Monday, July 22, 2019

Gerontion, 1919 - T S Eliot


Gerontion, 1919
Gerontion is derived from the Greek word Geran, means little old man. The central character in the poem is a decayed old man, a suitable representative of the panorama of futility and anarchy of contemporary civilization. Originally the poem formed a part of The Waste Land, but on the suggestion of Ezra Pound it was cut out and made into a separate poem. The Epigraph comes from Shakespeare’s Measure for Measure. The Duke tells Claudio of the vanity and futility of human life and advises him to welcome death rather than avoid it. Eliot’s poem expresses the futility of the civilization which Gerontion represents.
The poem opens with a description, concrete and elaborate, of Gerontion’s situation and environment. He is an old man, being read a Samson-like, as a boy. It is a dry month and he is waiting for rain. The dryness symbolizes not only the spiritual barrenness of Gerontion but also of the civilization which he represents. He is waiting for the rain of divine grace. It is the predicament of a disbeliever whose life is devoid of faith. He is not at all a heroic figure. He has never fought in any wars ancient or modern. He is entirely unlike the great heroes who fought in the life-giving rain, heaving a cutlass. He is quite disillusioned as regards himself and the civilization which he stands for. He knows that he is, “merely a dull head among windy spaces”
The contemporary degeneration
The setting of environment of the poem is felt by assessing the standards of life of the old man.  The house he lives in is a decayed house symbolizing contemporary decay and desolation. A Jew is the owner of his house, and he squats on the window sill. Obviously, the Jew symbolizes the modern commercial civilization, and his squatting like a bird of prey, brings out the hard heartedness of money relationships. Humanity is at a discount and man is guided solely by monetary considerations. Then follow a number of images suggestive of the squalor, and seediness, decay and dissolution, and sexual degeneration of contemporary life:
The goat soughs at night in the field overhead:
Rock, mass, stonecrop, iron, merd,
The woman keeps the kitchen, makes tea,
Sneezes at evening, pocking the peevish gutter.

A general picture of ruin and loss of the zest of life is thus evoked. The goat which is symbol of potency ‘coughs’ and the woman ‘sneezes’. The use of the epithets ‘blistered’, ‘patched’ and ‘peeled’ for the jew carry the over-tone of venereal disease, and the suggestion is enforced by his being ‘spawned’ – a word suggestive of sexual promiscuity – in some low cafĂ© or brothel. He is the product of a cosmopolitan urban civilization, a suitable representative of its materialism and sexual degeneration.

Loss of Faith

In this way, the geography of the poem is consummately established. But it is a drab, impotent vista of inactivity, and the decayed and desiccated Gerontion is a suitable inhabitant of such a house, both literally and metaphorically. What is the reason for all this debasement and degeneration? It is not sexual corruption; of course sexual corruption itself is the result of some deeper malady. Under the influence of science we seek truth intellectually and demand proof for everything. The modern man required ’signs’ or ‘proofs’ before he can have faith, but when such ‘signs’ are granted, they merely evoke ‘wonder’, a secular emotion, and not faith. In this respect, the modern intellectual is no better than the Pharisees in the Bible who wanted Christ to perform a miracle – to show them a ‘sign’ or ‘proof’ – before they would have faith in him. 

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