A Reader's Guide to T.S. Eliot's "Four Quartets"

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  • čas přidán 21. 04. 2013
  • Thomas Howard, Professor Emeritus, St. John's Seminary, and author, "Dove Descending: A Journey into T.S. Eliot's Four Quartets" - Gordon College Symposium Key Note Address - Thursday April 18, 2013

Komentáře • 193

  • @dbob3405
    @dbob3405 Před rokem +37

    CZcams has a lot of meaningless junk but to be treated to this wonderful lecture by a gifted Eliot scholar on a work of art I have loved and wrestled with my entire adult life makes wading through CZcams’s junk more than worthwhile. My appreciation and understanding of this as well as Eliot’s other work has only deepened and my life is more enriched-thanks you Professor Howard. I hope you and Eliot are in that infinite center enjoying each other’s company

  • @peterspellman9377
    @peterspellman9377 Před rokem +16

    Thomas Howard was the reason I attended Gordon College (1978-81). His classes were relentlessly inspiring and his child-like wonder unlocked for me the 'splendor in the ordinary' he always pointed to . Rest in the love of your Lord, dear Thomas, and enjoy 'the Dance'.

  • @rokasbucelis5899
    @rokasbucelis5899 Před 10 lety +163

    This man looks just like Eliot lol

  • @falldog9
    @falldog9 Před 3 lety +76

    R.I.P. Professor Thomas Howard. 1935 - 2020. This lecture is even more poignant now.

  • @evanleesmith385
    @evanleesmith385 Před 7 měsíci +3

    Grateful for this recording. Tom Howard is a mentor of mine via his writings. It's a gift to hear his voice in this lecture.

  • @soniajacks3104
    @soniajacks3104 Před 10 lety +85

    What a privilege to be able to hear Professor Howard in this way. I have read and re-read the Four Quartets for the last 50 years, having written a dissertation on Eliot in my 20s and each time I read it I understand a little more, but Prof Howard has provided me with new insights and done it in an amusing way. One could not ask for more. Many thanks

    • @bramblebop1904
      @bramblebop1904 Před 5 lety +3

      With poetry like that, I'm never sure if I _understand_ more each time, or _read into it_ more --- according to my growing life experience.

    • @hamstergirl-ii7su
      @hamstergirl-ii7su Před 3 lety

      hi- can I read your dissertation? i'm doing a project on eliot and I dont have enough time to fixate on any of his works specifically!

    • @Borzoi86
      @Borzoi86 Před rokem

      Discovered and read his Dove Descending just this last year. Yikes! The scales fell from my eyes and I now adore the Four Quartets. This is a special video!

  • @peterspaulding5584
    @peterspaulding5584 Před 2 lety +2

    This guy is charming as hell. Wish more scholars could lecture like this.

  • @Stoneshakre
    @Stoneshakre Před 10 lety +45

    I came looking for Alec Guinness reading 'The Four Quartets' but, distracted, I thought I'd give Thomas Howard's lecture a go. Very happy I did. I really envy those students who have Professor Emeritus Howard as a teacher. Funny and profound, he managed in less than an hour to send on its way a deal of my bewilderment about the poem, and also to question where I stand, strap-hanging among the crowds on my tube-train, immersed in my own twittering.
    Thank for, Professor, and Gordon College, for a video that reached The Wirral in perfect condition..

    • @TomRobinsonMusic
      @TomRobinsonMusic Před 9 lety

      ***** I've just uploaded the Alec Guinness recording to my CZcams channel Michael, and added a link in the "Show More" section where you can download it free from Soundcloud.

    • @paulfreeman4900
      @paulfreeman4900 Před 2 lety

      Bewilderment is good. A reflection of the times it was written in. I would rather hold onto this essence rather than have anyone try to explain such elusive beauty.

  • @anitaturcotte5880
    @anitaturcotte5880 Před 5 lety +17

    I just listened to Alec Guinness reading Four Quartets and then found this wonderful professor’s lecture. A pleasure to have the poem explained with intelligence and humour. Thank you Professor Howard.

    • @cufflink44
      @cufflink44 Před 2 lety

      Guinness does a fine job, but may I suggest you listen to Eliot himself, which is available on YT. Eliot's own reading is definitive, the one against which all others are measured.

    • @2msvalkyrie529
      @2msvalkyrie529 Před rokem

      Alec Guiness is insufferable .
      Excruciatingly mannered .

  • @warrenstutely3320
    @warrenstutely3320 Před 8 lety +32

    just come across the four quartets lecture by Thomas Howard, a true critic who doesn't hide behind the jargon of post modernism, so refreshing, many thanks

  • @sanchari.c
    @sanchari.c Před 3 lety +4

    What a privilege to see this, unrestricted by time or space. To sit in that class and hear him speak would have been amazing.

  • @SilhSe
    @SilhSe Před 2 lety +3

    Oh God , Prof. Howard is (was) brilliant 🥺 He's alive in our hearts and minds 🤍🕊

    • @Borzoi86
      @Borzoi86 Před rokem +1

      Buy a copy of Prof. Howard's wonderful book, "Dove Descending: A Journey into the Four Quartets." He was also a gifted writer.

  • @davidhockley1082
    @davidhockley1082 Před 6 měsíci

    This speaker is as a breath of fresh air. So many ( too many) people fail completely to understand anything at all about T.S. Eliot.

  • @atlantic1554
    @atlantic1554 Před 9 lety +7

    Thank you so much for posting! Listening to Professor Howard on T. S. Eliot's "Four Quartets," my mind explodes every few moments.

  • @janewrin1830
    @janewrin1830 Před 2 lety +3

    What a wonderful lecture. He was clearly a very knowledgeable and humble man.

  • @gayleyee5723
    @gayleyee5723 Před 2 lety +1

    This was wonderful, RIP Dr. Howard, you are a gem. I am hoping that he has left many generations of English scholars of TS Eliot in his wake.

  • @martinhasson4942
    @martinhasson4942 Před 4 lety +2

    THIS " LECTURE" IS AS
    SHARP AS A TWO-EDGED
    SWORD.
    MY OWN LITTLE GUESSING
    ABOUT THIS WORK OF ELIOT'S
    WAS I MAY SAY ENJOYABLE
    BUT THIS MANS INTERPRETATION
    MOVED ME TO TEARS!

  • @frgraybean
    @frgraybean Před rokem

    Thank you for posting this. What a treasure this man is! May he rest in peace!

  • @danielescada6785
    @danielescada6785 Před 5 lety +7

    Wow, that was incredible. I wish I had seen this years ago, when I first read Eliot. I ended up learning much of what Professor Howard explains, but with great difficulty. He summarizes everything so well. Brilliant lecture!

  • @kimberleychitando6641
    @kimberleychitando6641 Před 4 lety +4

    Professor Howard really makes the FQ fun! He must be an incredibly good teacher!

  • @botanmahdy6592
    @botanmahdy6592 Před 9 lety +2

    Thanks for sharing this . We need it as students in all the levels.

  • @dgbx6
    @dgbx6 Před 5 lety +1

    Wonderful approach and insights to this marvellous work. Thank you, I found this very helpful.

  • @user-rl6en5pc6x
    @user-rl6en5pc6x Před 4 měsíci +1

    Hey you folks, read Whitman's "Song of Myself" for another perspective. Another great poem. Despite its name Whitman's poem has little on him, and unlike Eliot it is optimistic and full of love. It will make you happy. Though Eliot was born in St Louis USA he seems to have transformed into nearly full English Anglican.

  • @fioweaver
    @fioweaver Před 5 lety +2

    What a breath of fresh air! All gadgets are designed to make us lazy spectators. Good poetry combines aesthetic appreciation and rigorous mental exercise.

  • @toffa1000
    @toffa1000 Před 8 lety +9

    excellent talk, excellent book

  • @m.h.3082
    @m.h.3082 Před 8 lety +1

    Wow. I met Tom at the C. S. Lewis institute in Seattle in 1998 and we corresponded for several years. On March 27, 2013, Spy Wednesday, I had most of my aorta replaced in Charleston and was still in CVICU. Shortly before my surgery, I recorded myself reading the "Wounded Surgeon Plies the Steel" section.

  • @Szederp
    @Szederp Před 8 lety

    Thank you very much for the upload. Great starting points.

  • @nickowchar2001
    @nickowchar2001 Před 3 lety +2

    I agree with the rest on this thread. A very fine lecture. I wish it went longer.

  • @Eris123451
    @Eris123451 Před 7 lety +7

    I first read 4Q aged about 16 and have read and reread them with love, awe and delight still undiminished now suddenly I'm 60 and although not a Christian they still speak to me with an elegance, precision and a clarity that is unmatched, but I find that I'm somehow glad that I've waited until now to have them explained to me.
    In fact these poems stand perfectly well on their own almost without the need for comment or analysis, but he still makes some interesting and useful points not all of which I agree with him about, but it probably doesn't matter.

    • @kieranjohnston7550
      @kieranjohnston7550 Před 2 lety +2

      Eris, thank you for your comments which really hit home. Especially “these poems stand perfectly on their own without comment.” While commentary can help, it is better if you enter the poems and work out your own understanding, over a long period of contemplation, as you have done. One of the greatest life-lines in poetry is from Frost’s poem “Mending Wall:” “I would rather he said it for himself.”

  • @benzandpour
    @benzandpour Před 2 lety +2

    Just saw Ralph Fiennes perform this in London. This video sure did help! (Dec 2021)

  • @GodsGadfly
    @GodsGadfly Před 5 lety +1

    What a delightful find!

  • @2003ziv
    @2003ziv Před 11 lety +2

    This is a great lecture. thank you!

  • @johnnywilley8522
    @johnnywilley8522 Před 5 lety +2

    Great lecture! Thank you !

  • @bryanupfield6934
    @bryanupfield6934 Před rokem +1

    Just totally fascinating and enlightening.

  • @sabymoon
    @sabymoon Před 3 měsíci

    I love Four Quartets, whenever I’m in a dark night of the soul I open the poem.

  • @DSmith-iw7fs
    @DSmith-iw7fs Před 4 měsíci

    Great Lecture. True professor of the dance.
    Thank you, Mr. Howard.

  • @julieferrone1311
    @julieferrone1311 Před 2 lety

    What a wonderful presentation. Eliot is not moralizing but says to us humans, we will suffer, we will feel the torment. We are either going to die in the fire of love or the fire of some hell. Despite the misgivings of our human condition - all shall be well and all manner shall be well. However, as Prof Howard states, it's the the casual "It'll be ok,"we have Adam's curse upon us, we will die..... a deeper communion, dying to our old selves, only through time is time redeemed .... and time is full of paradoxes, the structure of salvation or damnation. In the end, the rose and the fire are one. Now. Always. The "still point," so it is not so much a conclusion but a return, a new arrival, seeing the place for the first time.

  • @yebyo
    @yebyo Před 5 lety +1

    Thank you Professor, then all shall be well
    .

  • @user-pg5uw6kq9w
    @user-pg5uw6kq9w Před rokem

    Excellent talk! I learned a lot.

  • @jmichaelortiz
    @jmichaelortiz Před 2 lety +1

    He has entered TSE's zone of insight @ 49:00; marvelous!

  • @theculturedbumpkin
    @theculturedbumpkin Před 8 měsíci

    This was outstanding ❤️🙏

  • @radstar3
    @radstar3 Před 11 lety +11

    "Although logos is common to all, most people live as if they had a wisdom of their own."
    "The way upward and the way downward are the same."
    Heraclitus

  • @paulmitchell9423
    @paulmitchell9423 Před 4 lety

    Prof Howard is a complete teacher: how ironic that he was bound by time. Even so, I learned a very great deal about Eliot's poem and I can't help wondering how much more he had to offer.

    • @tonywolfemusic5920
      @tonywolfemusic5920 Před 3 lety

      @Jim Newcombe even children yet born are bound by time. Also, professor Howard was bound and is not bound by time.

    • @tonywolfemusic5920
      @tonywolfemusic5920 Před 3 lety

      @Jim Newcombe i think the disconnect comes from not understanding or ceding to the Almighty the fact that understanding of time for us-those stuck on earth for the “time” being-is bound by our understanding of time beginning and time ending. Or time proceeding. But what has been will be. And what will be has been. There is nothing new, and God is in control of it all. Christ was crucified some 2,000 years ago, and he was crucified for eternity past and future. That’s why in Revelation, the apostle John said he saw what appeared to be a Lamb as if slain (the Bible also says that before the foundation of the world the lamb was slain) We don’t get it, and can’t get it while we are still cloaked in mortality, but the more we stop focusing on our mortality, and begin focusing on our immortality, the more the Lord reveals to us, and gives us a better understanding as we move towards our heavenly home. I hope this helps. Be blessed, friend.

    • @tonywolfemusic5920
      @tonywolfemusic5920 Před 3 lety

      @Jim Newcombe also, no, I meant yet born. Yet in this sense being used as an adverb to modify the word born, and referring to the definition of yet meaning “in the time still remaining,” or “before all is done/finished”. I wrote what I intended to write.

  • @gracedirocco8049
    @gracedirocco8049 Před 6 lety +1

    Most illuminating.

  • @tomislavkuna2265
    @tomislavkuna2265 Před 4 lety

    Nice one! Enjoyed the reading.

  • @jarrodlacy9856
    @jarrodlacy9856 Před 9 lety

    I liked the mention of Falstaff as he dies, along with Mistress Quickly, two players from Shakespeare's "Henry V," in comparison and similarity to how Eliot relates and describes death. Fantastic post.

    • @idecantwellbarnes6707
      @idecantwellbarnes6707 Před 5 lety

      Greetings All! Will some kind scholarly person respond to Mr. Jarrod Lacy’s Falstaffian observation. Thank you.

  • @quagapp
    @quagapp Před 6 lety +2

    I heard someone who had worked in a record shop circa the time of the composition of Four Quartets. He worked in record shop at the time and Eliot came in wanting a copy of Bartok's Four Quartets. Whether this is significant I don't know. I also started watching this a bit dubiously (indeed from the small image he looks like Eliot). I have always actually just read the 4 Quartets since 1968. I can't recall studying them as such ( did put quite a bit or reading into The Waste Land). A friend and I argue that (as he thinks) all the other famous works by Eliot are great, not so Four Quartets. But I have always liked both. I think Eliot moved to these works which are, indeed, subtle, and even comparative to some great music communicating 'before it is understood'.

  • @ranulphdiggins4310
    @ranulphdiggins4310 Před 4 lety +2

    What a wonderful talk. Told me things I didn't know and got me to revisit parts of the poem I thought I already did. Two really minor points. First, East Coker is in Somerset near the border of Dorset. Close to where I grew up. Second at 30:20 TS Eliot is paraphrasing Ecclesiastes or Qoheleth not Ecclesiasticus.

  • @ethangrant4168
    @ethangrant4168 Před 7 lety

    Johnny, man. What a champ.

  • @John-vx9qy
    @John-vx9qy Před 4 lety

    Hes an excellent teacher. I watched a course on Eliot from Yale. That was boring but Professor is excellent .. Four Quartets is my favorite Eliot poem

  • @kinawinkelstrahle2431
    @kinawinkelstrahle2431 Před 3 lety

    Fantastic! Thank you so much! 😀💕👏👏

  • @brentcarson9634
    @brentcarson9634 Před 2 lety

    Great lecture on what I regard as the world's greatest poem. See also Harry Blamires's book, the Word Unheard.

  • @paulfreeman4900
    @paulfreeman4900 Před 2 lety +3

    The work of Eliot transcends analysis. Compare this to Beethoven's late Quartets and Piano Sonatas.Sublime!

  • @LawrenceCarroll1234
    @LawrenceCarroll1234 Před 11 lety +1

    One of the incidents of Eliot's life that I found hilarious - I believe this was recounted in Robert Speight's biography of Eliot (but I'm not sure) - was when he was asked by a student (an American I think) - what he meant in "Ash Wednesday" by the sentence, "Lady, three white leopards sat under a juniper tree." According to Speight (?), Eliot responded, "What I meant by that was 'Lady, three white leopards sat under a juniper tree." hahahahaha! I laughed and laughed. :-D Great lecture here!

  • @kevingrozav2089
    @kevingrozav2089 Před 3 lety +1

    This is a great lecture. I’m so excited to be a Christian honestly. Time is redeemable and I get to partake in the culmination of time and history in blessing! Revelation 1:8.

    • @SP-qi8ur
      @SP-qi8ur Před 3 lety

      You think this is the end of history?

    • @tonywolfemusic5920
      @tonywolfemusic5920 Před 3 lety

      @@SP-qi8ur no one knows the time. Yet, all will know when it is time.

    • @tonywolfemusic5920
      @tonywolfemusic5920 Před 3 lety

      @@SP-qi8ur whether dead or alive, we will partake in the culmination of the age, we who are to be made like Him...

  • @andreafisherwriter
    @andreafisherwriter Před 4 měsíci

    Savoring each and every word 🙏

  • @spellboundtarot1264
    @spellboundtarot1264 Před 3 lety

    Thank you Sir. 🖤

  • @johntobey1558
    @johntobey1558 Před rokem

    He looks so much like T.S.Elliot that I thought he was LARPing. Honest to God, this man is a true Scholar in his own right. A Clyde Kilby to his Elliot for those of you whom have toured the Wade Center at my Alma mater Wheaton College Wheaton, Illinois.

  • @gufarmall856
    @gufarmall856 Před 3 lety +1

    God bless you dear sir

  • @dwanderful1
    @dwanderful1 Před 3 lety +3

    Mr Howard is awesome and funny as well

  • @davidbetterton1
    @davidbetterton1 Před 10 lety +3

    Burnt Norton is in Gloucestershire, not Huntingdonshire. Little Gidding is the place in Huntingdonshire. But what a fun and interesting approach to these great poems

  • @abooswalehmosafeer173
    @abooswalehmosafeer173 Před 6 lety +1

    Thank you.i enjoyed that.

  • @oldpossum
    @oldpossum Před 5 lety +1

    Sometimes it is good to listen again to a lecture like this one that impressed many years ago. It still does. Professor Howard mentions the essence of poetry, which, many people believe, consists in some sort of gingering up the language, whereas it seems to be the opposite: It is the process of distilling, purification and remorseless concentration of the language.
    In the introduction of the "Compound Ghost's Speech" I have cited below, the master wrote:
    "Since our concern was speech, and speech impelled us
    To purify the dialect of the tribe
    And urge the mind to aftersight and foresight,
    Let me disclose the gifts reserved for age
    To set a crown upon your lifetime's effort."

  • @Ripabollockov1
    @Ripabollockov1 Před 5 lety

    Brilliant!

  • @iamthelobo
    @iamthelobo Před 4 lety +1

    T.S. Eliot... man... that guy was a poet.

  • @2msvalkyrie529
    @2msvalkyrie529 Před rokem

    Marvellous !!

  • @malvinderkaur4187
    @malvinderkaur4187 Před 3 lety +1

    Poetry is song from heart and mind... it just pops up, not labored too much thinking of what to formulate how to formulate, if it is labored then it loses its charm and spontaneity of that very thought.

  • @johnmartin2813
    @johnmartin2813 Před 5 lety +2

    At 28': these are not tube stations these are hills. Primrose Hill has never been a tube station. It used to be an overground station.

  • @Simpaulme
    @Simpaulme Před 4 lety +1

    Around 11 minutes in: Why Four Quartets? Doesn't Eliot say somewhere that the different 'voices' are analogous to the different instruments in a musical ensemble. At any rate, he wrote to Stephen Spender how he could wish to emulate the sublimity of Beethoven late quartets (specifically the A minor).

  • @TheWhitehiker
    @TheWhitehiker Před 3 lety +1

    The prof is tedious, but i love Eliot. Speed to 1.25 for your comfort.

  • @jamesbunch8932
    @jamesbunch8932 Před 6 lety +1

    2 violins, viola, cello

  • @siddinenibhavanarayana2671
    @siddinenibhavanarayana2671 Před 11 lety +1

    Thomas Howard, Professor Emeritus, St. John's Seminary, and author, "Dove Descending: A Journey into T.S. Eliot's Four Quartets"....
    The Marvel of application of technology to communication resulting in this wonder of conveyance of auditory and visual data.
    when we were studying Eliot in 1979, How better we would have been exposed to the different shades of interpretation.
    How earlier we had been under the cloud of thi mellow shadow of this aesthetic experience!

  • @tolvaer
    @tolvaer Před 4 lety

    I think J Alfred Prufrock was the patient in the Screwtape Letters

  • @davidreid8075
    @davidreid8075 Před 3 měsíci

    By- pass is a road which skirts a town or city..

  • @MrTheRealist
    @MrTheRealist Před 11 lety +1

    My favorite poem

  • @SSNewberry
    @SSNewberry Před 5 lety +2

    "Time present and time past
    Are both perhaps present in time future,"
    It summarizes itself.
    The speaker dwells on distraction by distraction.

  • @baganscissors7224
    @baganscissors7224 Před 6 lety +1

    solid

  • @anm2945
    @anm2945 Před 3 lety

    Thank
    You
    4
    This
    Lesson 😶

  • @taylordiclemente5651
    @taylordiclemente5651 Před 5 lety

    By the way, the wounded surgeon is Chiron.

  • @paulthomas333
    @paulthomas333 Před rokem

    Wow!

  • @c.s.hayden3022
    @c.s.hayden3022 Před 2 lety

    “Four Quartets, maybe some of you have ventured to get your toe into the water...” That really signals the level we’re at here. 😐

  • @safiyaahmed5648
    @safiyaahmed5648 Před 6 lety

    So can someone confirm this please? He mentions a cathedral at 02:07. Is this Chartres Cathedral? Am I right?

  • @tonywolfemusic5920
    @tonywolfemusic5920 Před 3 lety

    In the beginning was the Word (Logos), and the Word was with God, and the Word was God...and the Word (Logos) became flesh and dwelt among us.

  • @tonywolfemusic5920
    @tonywolfemusic5920 Před 3 lety

    Also, I believe the dying nurse is referring to a hospice type caregiver, meaning if we obey the hospice worker and give into the disease getting worse, and become aware of Adam’s curse, then we shall be healed. It is unabashed kenosis that this man is writing about.

  • @quagapp
    @quagapp Před 6 lety

    Eliot was thick-mired in religion. But 'twittering world' I suspect knowing Keats's 'Ode to Autumn'. The irony might also be directed to the final line: 'And gathering swallows twitter in the skies.' Everyone saw the reference to twittering on the internet. But I didn't I don't use twitter and I was thinking of a world where people twittered or things twittered....

  • @readingrebellion9758
    @readingrebellion9758 Před 5 lety +4

    "At the still point. Of the turning world, neither from, nor towards: There the dance is!"... T.S Eliot could have been a Buddhist.

    • @garypuckettmuse
      @garypuckettmuse Před 5 lety +1

      my understanding is that he took a big interest in what we call "hinduism" and I'm not sure if I heard this or it sprung from my own mind but I feel very sure this is a reference to the god Nataraja who is the dancing incarnation of Shiva. You can find all about Nataraja easily but his dance exists at the very instant of creation and destruction which occurs with every beat of his hand held drum, and he dances wildly but there is the still point of the dance, like the eye of the storm. I could go on but I won't bore you. Nataraja is my personal sacred hindu god figure. in the one image all of life is represented all of time, and all that is out of time. The still point is out of time and space.
      Go look, if you care to!

    • @afatalstillness
      @afatalstillness Před 4 lety

      The still point of the turning world is also nearly a direct reference to Dante's Divine Comedy.

    • @bun197
      @bun197 Před 3 lety

      He didnt like the idea of giving up the self I dont think

    • @Borzoi86
      @Borzoi86 Před rokem

      But, thankfully, God had other ideas for Mr. Eliot; Eliot became a believing and practicing Anglican.

  • @pascalinkel7275
    @pascalinkel7275 Před 7 lety

    cousin donne moi de tes nouvelles ?

  • @abdulwahid-nv1kh
    @abdulwahid-nv1kh Před 3 lety

    Have celebrations of these value systems helped creating a real humble human being?

    • @kieranjohnston7550
      @kieranjohnston7550 Před 2 lety

      That’s a very good question, Abdulwahid. I think that these value systems can be used as a vehicle for those who are humble enough to be disposed towards humility. The vehicle is irrelevant, the humility and openness is everything.

  • @tmac8892
    @tmac8892 Před rokem

    This is how I picture prufrock.

  • @jmichaelortiz
    @jmichaelortiz Před 2 lety +1

    Lewis was not an Orthodox Christian. He was a Protestant.

  • @ChurlsBeardSmug
    @ChurlsBeardSmug Před 6 měsíci

    Dr. Tom Howard is clearly emulating T.S. Eliot's manner of dress and style! Spitting image?

  • @markgranier
    @markgranier Před 3 lety +1

    Fascinating. BUT, the language is Four Quartets is NOT "flat" or "prosaic"! It is full of rhythmic, sinewy music.

  • @derrylbrooks9075
    @derrylbrooks9075 Před 4 lety

    Talk about twin lectures

  • @jmichaelortiz
    @jmichaelortiz Před 2 lety

    Sorry, but the "wounded surgeon" (35:28) is most definitely a priest probing spiritual wounds.

  • @homeandfamilyservices2650

    Does make you wonder why anyone with any maturity, self security and self confidence would wish to look like someone else. Has he also written a poem called the "2 x 2 Quartets" like his idol(-try)..😁😁

  • @christopherbrookfield4785

    Dickie-bow doodle dandie.

  • @Simpaulme
    @Simpaulme Před 4 lety

    'we human beings, we men, are hag-ridden ..'
    Did he really say that!

    • @robertdude4725
      @robertdude4725 Před 3 lety

      You do know that "hag-ridden" meant tormented by nightmares anxieties? It's only tenuously linked to witches etymologically.

  • @user-rl6en5pc6x
    @user-rl6en5pc6x Před 4 měsíci

    Great poem, no doubt, and interesting that this Christian poem (so called) does not mention Christ or consider the story of the 4 gospels. It's an intellectual Christianity that owes more to Acquinus' Summa Theologica, his distrust of the flesh and physical love like Augustine.

  • @bramblebop1904
    @bramblebop1904 Před 5 lety

    Symbol is two-dimensional --- what does this mean?

    • @DarkAngelEU
      @DarkAngelEU Před 5 lety

      That they are visible and readable. A symbol is immediately recognized and its meaning derived from its shape, therefor there is no depth or third dimension to the symbol. Personally I'd argue that some symbols are three-dimensional, like the crucifix with a mounted Christ, as opposed to the sober crucifix, two sticks that form a cross but then someone would counterargue that if there is more to a symbol than its direct meaning it is no longer a symbol. A symbol, like explained in the lecture, is something you can interpret without having too much definition of the actual subject it is describing. It objectifies the meaning, a garden becomes just that. A garden. What it looks like is up to you to imagine.

    • @bramblebop1904
      @bramblebop1904 Před 5 lety

      "A symbol is immediately recognized and its meaning derived from its shape, therefor there is no depth or third dimension to the symbol."
      This is about as mysterious as the original question, lol. Seems gratuitous -- at least.

    • @DarkAngelEU
      @DarkAngelEU Před 5 lety

      @@bramblebop1904 Well that's what makes most symbols universal haha, you can fill them in with your personal experience which grants you connection to and from a community whom you share symbols with. One I can think of to exemplify this is the Swastika: for Westerners it is a Nazi symbol thus it connotes war, fascism, genocide - as for Buddhists and most oriental cultures it stands for reincarnation and the wheel of life. Something is only a symbol when it is shared by a culture to have a meaning that doesn't require explanation so yes, at first sight they seem gratuitous but when you look closer it is very interesting to learn how cultures arrive at those symbols and what meaning they carry and why they are so present. Primitive cultures often have similar symbols yet they can have very different meanings. Even though these symbols had to be created once, they cannot be altered nor are they open to interpretation. There is no personal dialogue that alters the symbol, only acknowledges it. Therefor symbols are a two-dimensional object. It's much like writing which is two-dimensional as well, we use words and an alphabet that we understand but cannot be altered. An A is always an A. A B is always a B. To study their characteristics is of course the task of literature and art but these basic symbols cannot be altered because the message they carry would be lost to the reader (think of surrealism). It requires a new structure that has to be accepted, hence creating a new language which automatically means it has opened the horizon towards a new culture. Symbols are inherent to culture and language. They are basic. They carry us. We depend on them. Without them we would never grow. The coincidence that we talk about a garden when it comes to symbols seems fortunate :)
      A garden is a typical English symbol, especially still in the days of T.S. Eliot, where Vita Sacksville-West was known for her books about gardening which she would write with her husband. It is an intricate part of English culture and so a garden can be used as a symbol for it requires no connotation; it is idyllic, filled with many kinds of flowers, either pebbled paths, some winding stairs, a bench, perhaps even a pond or a fountain to invite birds to partake in its beauty and fill the air with beautiful sound. It exerts peace of mind and providence.
      Something T.S. Eliot is quoted for was that he said people hardly know how to read and wondered if he even was literate. Something he set out to do as a Modernist poet, along Ezra Pound and writers like James Joyce, was to modernize old symbols that to them were very present in their time, to reconnect modern culture with the past. This is why they so often refer to mythology, to language and religion. These are ancient stories that often carry meaning that we can acknowledge without understanding the story completely. They have been passed along generations for such a long time that they have become a part of our existence, simply speaking their words conveys a thought that is equivalent to their meaning. These words have no interpretation other than what they are, for they have become meaning themself. These are what we call symbols. Stop.

    • @DarkAngelEU
      @DarkAngelEU Před 5 lety

      I will add this for myself, read it if you like.
      James Joyce and the modernist generation were the first to put this two-dimensionality of symbols into question exactly because they used these old symbols in a new context: Ulysses is loosely based on Homeros' Odyssees, a postwar epic about a hero that tries to find his way home. However, Joyce's book (I wouldn't call it a roman) explores tragedy and the "hero" as a failure that isn't taken up to the stars by gods nor met with sympathy. It's a very vicious book that forces us to accept the reality where these symbols are a sheer comfort against the bitterness that life may contain. They're like coathangers to distance ourselves from our personal experience and Joyce, in my opinion, tells us to defy these symbols and accept our individual experience as they are unique and don't deserve objectification. The Surrealists did the same in a different manner, juxtaposing symbols to confuse the viewer, which becomes forced to think of new meanings for these symbols through the way the paintings present them to us by association. Most of the avant-gardes in the Modernist era seeked this modernization of what seemed by then a dead culture.
      After that came the Postmodern era, an era in which artists and writers wondered if there was even such a thing as symbols, why there was a need for symbols in the first place and if they could be reinvented and shaped by society itself. They were most of all inspired by corporatism but also by themes that had motivated the World Wars: nationalism, fascism, propaganda. This is a much more politically charged form of art, as it seeks to disassemble the tools of power. One of the first Pop Art paintings was Flag by Jasper Johnson, which calls out the propaganda machine that newspapers were/are in the USA. Americans are taught to love their country and everything they do serves as contribution to the greatness of America, not as an enrichment of their individual expression. Patriotism is indoctrinated, just like mass culture is, as provided by the popularity of Andy Warhol.
      From the 80's on things become a blur, 90's are geometric and seek to unify people through a new optimism achieved by the end of the Cold War in '89 yet it seems that since the turn of the century people are still looking for a way to celebrate freedom of individual expression. Especially in the USA, stricken in 2001 by the terrorist strikes of 9/11 has reverted to symbolism and seeks a new way to identify the American Family. It is a dead culture that will have to find a way to reinvent itself for it is stuck in its symbolism: the liberator has become the tyrant.
      In Europe the debate is about creating a new culture and finding each other in the European landscape, an onset of Modernist culture that bridges postmodern culture. Where USA simply is multicultural but has a problem with individual expression, Europe still has to find a way to accept its multicultural roots in order to integrate individual values into a political system that agrees upon these values regardless of race, gender or religious affiliation as it is tolerant towards the differences between European cultures but portrays a unified image towards foreigners. Basically, both nations deal with issues that can be dated back to the concept of colonization: to oppress your own values upon another culture. For the USA this problem is extroverted (American culture is everywhere, like Coca Cola) while for Europe this is an introverted issue (contains alot of foreign cultures that are not well integrated). This also shows how these problems can be dealt with: America requires an introverted solution (make your voices heard, exposing the system) whilst Europeans require an extroverted solution (interaction between communities, political debate). Both nations are stuck in a past that is not ready for the future. When a culture stops evolving it reverts to symbolism because it distinguishes the natives from the foreigners and creates a stronger alliance between natives. It is the task of the artist to annihilate these symbols by means of expression and poetry, as if (s)he were a soothsayer, that convinces the natives the future is nothing to be afraid of as these symbols will become multitudes when mixed with those of other cultures. It is the battle between humankind and eternity between parentheses that denies us to become one race.

    • @bramblebop1904
      @bramblebop1904 Před 5 lety

      Jayzus!

  • @american11asshole
    @american11asshole Před 5 lety +1

    An hour?! Can someone sum it up? I can!
    ESP - everything in time and space is connected!