Stephen Spender
"Ritualistic" is, it seems to me, the word that best describes [Eliot's]
attitude to life. He had a vision of the relationship of the living with the dead through
the patterns of rituals that extend into the modern world the pieties that remain
unaltered from the past. He thought that when these rituals were disrupted — and when, in
deed, the observance of them was not the foremost aim of the living — there would
be no connection of the living with the dead, of the present with the past.
From T.S. Eliot (New York: Viking Press, 1975): 7
J. Hillis Miller
This is the situation to which romanticism in poetry and idealism in philosophy have
brought Eliot. Each man seems destined to remain enclosed in his separate sphere, unable
to break out to external things, to other people, to an objective time and space, or to
God. All these exist, but as qualifications of the inner world which is peculiar and
private to the self.
Perhaps it will be possible to accept this situation and make a tolerable life out of
it. Instead of beating futilely against the walls of its prison, the self should turn
within, inspect the contents of inner space, and try to reduce them to harmony. Though all
things are only modes of the self they do have at least that form of existence. If they
can be put in patterned order the self, though still isolated, will be like a little world
made cunningly. A world of this sort, the universe squeezed into a ball, may not possess
God as the immanent principle of its order, but it may have that secondary form of
possession which is called resonance.
The notion of attunement is of great importance for Eliot. It is one reason why he
gives so much value to formal design. Pattern is not so much a good in itself as it is a
means of reaching the otherwise unattainable stillness at the center. The finite self is
hopelessly peripheral, but if its elements can be brought into order they may vibrate,
though at an infinite distance, in harmony with the divine pattern. This bringing into
order is Eliot’s fundamental definition of art. Though art and religion are always to be
distinguished, art is not an end in itself. It can take man only part of the way toward
salvation, but its reason for being is precisely to take him that part of the way. This it
does through an ordering of reality which leads to an artistic stillness oriented toward
the divine stillness and echoing it.
This is the meaning of Eliot’s most explicit definition of the use of art: "For it
is ultimately the function of art, in imposing a credible order upon ordinary reality, and
thereby eliciting some perception of an order in reality, to bring us to a condition of
serenity, stillness, and reconciliation; and then leave us, as Virgil left Dante, to
proceed toward a region where that guide can avail us no farther" (OPP, 94). The
passage is another version of an ambiguity basic in romanticism from Keats and Shelley to
Yeats. just as Yeats, in Ideas of Good and Evil, cannot decide whether the poet
"creates" or "reveals" his symbols, so art for Eliot imposes pattern
in order to reveal one which has been there invisibly all along. This pre-existent order
is shy to reveal itself and can be brought to light only by a created order, the
"musical design" (OPP, 80) of art. The pattern in reality may be there already,
but it is brought into being for human beings only through art. Art is the Virgil who
leads us to the borders of that realm where only Beatrice can lead us farther. Such a
notion of art as design vibrating in resonance with the divine stillness is, in
"Burnt Norton," admirably expressed in the image of the Chinese jar:
Words, after speech, reach
Into the silence. Only by the form, the pattern,
Can words or music reach
The stillness, as a Chinese jar still
Moves perpetually in its stillness.
Abandoning his impotent yearning to escape from himself, the poet turns inward to
search within his own sphere for the patterns which may grant him an indirect possession
of the divine harmony. It may be that the inner world of the isolated ego falls naturally
into orderly design.
From Poets of Reality: Six Twentieth-Century Writers. Cambridge, MA: The Belknap
Press of Harvard UP. 1965.
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