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    The Waste Land

    Page 35
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      1764), a clergyman and poet, was noted in the eighteenth century for his

      rough satires. For Thomas Gray, see “Andrew Marvell,” n. 23, 219. William

      Cowper (1731–1800) was the author of many celebrated lyrics and a long

      poem, The Task. Oliver Goldsmith (1730–1774) was the author of The Citizen of the World (1760–1761), a fictional Chinese gentlemen’s account of English manners and mores; The Vicar of Wakefield (1766), a sentimental novel; The Deserted Village (1770), a nostalgic poem about the passing of a simpler, happier, rural past; and She Stoops to Conquer (1773), a play. All these authors, according to the book by Mark Van Doren which Eliot is reviewing, attested

      to Dryden’s importance and influence.

      5. George Crabbe (1754–1832) was a Romantic poet; Byron defended Pope and

      the eighteenth-century poets (implicitly Dryden) in his satirical poem English

      Bards and Scotch Reviewers (1809). Van Doren argues (265) that the begin-

      ning of Poe’s poem “Israfel” was influenced by Dryden.

      6. From John Dryden, The Secular Masque (1700), which treats the transition

      from one century to another (in Latin, saeculum means “century,” whence the title). Momus is reviewing the achievements of each of the gods in the last

      century:

      m o m u s : All, all, of a piece throughout;

      Pointing to Diana:

      Thy Chase had a Beast in View;

      to Mars:

      Thy Wars brought nothing about;

      to Venus:

      Thy Lovers were all untrue.

      j a n u s : ’Tis well an Old Age is out,

      c h r o n o s : And time to begin a New.

      The passage is quoted by Van Doren ( John Dryden, 189) without speech

      indications, as if it were an independent poem, and Eliot follows him.

      7. From Shelley, Hellas: A Lyrical Drama, ll. 1060–1065.

      8. The Oxford Book of English Verse, ed. Arthur Quiller-Couch (Oxford:

      2 3 6

      n o t e s t o e l i o t ’ s p r o s e , p a g e s 17 3 – 17 5

      Clarendon, 1900), 700–701. Quiller-Couch excerpts the final chorus from

      Hellas and titles it “Hellas.”

      9. [Eliot’s note:] John Dryden, by Mark Van Doren (New York: Harcourt, Brace, and Howe).

      10. “Mac Flecknoe” is a short satirical poem (217 lines) which Dryden wrote and

      published for the first time in 1682. Absalom and Achitophel, a longer work (1031 lines), he published a year earlier.

      11. Thomas Shadwell (1642?–1692) was an English dramatist and poet. His

      plays, written in the tradition of Jonson’s comedy of humours, are noted for

      realistic pictures of London life and frank, witty dialogue. They include The

      Sullen Lovers (1668), Epsom Wells (1672), and The Squire of Alsatia (1688).

      He succeeded Dryden as poet laureate in 1689. Having attacked Dryden in

      The Medal of John Bayes (1682), he was lampooned as Og in Dryden’s Absa-

      lom and Achitophel, part II, and as “T.S.” and “Sh———” in “Mac Flecknoe.”

      Elkanah Settle (1648–1724) is better known to students of music than

      of literature; he wrote the lyrics for many songs by Henry Purcell. He is

      satirized as the character Doeg in Absalom and Achitophel, part II. Shaftesbury is Anthony Ashley Cooper, first earl of Shaftesbury (1621–1683), an

      English statesman who was first a supporter and later an opponent of King

      Charles II. Initially a believer in parliamentary government, he came to

      oppose the autocratic regime of the English Commonwealth under Oliver

      Cromwell, and after Cromwell’s death in 1658 was influential in restoring

      Charles II as king of England. He became a key member of the so-called

      Cabal, an elite advisory group serving King Charles. In 1660 he was made

      privy councillor, in 1661 chancellor of the exchequer, and in 1672 earl of

      Shaftesbury. But in 1673, after the king’s brother James, duke of York, had

      publicly acknowledged his conversion to Roman Catholicism, Shaftesbury

      renounced his earlier religious toleration and supported the anti-Catholic

      Test Acts. He was dismissed from oªce and in 1678 supported the anti-

      Catholic agitation connected with the Popish Plot. As leader of the Whig

      faction in Parliament, he opposed the duke of York as heir to the throne.

      In 1681 Shaftesbury was held for treason, but was released and fled to Hol-

      land, where he died on 21 January 1683. Dryden, who himself converted to

      Catholicism, satirizes Shaftesbury in Absalom and Achitophel. George Villiers (1628–1687), the second duke of Buckingham, was a member of the Cabal

      and was made a privy councillor. He wrote a play, The Rehearsal (1671), which patronizes John Dryden. He was dismissed from oªce in 1674 on charges

      of misusing public funds, but continued to intrigue with the duke of York

      until he retired from politics in 1681. He, too, is satirized by Dryden in

      Absalom and Achitophel.

      12. Of the four lines quoted immediately below by Eliot, Dryden quotes the first

      in his “Author’s Apology for Heroic Poetry and Poetic Licence,” which pref-

      aced The State of Innocence (1677); see John Dryden, Of Dramatic Poesy and Other Critical Essays, ed. George Watson (London: J. M. Dent, 1962), vol. 1, 205.

      13. Eliot is quoting from Davideis, an unfinished epic poem on the life of David

      n o t e s t o e l i o t ’ s p r o s e , p a g e s 17 5 – 17 9

      2 3 7

      by Abraham Cowley (on him, see “Andrew Marvell,” n. 6, 217). Eliot’s

      quotation splices together lines 79–80 and 75–76.

      14. John Dryden, “Mac Flecknoe,” ll. 72–78.

      15. On François Villon, see “Andrew Marvell,” n. 38, 221.

      16. Matthew Arnold, “Thomas Gray” (1880), in The Complete Prose Works of

      Matthew Arnold, ed. R. H. Super (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press,

      1960–1977), vol. 9, English Literature and Irish Politics (1973), 202. Arnold’s passage on Dryden is quoted in Van Doren, John Dryden, the book Eliot is

      ostensibly reviewing, on 322.

      17. Walter Pater, “Style,” Appreciations: With an Essay on Style (London: Macmillan, 1899; rpt. Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1987), 7. Pater’s

      comment on Dryden is quoted by Van Doren, John Dryden, 324. For Eliot’s

      view of Pater, see “Prose and Verse,” 162.

      18. William Hazlitt, “On Dryden and Pope,” lecture IV in Lectures on the English Poets, in P. P. Howe (ed.), The Complete Works of William Hazlitt (London: J. M. Dent, 1930), vol. 6, 68.

      19. For Mallarmé see “Prose and Verse,” n. 23, 225.

      20. Pope’s “portrait of Addison” (the essayist Joseph Addison [1672–1719]) takes

      up ll. 193–214 of his “Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot” (1735).

      21. Dryden, Absalom and Achitophel, part I, ll. 156–158.

      22. Dryden, “Cymon and Iphigenia, from Bocacce,” Fables, ll. 399–408. The

      same passage is quoted, with the same punctuation that Eliot uses, in Van

      Doren, John Dryden, 213.

      23. Eliot is quoting from Dryden’s poem “Alexander’s Feast, or the Power of Mu-

      sic; an Ode in Honour of St. Cecilia’s Day,” ll. 66–68 (the entire poem is 180

      lines long). The poem, a classic representative of the ode, features a famous

      flute player named Timotheus. This passage is not quoted by Van Doren.

      24. John Milton, Paradise Lost, V, 407–413.

      25. Nathaniel Lee (c. 1653–1692) is chiefly known for having co-written Oedipus: A Tragedy (1696) and a Preface to John Dryden’s opera The State of Innocence, and Fall of Man (1677), from which Eliot is quoting
    here.

      26. John Dryden, “Author’s Apology for Heroic Poetry and Poetic Licence,”

      which served as his preface to The State of Innocence (1677); see Dryden,

      Of Dramatic Poesy and Other Critical Essays, vol. 1, 196. Eliot will next quote lines 1–6 from that opera.

      27. John Dryden, Miscellany Poems, in Two Parts: Containing New Translations of

      Virgil’s Eclogues, Ovid’s Love-Elegies, several parts of Virgil’s Aeneid, Lucretius, Theocritus, Horace etc. (London: Jacob Tonson, 1685).

      28. John Dryden, All for Love (1678), ed. N. J. Andrew (New York: Norton, 1975), II.281–291, 295–296. The play is a restaging of the Antony and Cleopatra

      story, and both passages here are addressed to Cleopatra by Antony. Neither

      is quoted by Van Doren.

      29. “The Indian Emperor must have sounded suddenly and loudly like a gong.

      Dryden broke forth in it with consummate rhetoric, consummate blu¤, and

      consummate rhyme” (Van Doren, John Dryden, 110).

      2 3 8

      n o t e s t o e l i o t ’ s p r o s e , p a g e s 18 0 – 18 3

      30. John Dryden, Aureng-Zebe (1675), ed. Frederick M. Link (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1971), II.257–267 and 272–279. The play dramatizes

      the virtuous activities of Aurengzebe, a son who defends his aging father,

      the emperor, against the intrigues of his brother and various high oªcials.

      31. Pierre Corneille (1606–1684) and Jean Racine (1639–1699) are the two

      great French tragedians of the seventeenth century, more or less contempo-

      raries of Dryden.

      32. Charles Baudelaire, ll. 21–22 of “Les Petites Vielles” (Little old women), first published in 1859 and then collected in the second edition of Les Fleurs du

      mal (1860): “Have you ever noted how some coªns of little old women /

      Are almost as small as that of a child?”

      33. Dryden, Aureng-Zebe, V.301–303. Eliot has spliced together speeches spoken by di¤erent characters:

      i n d a m o r a : His love so sought, he’s happy that he’s dead.

      O had I courage but to meet my Fate,

      That short dark passage to a future state,

      That melancholy riddle of a breath.

      n o u r m a h a l : That something, or that nothing, after death:

      Take this, and teach thy self. [ Giving a dagger. ]

      The passage is not quoted by Van Doren.

      34. John Dryden, “To the Memory of Mr. Oldham” (1684); Eliot quotes the entire

      poem.

      London Letter, July 1921

      1. Although dated July 1921 by the editors of the Dial, the essay was probably written in mid-June. On the one hand, it refers to two new ballets, Cuadro

      Flamenco and Chout, which premiered in London on 29 May and 9 June, respectively; and it refers to a photograph of Einstein which was published

      in the Daily News on 11 June (see n. 3, 239). On the other hand, it contains no reference to Le Sacre du printemps, which was first given with new choreography on 27 June. Yet Le Sacre is conspicuously mentioned in Eliot’s next London Letter, September 1921. It is reasonable to infer that the essay was

      written before Le Sacre had premiered but after the photograph of Einstein

      was published, or sometime between 11 and 27 June. On the Dial, see

      London Letter, March 1921, n. 1, 202.

      2. The Daily News, 17 June 1921, 5, col. 4: “The Drought / Lowest Rainfall for /

      35 Years / Parched Crops”:

      There was again no rain yesterday, and the drought has now lasted—

      with slight showers, which can hardly be taken into account—nearly

      five months.

      In January the fall of rain was very slightly above the average. Of the

      136 days which have elapsed since the end of the month, 89 have been

      n o t e s t o e l i o t ’ s p r o s e , p a g e 18 3

      2 3 9

      entirely rainless and of the others the total fall recorded amounts to only

      3.6 in.

      The normal figure for January to June over a long period of years is

      rather more than 11 inches. The fall this year has been slightly over six

      inches. Since September, the amount of rain which has fallen has been,

      except for two months, below the normal average of the past 35 years.

      Charles John Darling (1849–1936) was appointed a justice in October

      1897 and served until his resignation in November 1923. His reign as a

      media favorite began in 1918, when he presided over a sensational libel trial

      brought forward when the beautiful American dancer Maud Allen sued the

      Conservative MP and journalist Noel Pemberton Billing, who had charged

      her with lesbianism (part of his crusade to stop the first London production

      of Wilde’s Salomé). The trial became the most well-publicized since Wilde’s

      in 1895, and newspapers followed it obsessively. Darling was soon noted for

      his double-edged witticisms. “The Law is open to all . . . just like the doors

      of the Ritz Hotel” was only one among many. His comment that he could

      not distinguish between Albert Einstein and Jacob Epstein the sculptor is

      probably an invention of Eliot’s.

      3. Albert Einstein, returning from the United States to Germany, disembarked

      from the steamship Celtic in England on 8 June 1921. That same day he gave

      the Adamson Lecture at the University of Manchester. On 10 June he went to

      London, where he was greeted at the railway station by Lord Richard Burdon

      Haldane (1856–1928), the first viscount Cloane, a former politician who also

      had lively scientific interests. Einstein gave an address to the Royal Astro-

      nomical Society, then was taken to Burlington House to see Newton’s por-

      trait, and then to a dinner at Lord Haldane’s house with distinguished guests

      who included George Bernard Shaw, Arthur Stanley Eddington, Alfred

      North Whitehead, and the archbishop of Canterbury. Einstein resumed his

      round of appearances on Monday, 13 June: he went to Westminster Abbey,

      where he left a gift of flowers at the tomb of Isaac Newton, then to King’s

      College, where he gave a lecture that was extensively covered in the press.

      He appeared in a photograph together with Lord Haldane in the Daily News,

      11 June 1921, 5, col. 4, under the headline “Some Einstein Perplexities.”

      The caption read: “Professor Einstein, who is spending the week-end with

      Lord Haldane, enjoying a joke with his host outside his chambers in Queen

      Anne’s Gate, yesterday.”

      4. The Pons-Winnecke comet was visible from England around 17 June, and

      newspapers reported on its appearance. See the Times, 1 June 1921, 4, col. 5,

      “Stars of the Month.” A report on “the sunspots” appeared in the Daily News,

      10 June 1921, 6, col. 5, under the headline: “sunspots’ new turn. / Electrical

      Chases Round a / Discomfited World”:

      The rotation of the sun on its axis has again brought the great

      sunspot area visible, and telescopic observation shows that the titanic

      convulsion in the photosphere is still in progress.

      2 4 0

      n o t e s t o e l i o t ’ s p r o s e , p a g e s 18 3 – 18 4

      Other sunspots may appear at any time while the unrest continues,

      for the region of the sun involved is little short of 2,000,000,000

      square miles. The whole of this region, there is reason to believe, is a

      huge magnetic field, and it is continually discharging streams of elec-

      trified particles into space.

      These particles, should they come earthwar
    ds, enter the upper strata

      of the atmosphere and set free its potential electricity, which runs amok,

      as it were, round the earth, causing aurorae at both poles, upsetting the

      normal records of the instruments which record the phenomena of ter-

      restrial magnetism, and at times, as last month, rendering temporarily

      useless the world’s telegraphic systems.

      If there is a repetition of these happenings this month we may

      expect it during the next few days.

      A discovery which, in the opinion of Dr. Crommelin, of Greenwich

      Observatory, “seems to make it desirable to rediscuss the dynamics

      of the stellar system,” has just been made by Dr. Pannekoek, a Dutch

      scientist.

      He has demonstrated the existence of a gas or dust cloud to the right

      of Orion’s belt, the area of which, he says, is twenty thousand million

      times greater than that of the sun.

      “The poisonous jellyfish and Octopus at Margate” are probably Eliot’s

      inventions, reports of the sort that typically appear in what is now called

      “the silly season,” the time when Parliament is in recess, theaters have

      closed, and there is a dearth of news.

      5. On Robert Lynd, see London Letter, May 1921, n. 21, 233. It is not known

      where Lynd made the comment which Eliot attributes to him. For J. C.

      Squire, see London Letter, March 1921, n. 16, 206.

      6. The Daily News, 17 June 1921, 5, col. 7, “news in brief: A New Complaint”:

      “Many people are su¤ering from a complaint resembling influenza, due, it is

      stated, to germs being blown about in the air owing to the non-watering of

      the roads.”

      7. A strike by miners began on 1 April 1921 and lasted for four months. The

      complex negotiations between the owners and workers were closely followed

      by the press. They came back into prominence when the owners and the

      unions met on Friday, 10 June 1921. See Daily News, 10 June 1921, 1, col. 7:

      “Coal Peace in Sight? / To-Day’s Conference of Delegates.”

      8. Eliot’s sentence is a pastiche of two motifs from the Old Testament. One

      derives from the prophet Jeremiah, who repeatedly laments that the people

      of Israel “have forgotten the Lord their God” (Jeremiah 3:21), or since God

     


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