T. S. Elliott's "Abandoned Land" T. S. Elliott's "Abandoned Land" has many images of the way he uses it. In 386 - 399, he wrote: Under this faint moonlight, in the rotten hole of the mountain grass tipped the grave in the song, and the sky around the church There was a chapel. There is no window, the door shakes, and the dry bone gives injury to everyone. There was only one cock standing on the roof Co Co rico co co rico lightning bolt.
T. Elliott's "The Waste Land" (1922) is a complex intensive poem with many literary suggestions to solve the mental crisis caused by modernity. Oxford's British literary colleagues describe Eliot's poetry as "satire, proposal, cosmopolitanism, sometimes lyricism and elegy." 1 The British poet Clay Grain wrote as follows. His reputation is notorious for their indomitable rationality and their artistic difficulty "Other famous examples of poetry are" magical journey "," ash Wednesday "," quartet "and so on.
It was very unlucky to be released in the same year as T.S. Elliot 's "The Waste Land", Frost' s Sonnets "Design" has been successful in recent years. Like its Elliot, its reputation has grown to such an extent that it is now regarded as one of the most explosive poetic remarks of the dark metaphysics of this century. In fact, the historical "design" is based on the vision of "wasteland" and Herman Melville's idea in the chapter "Whiteness of whales" by Moby-Dick (1851). In the paradigm, "design" expresses the fear of causing confusion reacting to the following evidence: (1) it continues to exist without supporting the design and ultimate objectives, (2) the existence of humans is one influence There is no natural evil design to be alleviated. In detail, this poem seems to support these two supplementary explanations.
William Carlos Williams' reaction to T. S. is almost obvious. Eliot's "Wasteland" which is often called "By The Road" and finally "Spring And All" is a response to Eliot and can be considered as a past proverb (Frye). People can almost see the concept of "Spring And All" popping out of the head and paper of Williams immediately after reading Elliot's "The Waste Land" at The Spring. If you like, lyrical poetic Heavyweight will be on stage. The response to the pessimistic and thoroughly questioning picture that Williams tried to portray is a very necessary second angle.