Read The Waste Land Page 33

Quincy’s essay “The English Mail-Coach.” To admirers of De Quincey this is

  his best work, an example of ornate prose of a sort that has much in com-

  mon with the prose poem as it was developing contemporaneously in France

  under the impress of Aloysius Bertrand and Baudelaire. See Collected Writ-

  ings of Thomas De Quincey, vol. 13, Tales and Prose Phantasies, 270–330.

  21. The conversation is recounted by De Quincey in a late essay entitled “Charles

  Lamb,” first published in the North British Review in 1848 and reprinted

  in Collected Writings of Thomas De Quincey, vol. 5, Biographies and Biographic Sketches, 215–258. De Quincey is explaining how much his tastes di¤ered

  from Lamb’s. While Lamb had an inborn bent toward “the natural, the

  simple, the genuine,” he was also responsive to irritating mannerisms of the

  sort used by the essayist William Hazlitt. The reason for this defect in his

  taste, De Quincey goes on, was his inability to appreciate the value of either

  music or “pomp,” the latter a term which could indicate something spurious,

  but also something genuine. “It is well to love the simple— we love it; nor

  is there any opposition at all between that and the very glory of pomp. But, as we once put the case to Lamb, if, as a musician . . . ” (235). The point

  n o t e s t o e l i o t ’ s p r o s e , p a g e s 16 3 – 16 5

  2 2 5

  of the anecdote is that simplicity alone would not be a suªcient criterion

  for reaching a decision.

  22. Three works by Edgar Allan Poe. “The Murders in the Rue Morgue” (1841) is

  the founding story of detective fiction. “Shadow—A Parable” (1835) is a brief

  account purportedly by an ancient Greek named Oinos (the word means

  “wine”), who, in biblical tones, recounts how he and six companions have

  sat beside the enshrouded corpse of one Zoilus, while outside a pestilence

  has been raging. A mysterious shadow moves and speaks to them. “The

  Assignation” (1834) tells the story of an unidentified stranger in Venice who

  poisons his beloved and then, after reciting a few lines from the “Exequy

  for His Wife” by the poet Henry King (see n. 13), commits suicide to join her

  in the afterlife.

  23. Stéphane Mallarmé (1842–1898) was perhaps the most influential French

  poet of the nineteenth century after Baudelaire, noted for his grafting of

  image on image, and allusion on suggestion—a style in which words take on

  new meanings, sentences new shapes, while rhyme and sound contribute

  still more suggestiveness.

  24. Alexandrianism, a term derived from the ancient city of Alexandria in Egypt,

  describes the lifeless formalism that was thought to typify writers and schol-

  ars under the Ptolemies, or after the golden age of ancient Greece. Georgian-

  ism is Eliot’s scathing term to describe poets who published their works

  in the Georgian Poetry collections; on these, see London Letter, March 1921, n. 15, 206.

  25. James Joyce’s Ulysses was not published until February 1922; Eliot assumes that his readers have read it as it was being published serially in the Little

  Review in New York and the Egoist in London (though the latter had a total circulation of only two hundred). In England, the Egoist had gotten only

  through the first part of the Wandering Rocks episode (episode 10 of the 18

  in Ulysses) when the journal was discontinued. In the United States, the Little Review managed to reach the thirteenth episode in its issue of October 1920

  but was legally barred from printing further issues after being convicted on

  charges of obscenity in February 1921.

  26. “The Monna Lisas of prose” refers to Walter Pater’s description of the paint-

  ing; see n. 16. For the “drums and tramplings of three conquests,” n. 12.

  “The eloquent just and mightie deaths” refers to a frequently anthologized

  passage from Sir Walter Raleigh’s Historie of the World (book V, chapter VI, the penultimate paragraph): “O eloquent, just, and mightie Death! whom

  none could advise, thou hast persuaded; what none hath dared, thou hast

  done; and whom all the world hath flattered, thou only hast cast out of the

  world and despised: thou hast drawn together all the far stretched greatness,

  all the pride, cruelty and ambition of man, and covered it all over with these

  two narrow words, Hic jacet.” Hic jacet is Latin for “Here lies.”

  2 2 6

  n o t e s t o e l i o t ’ s p r o s e , p a g e s 16 6 – 16 7

  London Letter, May 1921

  1. The essay was first published in the Dial 70, no. 6 (June 1921): 686–691.

  On the Dial generally, see London Letter, March 1921, n. 1. Writing on 21

  May to Scofield Thayer, the Dial’s editor, who was then in Berlin, Eliot noted:

  “I am glad to hear that my letter was received in time.” Given how long it

  would take for Eliot to send his essay to the Dial’s oªce in New York, for the oªce then to notify Thayer in Berlin, and for Thayer to acknowledge receipt

  to Eliot, the essay must have been posted by early May. It can be inferred that

  he wrote it sometime in late April.

  2. For this performance of Volpone, see London Letter, March 1921, n. 28, 210.

  3. “The only connection between The Phoenix and the Stage Society which I

  could ever discover lay in the fact that we used the same oªces and had the

  services of the same Secretary, Miss Alice Freedman. It is true that upon our

  first nineteen programmes appeared the legend ‘Under the Auspices of the

  Incorporated Stage Society,’ but so far as I am aware nobody attached the

  slightest meaning to the phrase, and so far from existing under the auspices,

  on Friday, 29th June, 1923, The Phoenix gave at the Regent Theatre a mati-

  née of Volpone in aid of the funds of the tottering and impoverished Incorporated Stage Society” (Montague Summers, Appendix III: The Phoenix,

  The Restoration Theatre [London: Kegan Paul, 1934], 324–325).

  4. The Daily News was founded by Charles Dickens as a Liberal rival to the

  Morning Chronicle in 1845, though Dickens retired after seventeen issues and handed over control to John Foster. In 1912 it amalgamated with the Morning

  Leader. From 1912 to 1919 the editor was Alfred George Gardiner (1865–

  1946), who brought its sales to more than 800,000 a day. He was forced to

  resign for criticizing Lloyd George (on him see London Letter, March 1921,

  n. 17, 206–207) and remaining faithful to the Asquith wing of the Liberal

  Party. The newspaper now shifted its allegiance from the Asquith liberals to

  Labour, the “Manchester School politics” noted by Eliot. The literary editor

  of the newspaper was Robert Wilson Lynd (see n. 21, 233). The Star was an

  evening paper launched by T. P. O’Connor in 1888 and edited from 1920

  to 1930 by Wilson Pope. In 1912 both the Star and the Daily News were purchased by the Cadbury family, famous makers of chocolate in England,

  who retained them until 1960, when both disappeared. On the Ebenezer

  Temperance Association, see “Andrew Marvell,” n. 11, 218.

  5. The Duchess of Malfi (1614), by John Webster (c. 1580–c. 1634), has often been deemed the greatest tragedy of the English Renaissance after Shakespeare’s. It dramatizes the story of the young and widowed duchess, who

  secretly marries her major-domo, Antonio, a marriage that enrages her

  brothers, precipitating her disappearance and his
murder. The performance

  Eliot saw, sponsored by the Phoenix Society, was performed at the Lyric

  Theatre, Hammersmith, on 23 and 24 November 1919. The producer was

  Allan Wade. The cast: the Duchess of Malfi, Cathleen Nesbitt; Ferdinand,

  Robert Farquharson; Bosola, William J. Rea; the Cardinal, Ion Swinley; Julia,

  Edith Evans; Cariola, Florence Huckton; Antonio, Nicholas Hannan. William

  n o t e s t o e l i o t ’ s p r o s e , p a g e 16 7

  2 2 7

  Archer (1856–1924) was the most influential drama critic of the New Drama

  movement in the 1890s and a translator of Ibsen. He considered the period

  between the Puritans’ closing of the theaters in 1642 and the creation of the

  New Drama to have been the dark ages of drama. His review of The Duchess

  of Malfi appeared in the Star, 25 November 1919, 3, col. 5, under the headline: “phoenix society. / ‘The Duchess of Malfy’ [ sic] in an / Elizabethan

  Setting”:

  The Phoenix Society, an o¤shoot of the Stage Society, which pro-

  poses to deal in Elizabethan and Restoration plays, opened its activities

  yesterday at the Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith, with a performance of

  Webster’s “The Duchess of Malfy” [ sic].

  From the time of Charles Lamb onward, critics have vied with each

  other in lauding this farrago of horrors as a masterpiece only inferior to

  Shakespeare’s greatest work. That it contains some passages of beautiful

  writing no one would deny; but that is not to say that it is either a great

  work of imagination or a good piece of dramatic craftsmanship. It is

  shambling and ill-composed; its horrors, besides being exaggerated be-

  yond all measure, are mechanical and tricky; and its style, even in the

  most admired passages, is marked by a sort of funereal a¤ectation

  which places it immeasurably below that Shakespearean level to which

  fanaticism seeks to raise it.

  f i n e s t a g e s e t t i n g .

  For one thing the Phoenix Society deserves great praise. It has commis-

  sioned Mr. Norman Wilkinson to design a setting, which is by far the

  best reproduction of an Elizabethan stage as yet seen in England, or

  (so far as I know) anywhere else. Certain questions of proportion apart,

  the middle curtain was the only serious departure from the Elizabethan

  model; and, as no pretence was made to accuracy, it would be pedantic

  to object to this concession to modern convenience.

  The treatment of the text is a di¤erent matter. The producer (Mr.

  Allan Wade) had the good sense to cut out several pages of the most ob-

  viously dead matter, and might well have cut more, for the performance

  lasted three solid hours, with only one brief intermission. But why did

  he cut the most famous and beautiful lines in the play:—

  Of what is’t fools make such vain keeping?

  Sin their conception, their birth weeping,

  Their life a general mist of error,

  Their death a hideous storm of terror.

  And why did two of the Duchess’s most natural and tragic lines

  disappear:—

  I am acquainted with sad misery

  As the tann’d galley-slave is with his oar.

  2 2 8

  n o t e s t o e l i o t ’ s p r o s e , p a g e 16 7

  On the other hand, the coarse language of the text was sedulously

  retained, all except one very gross indecency. Let us be thankful for that

  small mercy.

  a c t i n g t h e m a d m a n .

  Of the acting it is diªcult to speak, for where almost everything is un-

  natural, there is no sure criterion of merit. Miss Cathleen Nesbit made

  a beautiful and touching Duchess, without rising to any great tragic

  height. Mr. Robert Farquharson (rightly, no doubt) presented Ferdinand

  as a madman from the first, and threw great conviction into his ravings.

  It seemed to me painful and intolerable stu¤; but whether any setting

  could have rendered it acceptable I am more than doubtful.

  Mr. Farquharson enlivened the gloomy proceedings by dying “on his

  head,” with his heels in air—a position which he retained for several

  minutes, at imminent risk of apoplexy. “C’est magnifique, mais ce n’est

  pas l’art.”

  “ a l o a t h s o m e e p i s o d e . ”

  Mr. William J. Rea—a Bosola with a brogue—gave a very clever and

  e¤ective performance of that curiously ill-drawn villain. Good work was

  done by Mr. Ian Swinley as the Cardinal, by Miss Florence Huckton as

  Cariola, and by Miss Edith Evans as Julia. Surely the loathsome episode

  of the madmen might have been spared us. It was humiliating to see an

  audience of educated men and women solemnly a¤ecting to find artistic

  enjoyment in such barbarous tomfoolery. The company was loudly

  applauded at the end, as their hard work deserved, but the attempts at

  applause during the course of the action were very half-hearted.

  Another review of The Duchess of Malfi, this one by “K. A. N.,” appeared

  in the Daily News, 25 November 1919, 7, col. 7, under the headline: “an

  elizabethan / melodrama. / Wholesale Butchery in / ‘Duchess of Malfi.’ /

  funnier than farce”:

  Did Elizabethan playgoers look on the madness in “The Duchess

  of Malfi” as comic-relief or were they made cold with fear, as Ferdinand

  hoped his sister would be? Wholesale butchery on the stage (all the

  principal characters but one meet with violent deaths) was, we know,

  considered impressive. To moderns it is funnier than many intentional

  scenes of fun in musical comedy and farce. As a matter of fact, Webster

  quite spoiled his play by seeking to be in the fashion.

  His characters are of some interest. The Duchess herself, with her

  courage and independence; her choleric brother, the Duke; her lover,

  Antonio, an upright, ordinary man; the shameless hussy, Julia; and,

  above all, Daniel de Bosola, the soldier of fortune who plays the villain

  in private solely for professional ends and against the grain, a telling

  satire of the soldier’s and politician’s trade—all have points of interest

  n o t e s t o e l i o t ’ s p r o s e , p a g e 16 7

  2 2 9

  and occasional vitality. They become puppets merely to suit the drama-

  tist’s conduct of his plot. The drama is not made by the characters: they

  are stretched on the Procrustean bed of theatrical necessity. The con-

  duct of the scenes is arbitrary, and in spite of some fine lines here and

  there, generally inspired by Shakespeare, Webster showed himself

  yesterday afternoon at the Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith, to have been

  a poor tragic poet, but with considerable talent as a writer of comedy.

  t e s t o f p e r f o r m a n c e

  The Phoenix Society is to be thanked for having produced “The Duchess

  of Malfi,” for its performance will bring home to playgoers the hollow-

  ness of the old, uncritical praise of the great Elizabethan dramatists.

  Charles Lamb’s gentle enthusiasm and Swinburne’s boisterous pane-

  gyrics have made a legend of Elizabethan drama not founded on fact, as

  most critical students have known for a long time. It is time this drama

  were put to the test of performance.

  Although not perfect, the representati
on of “The Duchess of Malfi”

  was good enough in a general way. Miss Cathleen Nesbitt was, perhaps,

  a little lacking in tragic grip, but she made a very sympathetic and hand-

  some figure of the Duchess, and displayed a power for which her work

  in the past, good as it has been, had not prepared us. Mr. Nicholas Han-

  nan as the upright Antonio was excellent, but Mr. Robert Farquharson’s

  Duke hovered too often on the verge of the ludicrous.

  t h e d u k e

  “A most perverse and turbulent nature,” the Duke hoped to have gained

  an infinite mass of treasure by his sister’s death had she continued a

  widow. Ferdinand was not a modern decadent gloating over crime and

  bloodshed, as Mr. Farquharson attempted to make him. Nor was Bosola

  the croaking bu¤oon that Mr. William J. Rea presented. He would not

  have deceived anyone for a moment. Bosola is a cynic and a hater of the

  deeds he performs professionally. He is also the author’s chorus, and in

  person was a soldier with the temperament of Shakespeare’s Jacques.

  Mr. Norman Wilkinson’s setting was e¤ective as a background, only

  I thought the brilliant red railings of a balcony made a frieze that upset

  the e¤ect of Mr. Tom Heslewood’s dresses. Mr. Allan Wade produced

  the play with skill, but the incident of the Duchess grasping a dead

  hand, thinking it her husband’s, was badly managed, and her murder

  was not very impressive.

  Eliot himself also wrote a review of the performance, and he especially

  liked “the incident of the Duchess grasping a dead hand, thinking it her

  husband’s.” It was “extraordinarily fine,” he wrote, because “here the actors

  were held in check by violent situations which nothing in their previous

  repertory could teach them to distort. Here,” he summarized, “the play

  2 3 0

  n o t e s t o e l i o t ’ s p r o s e , p a g e 16 7

  itself got through, magnificently, unique” (“‘The Duchess of Malfi’ at the

  Lyric; and Poetic Drama,” Art and Letters 3.1 [Winter (1919)/1920]: 36–39,

  here 37).

  6. Sir Leo Money Chiozza Money (1870–1944) was a statistician and politician.

  Born in Genoa, he moved to London when young and in 1903 adopted his

  additional surname. From 1898 to 1903 he was the editor of Commercial In-

  telligence. In 1906 he was elected Member of Parliament for North Padding-