T.S. Eliot’s impersonal
conception of art and the fullest expression of his classicist attitude towards
art and poetry are essentially given by him in his essay Tradition and the
Individual Talent.
Eliot explains his theory
of impersonality by examining first, the relation of the poet to the past and
secondly, the relation of the poem to its author. According to his view the
past is never dead, it lives in the present. “No poet or no artist has his
complete meaning alone.
His significance, his appreciation is the appreciation of his relation to the dead poets and artists.” Above all, the artist or the poet has to work in the long established tradition of the literature to which he belongs. We cannot value the poet alone; we must set him for comparison and contrast among the dead poets of his language.
His significance, his appreciation is the appreciation of his relation to the dead poets and artists.” Above all, the artist or the poet has to work in the long established tradition of the literature to which he belongs. We cannot value the poet alone; we must set him for comparison and contrast among the dead poets of his language.
In the next part of the
theory he examines the relation of the poet to the poem. According to him, the
poem has no relation to the poet. The difference between the mind of a mature
poet and an immature one is that, a mature poet has more finely perfected
medium. Eliot thinks that the poet and the poem are two separate things. The
feeling or emotion or vision resulting from the poem is something different
from feeling, emotion, and vision in the mind of the poet. The art emotion is
different from personal emotion. In other words the poet should be passive and
impersonal.
To explain the theory,
Eliot has brought the analogy of chemical reaction. When oxygen and
sulphur-di-oxide are mixed in the presence of a filament of platinum, they form
sulphurus acid. This combination takes place only when platinum is presence. Platinum
is the catalyst that helps to process of chemical reaction, but it itself is apparently
unaffected. The mind of the poet is the shred of platinum. Its presence may be necessary
for partly or exclusively to operate for the combination of the experience in
order to give birth to a piece of poetry.
Eliot says that, the
business of the poet is not to find new emotions, but to use the ordinary ones
and in working them up in poetry, to express feelings which are not actual
emotions at all.
The emotion of art is impersonal.
It has its life in the poem and not in the history of poets. So, honest
criticism and sensitive appreciation is directed not upon the poet but upon the
poetry. The biography of the poet is not to be studied; the structure of the
poem and its evocation powers are important.
Edited by: Mahbub Murad. Dhaka, Bangladesh. Cell: +8801919879309, +8801761519111. Email: Mahbub_murad@yahoo.com
There is one fault other was all ur litrature was great.. and informative and more importantly in a simple language.. fault is " the combination takes place only when platinium is presence "
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