Presentation Speech by Anders Österling, Permanent Secretary of the Swedish Academy
In the impressive succession of Nobel Prize
winners in Literature, T.S. Eliot marks a departure from the type
of writer that has most frequently gained that distinction. The
majority have been representatives of a literature which seeks
its natural contacts in the public consciousness, and which, to
attain this goal, avails itself of the media lying more or less
ready at hand. This year's Prize winner has chosen to take
another path. His career is remarkable in that, from an extremely
exclusive and consciously isolated position, he has gradually
come to exercise a very far-reaching influence. At the outset he
appeared to address himself to but a small circle of initiates,
but this circle slowly widened, without his appearing to will it
himself. Thus in Eliot's verse and prose there was quite a
special accent, which compelled attention just in our own time, a
capacity to cut into the consciousness of our generation with the
sharpness of a diamond.
In one of his essays Eliot himself has advanced, as a purely
objective and quite uncategorical assumption, that poets in our
present civilization have to be difficult to approach. «Our
civilization», he says, «comprehends great variety and
complexity, and this variety and complexity, playing upon a
refined sensibility, must produce various and complex results.
The poet must become more and more comprehensive, more allusive,
more indirect, in order to force, to dislocate if necessary,
language into his meaning.»
Against the background of such a pronouncement, we may test his
results and learn to understand the importance of his
contribution. The effort is worth-while. Eliot first gained his
reputation as the result of his magnificent experiment in poetry,
The Waste Land, which appeared in 1922 and then seemed
bewildering in several ways, due to its complicated symbolic
language, its mosaic-like technique, and its apparatus of erudite
allusion. It may be recalled that this work appeared in the same
year as another pioneer work, which had a still more sensational
effect on modern literature, the much discussed Ulysses,
from the hand of an Irishman, James Joyce. The parallel is by no
means fortuitous, for these products of the nineteen-twenties are
closely akin to one another, in both spirit and mode of
composition.
The Waste Land - a title whose terrifying import no one
can help feeling, when the difficult and masterly word-pattern
has finally yielded up its secrets. The melancholy and sombre
rhapsody aims at describing the aridity and impotence of modern
civilization, in a series of sometimes realistic and sometimes
mythological episodes, whose perspectives impinge on each other
with an indescribable total effect. The cycle of poems consists
of 436 lines, but actually it contains more than a packed novel
of as many pages. The Waste Land now lies a quarter of a
century back in time, but unfortunately it has proved that its
catastrophic visions still have undiminished actuality in the
shadow of the atomic age.
Since then Eliot has passed on to a series of poetic creations of
the same brilliant concentration, in pursuance of the agonized,
salvation-seeking main theme. The horror vacui of modern
man in a secularized world, without order, meaning, or beauty,
here stands out with poignant sincerity. In his latest work,
Four Quartets (1943), Eliot has arrived at a meditative
music of words, with almost liturgical refrains and fine, exact
expressions of his spiritual experiences. The transcendental
superstructure rises ever clearer in his world picture. At the
same time a manifest striving after a positive, guiding message
emerges in his dramatic art, especially in the mighty historical
play about Thomas of Canterbury, Murder in the Cathedral
(1935), but also in The Family Reunion (1939), which is a
bold attempt to combine such different conceptions as the
Christian dogma of original sin and the classical Greek myths of
fate, in an entirely modern environment, with the scene laid in a
country house in northern England.
The purely poetical part of Eliot's work is not quantitatively
great, but as it now stands out against the horizon, it rises
from the ocean like a rocky peak and indisputably forms a
landmark, sometimes assuming the mystic contours of a cathedral.
It is poetry impressed with the stamp of strict responsibility
and extraordinary self-discipline, remote from all emotional
clichés, concentrated entirely on essential things, stark,
granitic, and unadorned, but from time to time illuminated by a
sudden ray from the timeless space of miracles and
revelations.
Insight into Eliot must always present certain problems to be
overcome, obstacles which are at the same time stimulating. It
may appear to be contradictory to say that this radical pioneer
of form, the initiator of a whole revolution in style within
present-day poetry, is at the same time a coldly reasoning,
logically subtle theorist, who never wearies of defending
historical perspectives and the necessity of fixed norms for our
existence. As early as the 1940's, he had become a convinced
supporter of the Anglican Church in religion and of classicism in
literature. In view of this philosophy of life, which implies a
consistent return to ideals standardized by age, it might seem
that his modernistic practice would dash with his traditional
theory. But this is hardly the case. Rather, in his capacity as
an author, he has uninterruptedly and with varying success worked
to bridge this chasm, the existence of which he must be fully and
perhaps painfully conscious. His earliest poetry, so convulsively
disintegrated, so studiously aggressive in its whole technical
form, can finally also be apprehended as a negative expression of
a mentality which aims at higher and purer realities and must
first free itsef of abhorrence and cynicism. In other words, his
revolt is that of the Christian poet. It should also be observed
in this connection that, on the whole, Eliot is careful not to
magnify the power of poetry in relation to that of religion. In
one place, where he wishes to point out what poetry can really
accomplish for our inner life, he does so with great caution and
reserve: «It may make us from time to time a little more
aware of the deeper, unnamed feelings which form the substratum
of our being, to which we rarely penetrate; for our lives are
mostly a constant evasion of ourselves.»
Thus, if it can be said with some justification that Eliot's
philosophical position is based on nothing but tradition, it
ought nevertheless to be borne in mind that he constantly points
out how generally that word has been misused in today's debates.
The word «tradition» itself implies movement, something
which cannot be static, something which is constantly handed on
and assimilated. In the poetic tradition, too, this living
principle prevails. The existing monuments of literature form an
idealistic order, but this is slightly modified every time a new
work is added to the series. Proportions and values are
unceasingly changing. Just as the old directs the new, this in
its turn directs the old, and the poet who realizes this must
also realize the scope of his difficulties and his
responsibility.
Externally, too, the now sixty-year-old Eliot has also returned
to Europe, the ancient and storm-tossed, but still venerable,
home of cultural traditions. Born an American, he comes from one
of the Puritan families who emigrated from England at the end of
the seventeenth century. His years of study as a young man at the
Sorbonne, at Marburg, and at Oxford, clearly
revealed to him that at bottom he felt akin to the historical
milieu of the Old World, and since 1927 Mr. Eliot has been a
British subject.
It is not possible in this presentation to indicate more than the
most immediate fascinating features in the complicated
multiplicity of Eliot's characteristics as a writer. The
predominating one is the high, philosophically schooled
intelligence, which has succeeded in enlisting in its service
both imagination and learning, both sensitivity and the analysis
of ideas. His capacity for stimulating a reconsideration of
pressing questions within intellectual and aesthetic opinion is
also extraordinary, and however much the appraisement may vary,
it can never be denied that in his period he has been an eminent
poser of questions, with a masterly gift for finding the apt
wording, both in the language of poetry and in the defence of
ideas in essay form.
Nor is it due only to chance that he has written one of the
finest studies of Dante's work and personality. In his bitter
moral pathos, in his metaphysical line of thought, and in his
burning longing for a world order inspired by religion, a
civitas dei, Eliot has indeed certain points of contact
with the great Florentine poet. It redounds to his honour that,
amidst the varied conditions of his milieu, he can be justly
characterized as one of Dante's latest-born successors. In his
message we hear solemn echoes from other times, but that message
does not by any means therefore become less real when it is given
to our own time and to us who are now living.
Mr. Eliot - According to the diploma, the award is made chiefly
in appreciation of your remarkable achievements as a pioneer
within modern poetry. I have here tried to give a brief survey of
this very important work of yours, which is admired by many
ardent readers in this country.
Exactly twenty-five years ago, there stood where you are now
standing another famous poet who wrote in the English tongue,
William Butler Yeats. The honour
now passes to you as being a leader and a champion of a new
period in the long history of the world's poetry.
With the felicitations of the Swedish Academy, I now ask you to
receive your Prize from the hands of His Royal Highness the Crown
Prince.
From Nobel Lectures, Literature 1901-1967, Editor Horst Frenz, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1969
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1948