Moral Decay of World in T.S Eliot Poem, The Waste Land
Eliot’s depiction of modern life’s
vacuity is easily understandable if we can picture the time when it was
written, the post-World War I. At a time when traditional stabilities of
society, religion and culture seemed to have crashed dramatically in the hands
of ‘rapid change’ of both social and technological in every sphere of human
lives. Modernity destroyed the old order of any kind, be it social, ethical or
religious; thus made people to doubt on the previously established assumption
of self, divine, world and so on.
The poem is divided into five sections.
And each displays a bizarre, mundane and futile modern life symbolically, where
sometimes we have found direct reference to real city (London) and sometime
through rhetorical suggestion. As we explore through the poem, the mundane and
vain modern life’s imagery become evident. Starting with the section titled
‘The Burial of the Dead’ that represents a physical wasteland and the buried
human consciousness that was compared to a corpse hidden in April, ‘the
cruelest month’. The second section entitled ‘A Game of Chess’ where we
experience sexual abuse and lifeless relationship between lover and beloved,
similarly, between husband and wife. This section brings in two poles apart
scenario to show the sexual failure. The first one deals with upper class
modern carnal love, while the other one depicts lower middle class or working
class problem in terms of sexual relationship between married couples, the
third section titled ‘The Fire man Sermon’ that mainly displays human lust and
desire for sex. We have seen the prostitution just right over the Thames
River in this section. Eliot suggests that London city is burning out of lust
and desire. Eliot continues till section
fine entitled ‘What the Thunder Said’ to search out a possible solution to the
problem that modern life is affected with. During the journey up to section
five, we have been introduced with some grave predicaments of our modern life
including ignorance, sexual abuse, lust, hypocrisy, hyper-reality, the vain
purpose of life and so on.
However, Eliot presents the mundane life
of London, often depicting physical or bodily set-up. Actually, symbolically it
goes beyond portrayal and reaches the soul.
To sum up we can say that by the dawn of
the 20th century, traditional stabilities of society, religion, and
cultural seemed to have weekend, the pace of change to be accelerating. The
unsettling force of modernity profound challenged traditional way of
structuring and making sense of human experience. Because of the rapid pace of
social and technological change, because of the mass dislocation of populations
by war, empire, and economic migration; and because of the mixing in close
quarters of cultures and classes in rapidly expanding cities, modernity disrupted
the old order, upended ethical and social codes, cast into doubt previously
stable assumptions about self, community, the world and the divine.
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