hyperhello 4 days ago

The Hollow Men is from 1925. Try to read it like a beatnik poet, world-weary and confident, with finger snaps and bongo drums or a jazz orchestra in the background. Eliot was a fascinating fellow traveler person. My favorite site for his poems is here: https://mypoeticside.com/poets/t-s-eliot-poems

  • lemonberry 3 days ago

    I find conjuring my inner Maynard G. Krebs helps a lot.

    • xhkkffbf 3 days ago

      Yes, a funny character and a spot-on parody of the genre, but I found it really insightful to watch some interviews with Jack Kerouac to get a feel for his personality. It's a bit different from our rosy-eyed view of that era. He was harder and harsher than we want to imagine.

      • lemonberry 3 days ago

        Absolutely. I still enjoy his books.

  • danans 3 days ago

    Though their genres and styles were completely different, the timing of his work, its reflections on the trauma of WW1, and then his conversion to conservative Catholicism reminds me more of Tolkien.

    • dhosek 3 days ago

      He wasn’t actually Catholic-Catholic, but Anglo-Catholic, a faction within the Anglican church which revived a lot of Catholic liturgical practices without entering into communion with Rome.

  • halJordan 3 days ago

    There are recordings of TS Eliot reading this poem. So while we should imagine your desired reading for its own worth, a "beatnik" reading shouldn't be implied as the original reading

  • bryanrasmussen 3 days ago

    The beatniks were most active in the 50s, maybe as early as the mid 40s, but definitely not 1925.

  • multjoy 3 days ago

    He was also a virulent anti-semite

    • alkyon 3 days ago

      Like Wagner and lots of other artists around that time. Agatha Christie's most famous novel? - Ten Little Niggers. Jean Genet was a convicted criminal. I try to separate the work from the artist, even if it's difficult.

      • multjoy 3 days ago

        OP doesn’t even acknowledge it.

        Eliot chose, in 1948, when the Holocaust was common knowledge, to reprint a poem that contains the line:

        >On the Rialto once./The rats are underneath the piles. The jew is underneath the lot.

        That isn’t a poet following a common zeitgeist, that is a deliberate, provocative act.

        • tptacek 3 days ago

          I think it's a valid and important observation, but it's not incumbent on someone bring up T.S. Eliot to offer a disclaimer about it, and you shouldn't write a comment that implies otherwise.

    • danans 3 days ago

      Which was sadly not uncommon in those days. The Nazi party had a significant following in both the US and the UK at that time.

strken 3 days ago

Here's my favourite reading: https://youtube.com/watch?v=nwcP3NOCeiE.

  • rikroots 3 days ago

    I was going to respond saying how much I dislike the way the narrator reads the poem - like a vicar 45 minutes into an overlong Sunday sermon, as bored as the congregation - then I saw the OP article included a link to Eliot reading his own poem. And that one sounds like the vicar now entering the third hour of his overlong Sunday sermon. So I have to agree: your favourite reading is the better reading of the poem.

zabzonk 3 days ago

For those interested in Eliot, the BBC has a lot of stuff (criticism, recordings, etc.) in various places. Just search for "bbc ts eliot".

every 3 days ago

This is the poem I used for speech contests in high school...