Monday 12 November 2012

George Orwell on the Religious Emphasis of Eliot's "Four Quartets"

I've just been doing a little bit of work on T.S. Eliot's "Four Quartets" for an online learning module, and have realized that this long sequence of poems fills me with a certain ambivalence about its poetic "quality." On the one hand, I think it's the most beautiful thing Eliot ever wrote; on the other, I think that the thing is really prosaic and (as Eliot himself feared) hastily written compared to his earlier stuff. Maybe the whole thing wants the intervention of Ezra Pound's red pen...

In any case, I came across the following review that George Orwell wrote about the first three poems in "Four Quartets," and can honestly say that this guy is a genius when it comes to articulating some of the things I feel about Eliot's work. I think this is a piece of great criticism, and just wanted to share it:

http://georgeorwellnovels.com/reviews/burnt-norton-east-coker-the-dry-salvages-by-t-s-eliot/


6 comments:

  1. Thank you so much for sharing this!

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  2. Happy to do it! I find it's a very interesting piece of writing.

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  3. The supplied link to this essay no longer works. The only copy I have been unable to unearth is part of a longer PDF, here: http://t2mh.com/world/orwell/Essay%20-%20Orwell,%20George%20-%20Collected%20Essays%201940-1943.pdf

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  4. Today, !7 August 2017, I came across your site as a result of trying to track down a George Orwell quote about Eliot.

    I have to say, as much as I adore Eliot, you are right about the questionable or ambivalent quality of Four Quartets, a poem I still admire. I, too, have often thought what if Pound had been around: he could have done for Four Quartets what he did for The Wasteland!!

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  5. For myself personally, I ultimately took on the viewpoint taught by Buddha to believe nothing until you have experienced it and found it to be true.eyeofthepsychic.com

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  6. I have listened to Alec Guinness reading 'Four Quartets' over and over again and I remain fascinated and perplexed in equal measure. Orwell is always the person I turn to when I need to know what to think about something and when I found he had written a review of 3 of the Four Quartets I was thrilled. However, after scouring the internet for it and not finding it in my copy of Orwell's Essays either I'm now at a loss. Even Amazon doesn't have it, at least not in any of the Kindle editions. Neither of the two links in the comments section work. Any other ideas?

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