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Opinion

TS Eliot’s masterpiece reflected darkness that led to the Shoah

Published a hundred years ago this month, ‘The Wasteland’ expressed an uncanny movement of literary bleakness

December 16, 2022 15:20
Thomas Stearns Eliot by Lady Ottoline Morrell (1934)
5 min read

TS Eliot’s The Waste Land was published 100 years ago this month, in the bleakness that followed WWI. It is one of a number of works of literature of the period that stare into the abyss while seeking out meaning; in this, they can be held to prefigure the devastation of the Holocaust.

Eliot, who was famously antisemitic, draws on a scholarly range of ancient sources, including the Hebrew Bible, to portray the cultural fragmentation which led to the rise of fascism and the Shoah.

In a despair-ridden search for meaning amid breakdown, Eliot alludes to the fierce diatribes of prophets such as Isaiah, Jeremiah and Ezekiel against their idolatrous people in lines such as these:

“What are the roots that clutch, what branches grow
Out of this stony rubbish? Son of man,
You cannot say, or guess, for you know only
A heap of broken images, where the sun beats,
And the dead tree gives no shelter, the cricket no relief,
And the dry stone no sound of water.”

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Topics:

Literature