dreamed about five years ago, and the fact that the numbers and types are almost inexhaustible is possibly related directly to the world. Colleagues and scholars, content, contextual, hyperlinked materials are leading to most eye-opener information.

T. Elliot portrayed him in the "great nature" of the ridiculous land of the Western countries in the 1920s. However, in the 21st century, all common mobile technologies pushed this mental disorientation to a higher level. Modern people bury their heads on smartphones when they are furiously demanding something stimulating their senses. In the process of consumption stimulated by stimulants, they lose their reproductive ability and can not think or create themselves. In this respect, the term "wasteland" seems better for modern people.

To prove the process of this change let's take the first literary text - "malaria" mentioned in the autobiographical theme of "wasteland" as an example. A passage of "Wasted Land" was rehearsed from autobiography and fused with Eliot's own way of debating the drought in the wasteland of the title of the poem. As I said, the content of the content described in the Earl's autobiography has been changed only by fusion with Elliott's legend - it's the background and meaning of the Earl's story about her noble lifestyle I changed. It is a symptom of moral and spiritual drought of modern civilization. The same remediation process due to line collapse also applies to the use of citations as literary implications of Eliot.