The Waste land
The Waste Land by T. S. Eliot is a seminal modernist poem that captures the disillusionment and fragmentation of post-World War I Europe. The poem is known for its complex structure and use of multiple voices, languages, and literary references. It begins with the famous line 'April is the cruellest month' and explores themes of death, rebirth, and the search for meaning in a desolate world. Eliot draws on a wide range of cultural and literary sources, including mythology, religion, and classical literature, to create a tapestry of voices and images that reflect the chaos and disintegration of modern life. The poem's fragmented structure and use of allusion challenge readers to piece together its meaning, mirroring the fractured nature of the world it depicts.
| Word | Easy Meaning | Translation | Pron. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Waste | desolate, barren | a place that is empty and without life | wayst |
| land | ground, earth | the solid part of the earth's surface | laand |
| cruellest | most harsh, most severe | the most unkind or causing the most suffering | kroo-uh-lest |
| fragments | pieces, parts | small broken parts of something | frag-muhnts |
| shored | supported, reinforced | to support or hold up something | shord |
| ruins | remains, wreckage | the remains of something destroyed | roo-ins |
| desolation | emptiness, loneliness | a state of complete emptiness or destruction | des-uh-lay-shuhn |
| disillusionment | disappointment, disenchantment | a feeling of disappointment from discovering something is not as good as believed | dis-ih-loo-zhuhn-muhnt |
| prophecy | prediction, forecast | a statement about what will happen in the future | prof-uh-see |
| allusions | references, hints | indirect references to something | uh-loo-zhuhns |
T. S. Eliot was a renowned poet, essayist, publisher, playwright, and literary critic. Born in 1888, he became one of the 20th century's major poets, known for his innovative and influential works such as 'The Waste Land' and 'The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock'.
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