Decoding "The Burial of the Dead"

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(Figure 5: Recurring Terms in the Biblical Allusions from "Order for the Burial of the Dead")
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='''''Decoding "The Burial of the Dead": Understanding Eliot's WWI Crisis of Faith'''''=
 
='''''Decoding "The Burial of the Dead": Understanding Eliot's WWI Crisis of Faith'''''=
  
The Anglican burial service, the "[[Order for the Burial of the Dead]]" saw a lot of use after the massive death toll of WWI, and the decimation of nearly an entire generation of England's young men.  Eliot, who had tried to join the U.S. Navy upon the outbreak of the Great War, was rejected for physical reasons.  After the rejection, he moved to England, where more young men died, and witnessed the decimation of fighting men, watching and waiting from the sidelines.  His feelings of impotence, his guilt, his anger, and the other personal anxieties resultant from his married life create the feelings of disillusionment and bitterness in "The Waste Land." Young Eliot, so firmly a staunch Anglican for most of his life, may have even experienced a crisis of faith.  By looking at the "[[The Waste Land Text]]," especially "The Burial of the Dead," and critically comparing it to the Anglican "[[Order for the Burial of the Dead]]," it is possible to see Eliot's concerns with the promise of salvation, in a time which seems to be comparable to the Biblical vision of the end times.
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The Anglican burial service, the "[[Order for the Burial of the Dead]]" saw a lot of use after the massive death toll of WWI, because of the decimation of nearly an entire generation of England's young men.  "The Waste Land," in its title and content deals directly with what life was like for civilians, affected by these deaths without really seeing them.  England was one of the countries with the greatest casualties and T.S. Eliot, who had moved to England at the outbreak of the war after being rejected from admission to the U.S. Navy, witnessed the English response to the decimation of fighting men, watching and waiting from the sidelines.   
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"The Waste Land" unveils Eliot's feelings of impotence, guilt, anger, and the personal anxieties, resultant both from the troubles of his marriage, and from the troubles, as he saw it, of the Western world. Young Eliot the artist, so firmly a staunch Anglican for most of his life, saw this event as a crisis of faith for all Christian nations.  By looking at the "[[The Waste Land Text]]," especially "The Burial of the Dead," and critically comparing it to the Anglican "[[Order for the Burial of the Dead]]," it is possible to see Eliot's concerns with the promise of salvation, in a time which seems to be comparable to the Biblical vision of the end times.
  
 
='''Figure 1: Eliot's Prophetic Terms from "The Burial of the Dead" -vs- "Order for the Burial of the Dead"'''=
 
='''Figure 1: Eliot's Prophetic Terms from "The Burial of the Dead" -vs- "Order for the Burial of the Dead"'''=

Revision as of 14:27, 13 December 2012

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