Discuss Eliot’s Concept of
Depersonalization or His Theory of Impersonality
In Tradition and Individual
Talent, he propounded the doctrine that poetry should beimpersonal and
free itself from Romantic practices, ‘the progress of an author is a continual
self-sacrifice, a continual extinction of personality’. He sees that in this depersonalization,
the art approaches science. For Eliot, emotions in poetry must be
depersonalized. Artistic self-effacement is essential for great artistic work.
He opposed Coleridge who
says that a worth of a poet is judged by his personal impressions and feelings.
Eliot says that impressionism is not a safe guide. A poet in the
present must be judged with reference to the poets in the past.
Comparison and analysis are the important tools for a critic. The critic must
see whether there is a fusion of thought and feeling in the poet,
depersonalized his emotions and whether he has the sense of tradition. So these
are the objective standards. But what emotion is Eliot talking of? He speaks
against the poet’s emotions. Art, too has emotions; but different from those of
the artist and this difference is to be maintained for a great work of art.
Eliot says:
“The difference between art and the event is always absolute”
His theory of impersonality goes
even further when he criticizes Wordsworth’s view that poetry has its, Origin
in emotions recollected in tranquility”. In his view poetry is an organization
of different concepts and for such organization to take place perfect
objectivity on the part of the poet is essential. There is no question of the
poet expressing his personal emotions. To Eliot, The poet’s emotions and
passions must be depersonalized; he must be as impersonal and
objective as a scientist. The personality of the artist is not important:
important thing is his sense of tradition; A good poem is a living whole of all
the poetry that has ever been written. The poet must forget his personal joys
and sorrows, and be absorbed in acquiring a sense of tradition and expressing
it in his poetry. Thus the poet’s personality is merely a medium, having the
same significance as a catalytic agent, or a receptacle in which chemical
reaction takes place. That is why the poet Poetry is not a turning loose
of emotion, but an escape from emotion; it is not the expression of
personality, but an escape from personality. Eliot does not deny personality or
emotion to the poet. Only, he must depersonalise his emotions. There should be
an extinction of his personality. This impersonality can be achieved only when
the poet surrenders himself completely to the work that is to be done. Eliot
asserts:
“The emotion of art is impersonal. And the poet cannot reach this
‘impersonality without surrendering
himself wholly to the work”
Eliot compares the poet’s mind to
a jar or receptacle in which are stored numberless feelings, emotions etc.,
which remain there in an unorganized and chaotic form till, “all the particles
which can unite to form a new compound are present together.” Thus poetry is
organization rather than inspiration. And the greatness of a poem does not
depend upon the greatness of, or even the intensity of, the emotions, which are
the components of the poem, but upon the intensity of the process of poetic
composition. Just as a chemical reaction takes place under pressure,
so also intensity is indeed for the fusion of emotions into a single whole. The
more intense the poetic process, the greater the poem. There is
always a difference between the
artistic emotion and the personal emotion of the poet. The poet has no
personality to express, he is merely a medium in which impressions and
experiences combine in peculiar and unexpected ways. Impressions and
experiences which are important for the man may find no place in his poetry,
and those which become important in the poetry may have no significance for the
man. The emotions of poetry are different from personal emotions of the poet.
Eliot endorses:
“It is not in his personal emotions, the emotions provoked by
particular events in his life, that the poet is in any way
remarkable or interesting”
In the poetic process there is
only concentration of a number of experiences and a new things results from
this concentration. And this process of concentration is neither conscious nor
deliberate; it is a passive one. In the beginning, his self, his individuality,
may assert itself, but as his powers mature there must be greater and greater
extinction of personality. He must acquire greater and greater objectivity.
He compares the mind of the poet to a catalyst and the process of poetic
creation to the process of a chemical reaction. Just as chemical reactions
take place in the presence of a catalyst alone, so also the poet’s mind is the
catalytic agent for combining different emotions into something new. The
experiences which enter the poetic process, says Eliot, may be of two kinds.
They are emotions and feelings. Poetry may be composed out of emotions only or
out of feelings only, or out of both. There is always a difference between the
artistic emotion and the personal emotions of the poet. Eliot speaks of John
Keats:
“The ode of Keats contains a number of feelings which have nothing
particular to do with the nightingale, but which the nightingale,
partly perhaps because of its attractive name, and partly
because of its reputation, served to bring together”
Thus, the difference between art
and emotion is always absolute. The poet has no personality to express, he is
merely a medium in which impressions and experiences combine in peculiar and
unexpected ways. According to Eliot, two kinds of constituents go into
the making of a poem: the personal elements, i.e. the feelings and emotions of
the poet, and the impersonal elements, i.e. the ‘tradition’, the
accumulated knowledge and wisdom of the past, which are acquired by the poet.
These two elements interact and fuse together to form a new thing, which we
call a poem. It is the mistaken notion that the poet must express new emotions
that results in much eccentricity in poetry. That is why, Eliot says:
“His particular emotions may be simple, or crude, or flat”
It is not the business of the
poet to find new emotions. He may express only ordinary emotions, but he must
impart to them a new significance and a new meaning. And it is not necessary
that they should be his personal emotions. Even emotions which he has never
personally experienced can serve the purpose of poetry. For example, emotions
which result from thereading of books can serve his turn. This
impersonality can be achieved only when poet surrenders himself. And the poet
can know what is to be done, only if he acquires a sense of tradition, the
historic sense, which makes him conscious, not only of the present, but also of
the present moment of the past, not only of what is dead, but of what is
already living.
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