Poetry and Exile: T.S. Eliot, Four Quartets

When:
October 13, 2015 @ 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm
2015-10-13T18:00:00+01:00
2015-10-13T19:00:00+01:00
Where:
Museum of London, Barbican
Barbican Estate
London EC2Y
UK
Cost:
Free
Contact:
Gresham College
02078310575

These poems retain a stubborn opacity and no interpretation is ever wholly satisfactory. The difficulty of Eliot’s poetry is partly a function of the poems’ dense allusions to so much other poetry. But by exploring the idea of exile in relation to locality and the idea of space more abstractly, the shape of Four Quartets as descriptive of a spiritual journey comes into better focus. Autobiographically it is clear that Burnt Norton, the house and its extensive gardens, East Coker, and above all the religious community at Little Gidding, matter greatly to our understanding of both Eliot’s life and also his poetry. But the antithesis of place, that is the idea of exile from place, is equally important.

This is a free public lecture by Belinda Jack, Gresham Professor of Rhetoric.

There is no need to book in advance for this lecture. It runs on a first come first served basis.