Authors: Robert Crawford
He had to lead a double, even a multiple, life. He tried to understand and care for Vivien as best he could, which, in turn, exhausted him. Each working day he needed to go to the bank and be professional, accurate, reliable. That he could manage. Routine was helpful, but contributed to a self-protecting aspect of him that Katherine Mansfield called during the spring of 1921 âthe bluff'. She found Tom âa rare, delightful being', even as she decided that âthe bluff oppresses me'.
20
Then there was his public literary life, much of which he found congenial. Even if there, too, he bluffed at times, it helped keep him sane, and even let him be witty, as he was with Virginia Woolf when she shared a taxi with him one March Sunday night to go to see Congreve's Restoration comedy
Love for Love
. âAre you as full of vices as I am?' she asked him. âFull. Riddled with them', he replied. They chatted briefly about literature; she worried her work involved depending on âan illusion'. He told her she didn't really mean that. She thought she did. Later, after sitting beside him at the theatre, she confided to her diary that,
I think one could probably become very intimate with Eliot because of our damned self conscious susceptibility: but I plunge more than he does: perhaps I could learn him to be a frog. He has the advantage of me in laughing out. He laughed at Love for Love: but thinking I must write about it I was a little on the stretch.
21
Laughter released him from strain, but only temporarily. Later in March Vivien came home from the nursing home to Clarence Gate Gardens, but remained in bed. Tom explained to Sydney Schiff that on medical advice, âShe has not been allowed to see anyone, except myself, or to write letters.'
22
By the start of April she was a little better. Perhaps she might go to the country for a month. He thought it would be a year or two before she recovered.
Outside the flat things were also a struggle. At Lloyds Bank his work on post-war German debts was challenging but usefully absorbing. In the sometimes febrile literary world, while keeping on generally good terms with the Woolfs (though Virginia worried on occasion that âEliot never admired me, damn him'), Tom felt that âI and Murry have fallen apart completely.' No longer could he hide his conviction that Murry was a poor writer: âverbose', with too facile a love of âmoney and being a public figure'.
23
Vivien's hostility towards Katherine Mansfield, on whom Murry cheated, exacerbated this disagreement. Surveying his own troubled life, Tom brooded on the Victorian Catholic convert John Henry Newman's intense spiritual autobiography,
Apologia pro Vita Sua
, and on the extended poem he so wanted to write. When he could, he applied his mind not just to the pain of this, but, purposefully, to the technical challenge. âWe do not like long poems', he opined gloomily. The pained Gothic imagination of Edgar Allan Poe, familiar to him since his childhood dental ordeals, was in his thoughts at this difficult time. Poe's theory that âno poem should be more than 100 lines' haunted him; the issue was how to sustain intensity.
24
In the spring of 1921 Woolf was discomfited to realise that Tom âdoes like Poe'.
25
Contemplating extended composition in verse, he had noted recently how Conrad Aiken's long poem echoed his own cadences. It also lost intensity, getting far too diffuse; yet maybe it helped Tom. Aiken's
The House of Dust
tried to link an individual psyche to a âdarkened city' of âtowers', bells, loves and ânightmare streets' where âspring returns', and âcards' might âtell your future'. âTime is dissolved' in âdust' as sometimes unfaithful lovers âSit and talk' and âmisconstrue' each other (âWhat shall we talk of?'), and people cry out âGood-night! Good-night! Good-night!'
26
Aspects of this surely lodged in Tom's consciousness, resurfacing in the long poem he was attempting to work on. Pound's developing âCantos' offered another, more helpful model â one, like his own recent verse, increasingly pieced together out of quotations, allusions, snatches. If Tom could get the structure right, a lengthy poem could work: âNo one who is willing to take some trouble about his pleasures complains of the
length
of the Divine Comedy'. He thought it was no bad thing for an extended poem to contain some material âof ephemeral interest', but âit should not have been composed as a number of short poems'.
27
This was a problem. For he had several shorter pieces, including âThe Death of the Duchess', that he had been hoarding for years, hoping perhaps they might fit into a larger structure. Like âThe Death of the Duchess', these older poems, allusive yet intimate, were veined with anxieties about sex and death.
Frustratingly, the material would not gel. On 5 February 1921 he showed Lewis âa new long poem (in 4 parts) which', Lewis told Sydney Schiff, âwill be not only very good, but a new departure for him'.
28
Yet Tom held this work back. For
Tyro
he sent instead a short âSong to the Opherian'. He got one of the words wrong: he seems to have meant âorpharion', an instrument like a lute to which Elizabethan love songs (such as those of John Dowland) were sometimes sung. Edited down to thirteen lines, this poem is no sweet love song. With its sense of frustrated eroticism (âI may not kiss or clutch'), its âblackened river' and âbed' and âpendulum in the head' and âbleeding' and âtears', it signals physical and psychological angst transmuted into something haunting yet scarcely comprehensible â meaning that refuses to come into shape. This was Tom's compositional problem as he struggled throughout 1921. Unusually, he published âSong to the Opherian' under a pen-name, âGus Krutzsch', echoing the name of his manly footballing St Louis schoolfellow August R. Krutzsch. Doing so may have been a mischievous way of hiding the intimate hurts of âWonkypenky' from the public gaze.
29
It hints too at how, as Tom looked forward to his mother's arrival that summer, he was acutely conscious of his American background.
âGus Krutzsch' (changed from âHeine Krutzsch') also features in the long American narrative section positioned to open his long poem. As well as revisiting his past, Tom was thinking early in 1921 about writers who could create characters that convincingly incarnated âmyth'. How might one attempt this in a modern era largely âbarren of myths'? Epitomising Englishness, John Bull had been such a myth, but was now âdegenerate'; in film Charlie Chaplin, ânot English, or American, but a universal figure', might be another. Chaplinesque or not, England's theatres and music-hall stars allowed audiences, âpurged of unsatisfied desire', to âlive the myth'.
30
These ideas nourished âSweeney Agonistes', the drama of disastrous desires in London that Tom was plotting; more immediately they nurtured what became
The Waste Land.
Recently returned from Paris, he was spurred, as so often, by the French capital's cosmopolitan culture. The new phenomenon of Dada, which was moving westwards and which that April would produce Man Ray and Marcel Duchamp's
New York Dada
, intrigued him. He thought Dada in Paris âa diagnosis of a disease of the French mind', even âa moral criticism', but âwhatever lesson we extract from it will not be directly applicable in London'. This holds open the possibility of indirect applications. Thoughts of Dada led him to Baudelaire, âa deformed Dante' who had âintellect
plus
intensity'. Tom wanted just that combination for his extended poem. Further evidence that the work was taking shape lies not least in the quotation which ended his
Tyro
piece, âThe Lesson of Baudelaire'. That quotation from Baudelaire's preface to
Les Fleurs du Mal
would be positioned prominently in Tom's long poem, mounting a disconcerting moral challenge to the reader as ally and hypocrite: â
Vous, hypocrite lecteur
â¦'
31
In January he composed and reworked the first of his âLondon Letters' for the
Dial.
Telling Thayer it was âthe first writing of any kind that I have done for six months', he mentioned, âIt will be several months before I have any verse ready for publication.'
32
As he faced up to his problems, his âLondon Letter', which did not appear until April, articulates âan overwhelming sense of difficulty'. Splenetically, it complains of London-published poetry as âdull, immature, slight, and bad'. Georgian poet John Drinkwater's verse is âdull, supremely dull'. âI do not wish to dwell upon the dulness', Tom writes, but dwell on it he does, lamenting a reading public that âknows no tradition, and loves staleness'; the âindependent' man is rejected in âa world of mass-production' characterised by âRegular Hours, Regular Wages, Regular Pensions, and Regular Ideas'.
33
The great English poet who made much of dullness is Alexander Pope, who ends his satire on literary life,
The Dunciad
, with a mock-apocalypse in which âThy hand great Dullness! lets the curtain fall, / And universal Darkness covers all'.
34
Tom singled out âthe last lines of the “Dunciad”' for praise in June.
35
In his prose of early 1921 he imagined several mock apocalypses â from a âSecond Flood' brought on by all this dullness to a âLast Judgement', supposedly imagined by modern English poets âwho know a little French' and featuring âRoman candles, Catherine wheels, and inflammable fire-balloons'. In his poetry, too, he turned to Pope.
36
Probably around this time, though their first composition cannot be dated precisely, he wrote around seventy lines of Popeian couplets about a lady, Fresca (first mentioned in âGerontion'), who lies in bed, affectedly âunwell'. Awaking âfrom dreams of love and pleasant rapes', she summons her maid, corresponds with a friend about âLady Kleinwurm's party', uses the toilet and has a bath. Connected with prostitution and the âhearty female stench', Fresca seems a poetaster in a shallow milieu. She has been âthrilled' into âhysteric fits' by âthe Russians'. With a dash of misogyny, Tom typed in Popeian accents,
Women grown intellectual grow dull,
And lose the mother wit of natural trull.
37
This passage concluded with lines that again echo Marvell's âTo his Coy Mistress', with its âchuckle spread from ear to ear.'
In early 1921 Tom had written of Marvell as a poet from a âPuritan' background who managed to learn from the rather different tradition of the âFrench'.
38
Those words at least as accurately describe himself. As it survives, his typescript entitled âThe Fire Sermon' then changes its verse form. It veers away from Pope towards the sounds of a nightingale, associated in Classical mythology with Tereus's rape of Philomela. The poem may allude to a Renaissance song but Tom's typescript here resembles a Dadaist or other French avant-garde text. Jean Cocteau in
Le Potomak
(1913) had broken up Wagner's
Tristan und Isolde
(a work Tom also plundered) with his
Cor de Tristan se rappelant
Cor
Cor
Cor de Tristan â¦
39
Tom went even further. Twitteringly, he disintegrated the nightingale's call in a soundscape suspended between Dada and Elizabethan English:
Twit twit twit twit twit twit twit
Tereu tereu
So rudely forc'd
Ter
40
There then follow descriptions of seedy life in modern London, including an account of a twenty-one-year-old âclerk' who âassaults' a typist; her reaction to his sexual attentions is âindifference'.
41
These several versions of sexual encounters, each mentioning or involving what is or comes close to rape, read as enactments of similar scenes from different eras, functioning rather like reincarnations of some underlying, disturbing myth. Drawn from Tom's reading and, conceivably, from his awareness of âsociety' London as well as the seedier goings on around Crawford Mansions, these passages are works of imagination; nor should the âFresca' be taken as Vivien. Nevertheless, the pervasive sense of tormented sexuality, the disgust and the horrified fascination with London life do seem to speak, however indirectly, from Tom's problematic experience.
Other poems or part-poems woven into his projected composition do this too. If âThe Death of the Duchess' has links to life with Vivien, then the opening of the surviving typescript of the new poem's first part, âThe Burial of the Dead' (which begins, âFirst we had a couple of feelers down at Tom's place') presents an account of a night on the town that calls up Tom's memories of going with Aiken to rough areas of Boston. The âTom' of the opening has a wife called âJane' (the name Mary Hutchinson had given to a version of herself in her 1917
Egoist
short story), so he is not Tom Eliot; yet he shares aspects of Tom Eliot's past.
42
The work's second part, initially called âIn the Cage' then retitled âA Game of Chess', begins with a passage about a woman in a grand interior that alludes to Shakespeare's
Antony and Cleopatra
. Further links to the rape of Philomel precede a transition to a very edgy conversation between a couple, beginning, âMy nerves are bad tonight'. Modulating from jagged conversation into the music of ragtime, this passage seems uncomfortably close to the situation Tom and Vivien found themselves in when the poem was under construction. Vivien, who had a good ear for dialogue, read these lines in typescript and described them as âW O N D E R F U L'. When the passage concluded with a long, Cockney-accented conversation involving sex and an abortion, she pencilled in the line (which Tom kept, almost unaltered, in his final version), âWhat you get married for if you dont want to have children'.
43