The Scotsman

Eliot After The Waste Land

By Robert Crawford

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Jonathan Cape

Nea the beginning of the second volume of R ma of T Eliot, the problem for t bec mes clear. Eliot wro e, ironically in a let er, “If I could

oy every letter I have ever written in my life I would do so before I die. I should like to leave as little biography as possible”. Eliot did vacillate from this position, but there was a perpetual reticence to his life. Crawford is the first biographer to have access to Eliot’s correspond­ence with Emily Hale, which was sealed for 50 years, and there is therefore a tranche of new detail, speculatio­n and inference possible. But Crawford wisely states “my aim is not to neaten his life, or reduce it to one expository template, but to let it emerge in its sometimes complex, contradict­ory messiness”.

Messiness is a very apposite word. This volume sees Eliot’s separation from his first wife, Vivien, who was eventually sectioned. All the while Eliot was romancing, in an epistolary form, an old acquaintan­ce Emily Hale. The letters are revealing: Eliot made it clear that his marriage to Vivien was indissolub­le. He refused to divorce her, and even after her death would not re-marry Hale. He did, however, confide in her that “my life and work will be misunderst­ood to the end of time”, called her his “Raspberrym­outh”, and the time he spent with her does inform, if not inspire, the imagery of the Four Quartets.

And yet; and yet. Towards the end of his life he wrote a strange document, saying “I came to see that my love for Emily was the love of a ghost for a ghost, and that the letters I had been writing to her were the letters of an hallucinat­ed man, a man vainly trying to pretend to himself that he was the same man that he had been in 1914”. There is something more than ungallant in leaving a kind of codicil that insists that their letters were is some sense never really true. Of course, by this time he had re-married, to his secretary Valerie Fletcher, who became the formidable gatekeeper of the Eliot estate. In perhaps the most astonishin­g moment of the book, it is recounted that Valerie heard a recording of Eliot reading when she was a 14 year-old schoolgirl, and declared “I shall marry that man”. Her infatuatio­n with Eliot became something of a family joke. But nor can it be denied that Valerie made Eliot happy. “At the age of 68 the world was transforme­d for me, and I was transforme­d by Valerie”, he wrote in the same piece where he renounced Emily. It would be churlish to begrudge him his late and unexpected happiness.

All of this is interestin­g and Crawford handles it judiciousl­y. Eliot, however, is remembered as one of the greatest poets of the 20th century, not for his haphazard romantic life. Crawford places the Four Quartets in the context of war and depression, as much a work of ruination as The Waste Land but with a searing and redemptive quality. The problem for any biographer is after the Four Quartets, the poetry ceases. Eliot did still write, and readers may have memories of Murder In The Cathedral. But an unscientif­ic straw poll of my friends in the book world was remarkable in how few of them had read The Family Reunion, The Cocktail Party, The Confidenti­al Clerk or The Elder Statesman. The idea of a revival of Eliot’s drama seems a remote propositio­n, and Crawford is fairly unsentimen­tal about the lack of that prospect.

This book is properly complex, both in terms of the art and the life. I will relish knowing that the Eliot who was described as wearing a “four piece suit”, was also the Eliot who bought “fake plaster dog poo” for his four year old nephew. SK

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