T.S. Eliot - BBC Arena Portrait 1/6

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  • Опубликовано: 25 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 120

  • @owenwilliams9666
    @owenwilliams9666 7 лет назад +24

    Thanks for making this excellent program available, T. S. Eliot's Four Quartets is one of my favorite poems.

  • @bedouinknight9437
    @bedouinknight9437 7 лет назад +20

    I'm so glad that we study about him in Modern literature what an amazing guy

  • @Wisehousepublishingunlimited
    @Wisehousepublishingunlimited 8 лет назад +12

    Thank you for this amazing documentary! We're proud to have his Waste Land published. He is one of the most influential poets of the 20th century.

  • @athel8694
    @athel8694 10 лет назад +43

    In case anyone wonders, the harmonica music at the beginning is from Bob Dylan's 'Desolation Row' - an incredible and very eliotesque song.

    • @closetfrerardway7698
      @closetfrerardway7698 7 лет назад +3

      Arthur Smythe My Chemical Romance also did a cover of it.

    • @alexnegri921
      @alexnegri921 7 лет назад

      MCR Sucks and ruined the song.

    • @augustosarmentodeoliveira3023
      @augustosarmentodeoliveira3023 6 лет назад +2

      @@closetfrerardway7698 why are you citing My Chemical Romance in a Eliot video and a Dylan song?

    • @DarkAngelEU
      @DarkAngelEU 6 лет назад +3

      @@augustosarmentodeoliveira3023 Because they're a good band, y'all. Taste is subjective, after all.

    • @augustosarmentodeoliveira3023
      @augustosarmentodeoliveira3023 5 лет назад +1

      @@DarkAngelEU there's almost nothing true about your comment. maybe its punctuation.

  • @f.v.h648
    @f.v.h648 7 лет назад +2

    Very nice documentary film of Eliot.

  • @bertharady6558
    @bertharady6558 9 лет назад +2

    Useful moving commentary with readings by Elliot, Seamus Heaney etc,

  • @ktsc156
    @ktsc156 8 лет назад +7

    Inspiring T.S. Eliot

  • @emmetglyde8853
    @emmetglyde8853 7 лет назад +11

    Four Quartets is the greatest poetic work of any era.

    • @teknatheou
      @teknatheou 2 года назад +1

      Yes, Eliot famously said "Dante and Shakespeare divide the modern world between them--there is no third." I'd say there is a third, and that he is it!

  • @geoffreynhill2833
    @geoffreynhill2833 2 года назад +2

    Is there still anything like this on BBC TV? 🌈🦉

    • @apolinary29
      @apolinary29 2 года назад +1

      no

    • @apolinary29
      @apolinary29 2 года назад

      bbc is all politically correct crap. has been so for years.

    • @geoffreynhill2833
      @geoffreynhill2833 2 года назад +1

      @@apolinary29 Thanks. And I'm sure there are more than two of us. Greets from London!

  • @flanplan5903
    @flanplan5903 4 года назад +1

    Has anyone made a biopic about this guy? They should!

  • @TomFoti
    @TomFoti 10 лет назад +41

    Only 1400 views and no comments yet. Come on, world, turn off American Idol, Dancing with the Stars, CNN, and whatever other drivel that may be draining your brain and find out why you're alive. "To arrive at where you are" you have to "get from where you are not." TSE.

    • @meio4744
      @meio4744 10 лет назад +2

      Sounds profound but what does it even mean.

    • @TomFoti
      @TomFoti 10 лет назад +5

      I believe Eliot feels there is a greater truth within that defies a ready description. He can only circumscribe it, referring to it as a "Shantih", the peace that goes beyond understanding, or as the "Stillness between two waves of the sea." That truth is where you are, even though other considerations cloud our heads and distract us from the truth within. So, to arrive at where we are (eternal inner peace), we have to get from where we are not (the distractions that preoccupy our minds.)

    • @siennareb1124
      @siennareb1124 9 лет назад +2

      TomFoti My thoughts exactly

    • @jkheinle60
      @jkheinle60 8 лет назад +1

      TomFoti May I say thank you for your beautiful post, such clarity for useful thought which will appreciate well...further on, as well, isn't that the kind of inspiration Mr. Elliott's works deposits for us!
      I was thrilled the moment I'd randomly discovered "The Cocktail Party" and "The Four Quartets" and "Wasteland" (discovering the poet first in 2007!) after finding a rare and aged copy 1929!
      His words were so instantly true and bewitching at the moment in history laid against that familiar sense impending apocalyptic concern yet so personally a dark and ironic wit and humor.
      I said aloud addressing the poet: "you may have planned this eerie coincidence of circumstances...for plenty of us...you MUST have! A secret CULT!"
      We Americans have to face transformation and it require our ability to quieten our minds to listen....not to leap ahead . ...linear vs. The cyclical. In apprehension of the nearing ages upon us all...

    • @TomFoti
      @TomFoti 8 лет назад

      Thanks for the kind words. In the Four Quartets, when Eliot says, "the hint half guessed, the gift half understood, is Incarnation," I think he's exposing the deepest root of who we are, and also in a way our direct connection to the infinite. It's such a vital concept; elemental to arriving at the kind of transformation you are talking about, and it also reveals an exciting and life-giving resource of energy that may be the wellspring we need in facing such troubling times.

  • @vikynga4498
    @vikynga4498 7 лет назад +1

    I just wish there were good subtitles and not those automatically generated :'(

  • @eveningstar7048
    @eveningstar7048 3 года назад +1

    love the use of brian eno

  • @LittleJoeTheMoonlightCat
    @LittleJoeTheMoonlightCat 3 года назад +1

    The Fan fair of The Jellicles, Any Jellicle Cat would know That, It's The tune Played Just Before The Old Gumbie Cat, and The Apology Tune for Grizabella Just Before She's Sent Past The Russell Hotel, to The Heaviside Layer.

  • @the_famous_reply_guy
    @the_famous_reply_guy 7 лет назад +8

    No mention of Esra Pound influence on Eliot.

    • @rapier1954
      @rapier1954 6 лет назад +2

      Yes it is not very accurate for leaving that out which had a major effect given Pound edited the Wasteland and removed about 1/3 of it.

    • @СътвоРиМи
      @СътвоРиМи 6 лет назад

      In the second part and the beginning of the third

    • @TomFoti
      @TomFoti 4 года назад +1

      il miglior fabbro.

  • @farzanashamim2726
    @farzanashamim2726 3 года назад +1

    बहुत अच्छा

  • @Ketston
    @Ketston 9 лет назад +2

    Subtitle would have been great. I can read English and i can understand it when i read it, i can even talk it (i obviously make some error, because i'm not english), but sometimes it's hard to understand some pronunciations, so the meaning of a sentence could be lost. However, thank you so much for this DOCU. I appreciate it very much.

    • @Ketston
      @Ketston 9 лет назад +1

      I know, sir.

    • @PerryLMarrs
      @PerryLMarrs 8 лет назад

      +Ketston please email me if you have trouble with your English
      Perry L. Marrs

  • @ercanpeker
    @ercanpeker 6 лет назад +2

    one of last great men of the West.

  • @simianshakenspere7334
    @simianshakenspere7334 3 года назад

    the line between Leeds and Belsen Is only paper thin.

  • @rubiksharma5387
    @rubiksharma5387 3 года назад +1

    Wasteland exhibits Eliot's wide range of studies of religion, literature, theology, history and blend of allusions with realism.

  • @Hobbs-Bagley
    @Hobbs-Bagley 8 месяцев назад

    At 12:15, Sarah Churchwell is so mistaken in her portrayal of St. Louis in the early 1890s as a wild west town with swinging door saloons, etc. Unreliable at best…

  • @simianshakenspere7334
    @simianshakenspere7334 3 года назад

    consumed by either fire , or fire...

  • @algie-t2w
    @algie-t2w 8 месяцев назад

    He was 68. She was 30. On their honeymoon she must have felt old age creeping up on her.

  • @xflona
    @xflona 6 лет назад +1

    Anyone watching this for Lineback ;_; ?

  • @reaganwiles_art
    @reaganwiles_art 4 года назад +1

    A great genius. A poet of impersonal poetry which is all about himself. A deeply racist man. Elitist. These are not criticisms.

  • @LittleJoeTheMoonlightCat
    @LittleJoeTheMoonlightCat 3 года назад

    Fiona Shaw, Petunia Dursley Of Harry Potter Fame.

  • @orapronobis1040
    @orapronobis1040 2 года назад

    "summering around the cape" (12:45-50)....my dear! Cape Ann is NOT "the cape" (which is shorthand for Cape Cod) -- get your capes straight blondie!

  • @simianshakenspere7334
    @simianshakenspere7334 3 года назад

    1963

  • @chel3SEY
    @chel3SEY 6 лет назад +2

    I wonder when Eliot acquired his fake English accent, before or after he arrived in England.

    • @avocadoo4387
      @avocadoo4387 3 года назад

      He didn't I met him before he was in England and he sound the same

    • @chel3SEY
      @chel3SEY 3 года назад

      @@avocadoo4387 I see. So you're 120 years old...

    • @avocadoo4387
      @avocadoo4387 3 года назад

      @@chel3SEY no my grandad meet him isaid it wrong

    • @Driecnk
      @Driecnk 3 года назад

      Really

  • @campbellbailey9614
    @campbellbailey9614 6 лет назад +1

    Michael Jackson was also a sheman I never realised t s eliot was trans amazing

    • @afonsosousa2684
      @afonsosousa2684 5 лет назад +2

      Neither Jackson nor Eliot were trans, what are you talking about.

    • @TomorrowWeLive
      @TomorrowWeLive 4 года назад

      What drugs were you on when you wrote this comment btw?

    • @Driecnk
      @Driecnk 3 года назад

      Not a shaman

  • @degsbabe
    @degsbabe 5 лет назад

    4:10 'Most important poet...' Really ? The way America courted Dylan Thomas and slobbered over him, hailing him the greatest. I will concede though I do like Eliots 'Wasteland' and the 'Hollow Men'.

    • @Me_ThatsWho
      @Me_ThatsWho 3 года назад

      Yeah, I sort of blanched when I heard that at 4:10 If important means influential to other artists, one could argue Pound was more influential (at least with the Modernists)

    • @degsbabe
      @degsbabe 3 года назад

      @@Me_ThatsWho ...' I sang in my chains like the sea. ...'

    • @Me_ThatsWho
      @Me_ThatsWho 3 года назад

      @@degsbabe"And the sabbath rang slowly
      In the pebbles of the holy streams."

    • @degsbabe
      @degsbabe 3 года назад

      @@Me_ThatsWho Marvellous. ..'. In the cathedral of the woods...'

    • @Me_ThatsWho
      @Me_ThatsWho 3 года назад +1

      @@degsbabe Nice.
      "...And the fair girl long ago
      Whom I often tried to know
      May be entering this rose."

  • @pouyanazarvash6182
    @pouyanazarvash6182 5 лет назад

    i dont get it.

  • @campbellbailey9614
    @campbellbailey9614 6 лет назад

    I got bored a 1:43 when did you fall bored?

    • @TomFoti
      @TomFoti 4 года назад +2

      Shut your TV off for two months and come back to it. "Adopt the pace of nature. Her secret is patience." -- Emerson

    • @Me_ThatsWho
      @Me_ThatsWho 3 года назад +2

      @@TomFoti beautiful quote !

    • @elainewallace-e1o
      @elainewallace-e1o 2 месяца назад

      Bored through most of video...but soldierd on.

  • @TomorrowWeLive
    @TomorrowWeLive 4 года назад +2

    That horrible American country music at the beginning. Music and poetry are always a bad combination, but I can't think of any song less suitable to go with an Eliot poem. At first I thought I'd opened another video by mistake.

  • @matthewstokes1608
    @matthewstokes1608 6 лет назад +4

    What on Earth is the Dylan dirge doing at the beginning - The Four Quartets needs no help - least of all that.

    • @christophermcauliffe9141
      @christophermcauliffe9141 4 года назад +1

      I think it's only there because Dylan mentions Eliot in a song. Even with that in mind, the song seems very badly placed, and a real mistake. (And I'm a huge Dylan fan)

    • @Driecnk
      @Driecnk 3 года назад

      No connection?

  • @Lightsomewise
    @Lightsomewise 5 месяцев назад

    Read the Quran before it’s late

  • @michaelboylan5308
    @michaelboylan5308 5 лет назад +1

    Grotesquely over rated, Insignificant poet compared to Yeats Pound D,H, Lawrence Graves let alone Rilke Pasternak or Mandelstam, The reason must be the English needed a resident Great Poet to go with a resident Great Novelist Woolf

  • @simianshakenspere7334
    @simianshakenspere7334 3 года назад

    meh