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Indlæser... T.S. Eliot: A Life (1984)af Peter Ackroyd
![]() Ingen Der er ingen diskussionstråde på Snak om denne bog. ![]() ![]() T.S. Eliot was one of the great poets in the English language during the twentieth century. He grew up in St. Louis and after graduating from college, moved to England. He loved his new country so much that he eventually became a subject of the English king. He wrote noted poems and plays over his lifespan. He also worked as a banker and as an editor for a publishing firm. The author of this biography (Peter Ackroyd) is an Englishman who is one of the great historians of our time. Compared to his later writings on a multi-volume history of England, this relatively early work seems relatively superficial. It describes a poet of great emotion and depth in relatively simple terms. Perhaps this is due to Eliot’s nature, but surely some of it is due to Ackroyd’s youth. Fortunately for us, Ackroyd grew as a writer as he aged, and his writing on the history of England is simply majestic. Nonetheless, this work on Eliot was obviously written in Ackroyd’s youth. What is this book’s value? Anyone who reads Murder in the Cathedral, Notes on a Christian Culture, The Waste Land, or anything else written by T.S. Eliot will wonder what sort of a human being produced such varied and ingenious works as these. Ackroyd’s biography will elucidate such curiosities. It peaks beneath the curtain into Eliot’s personal life. It brings to light his two marriages, his friendships, his religious conversion, his love of England, and his intellectual development in stark terms. Eliot’s story is well-researched as demonstrated by the comprehensive bibliography. As told in this biography, Eliot was often asked what such-and-such a line in his poetry “meant” – as if there were some simple symbology at play. Eliot usually demurred and left the questioner wondering. Despite its shortcomings, this tale fills in some of those questions. It does not give us a definitive word on what opaque works like The Waste Land “truly mean” (if there is an answer to that question at all). Instead, it helps us see clearly the creative person behind the works, and it fulfills that job quite well. I hardly ever read poetry, but for some reason T.S. Eliot's poetry speaks to me. Perhaps it's because, like Eliot, I used to work at a bank in the City of London, and the feeling of his poems is the exact feeling I had as a 'Hollow Man' looking at the masses of other Hollow Men crossing London Bridge to the Waste Land of the City. "I had not thought death had undone so many" - lines like that just express so much for me. So I was happy to be able to borrow this biography of T.S. Eliot from my neighbours. It was quite a depressing read, but fascinating. Eliot was apparently very cold and detached from his emotions, sexually repressed, withholding of emotion, distrustful of the passionate side of him, and stuck for much of his life in a disastrous marriage with Vivien, who was perpetually ill and mentally unstable. His writing depended a lot on other literature, feeding on others' work, adapting it and using it in hiw own. "His was an imagination which went to literature for that which life could not give - a sense of order and significance, and the possibility of dramatic intensity." I was struck by how much of a record we have of people's lives and thoughts in those days, through letters and other paper archives - there's even a record of what books Eliot borrowed from his local library in 1917. Today, how much will there be for future historians to draw on? Nobody writes letters any more. Emails and blogs and websites could theoretically be retained forever, but are in practice deleted frequently. Not to mention tweets, texts, instant messages, etc. I was also interested in how small and accessible 'literary' society seemed in those days. Even before Eliot was famous, he was mixing quite easily with the likes of Ezra Pound (who mentored him and edited the Waste Land), the Woolfs, James Joyce, etc etc. Eliot came from a privileged background so clearly that was important, but I was interested in how easily he seemed to get 'in', and how everybody seemed to know everybody. His poetry was written sproadically, partly due to other commitments - his work at the bank and then as a publisher at Faber & Faber, his own poor health and that of his wife, their eventual breakup (Eliot split from her in a very cowardly way, going to America for a year and then just avoiding her when he got back to London and getting his lawyer to write to her and explain everything). For some years, there's almost nothing in the biography apart from a catalogue of worries and difficulties and ailments. His conversion to Anglo-Catholicism surprised many, given his scepticism and ironic distance from any idea. But his sister Ada thought that it was a way for him to withdraw from the world even further, seeing it as unreal and merely "acting" in it while maintaining a separate, inner world of mysticism. He was also seeking some kind of order and tradition to cling to. He became increasingly preoccupied with the absurdity of most activities and the deceitfulness of human affections. Even his writing didn't seem to give him much pleasure - in his letters there are repeated references to poetry as something dark and viscous that clogs him up and has to be evacuated. At the end of his life, however, he did seem to find happiness. He married his secretary Valerie Fletcher in 1957 and lived a simple, domestic life of semi-retirement with her until his death in 1965. After he died, Valerie said, "He felt he had paid too high a price to be a poet, that he had suffered too much." Biographies are funny things. One might think that the more charismatic the subject, the more thrilling the biography and that, vice versa, a boring subject makes for a dull read. Peter Ackroyd's biography of poet, playwright and critic Thomas Stearns Eliot is proof of the fallacy of such a conclusion. This is not to say that Eliot is a tedious subject. An intensely private man, he was a great poet and his personal life had its moments, including a penchant for wearing apple-green face paint on occasions. However, he was somewhat aloof and his day jobs of bank clerk and publisher hardly make the blood race. Ackroyd's blood races though with admiration and understanding of a great poet and a very human man, and the biographer's skill as a writer and literary critic is such that he can make the reader's pulse quicken too. Somewhat hampered by the Eliot estate's refusal to allow him to quote Eliot's works or letters, Ackroyd nonetheless manages to collect together a vast amount of information. This, together with his intelligent approach to his poetry, gives a real insight into the quiet Anglophile. Of course, much of the book is taken up with his first marriage to Vivienne but there is none of the tabloid glee that comes with minor scandals in the telling of this difficult and ultimately doomed relationship. The book is a must-read for any fan of Eliot or Ackroyd and frankly for anyone who likes a good book. Ackroyd's too good a writer to take this cheap shot, but fortunately I'm not, so I end with this comment on the death of a great artist: This is the way a life ends, not with a bang but a whisper. 2603 T. S. Eliot: A Life, by Peter Ackroyd (read 8 May 1994) This is a 1984 biography. Eliot was born in the same month as my father and died in the month before he did. Eliot led a mostly unhappy life, but my impression that he worked in a bank was correct only till the late twenties, after which he was associated with a publisher. later Faber & Faber. He at least was free from the prediliction to the silliness so prevalent in the 1930's among English writers: a blindness to Communism. This is a good book, not too abstruse.
Ackroyd as a rule effaces himself and concentrates on his difficult subject - Eliot the multiple role-player, the chilly yet much loved companion, the complaining stoic. And he very easily surpasses his predecessors in his understanding of the poems, and of the general pattern of Eliot's career as a poet - the habitual undertaking of enterprises so novel that they might never, for lack of bearings, be concluded, or could reach their maturity only through the intervention of another hand, as in the case of The Waste Land. Hæderspriser
'THIS BRILLIANT ACCOUNT OF ELIOT'S LIFE TURNS A WEALTH OF DETAILED RESEARCH INTO A FLUENT NARRATIVE THAT IS CONSISTENTLY ENGROSSING AND CONTAINS INSIGHTS INTO EVERY ASPECT OF THE MAN'S LITERARY OUTPUT' - IAN HISLOP, BOOKS & BOOKMEN 17/8/87--7000X107PX$5.95(10000X86P). B FORMAT.400PP+32PP INSET.TEXT ON TAMBELLE. No library descriptions found. |
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