The quoted passage comes near the end of T.S. Eliot’s poem,
Little Gidding, which was written in Britain during the Second World
War. Eliot goes on to use vivid imagery to describe the beginning:
“At the source of the longest river
The voice of the hidden waterfall
And the children in the apple-tree
Not known, because not looked for
But heard, half-heard, in the stillness
Between two waves of the sea.”
The theme of the poem is:
“All shall be well, and
All manner of things shall be well”.
The author urges us to view history as a pattern of
“timeless moments”. We celebrate those who died as a consequence of sectarian
strife even though they were not “wholly commendable’. We do not celebrate them to
“revive old factions”. We celebrate them because of what we have inherited and
taken from them. They now accept “the constitution of silence” and are “folded
into a single party”. They have left us with a symbol “perfected in death” that
“all shall be well”.
The poem seems to me to offer hope for the future of Western
culture, despite the author's experience of the “incandescent terror” of bombing raids while it was being written.
Eliot elaborates his views on culture in his book, Notes Toward the Definition of Culture. The first edition of that book
was published in 1948, but he began writing it at around the same time as Little
Gidding was published.
At one point, Eliot suggests that culture “may be described
simply as that which makes life worth living” (27). He views culture as linked
to religion: “there is an aspect in which we see a religion as the whole way
of life of a people … and that way of life is also its culture” (31).
Eliot claims that it is an error to believe that “culture
can be preserved, extended and developed in the absence of religion”. Nevertheless,
he acknowledges: “a culture may linger on, and indeed produce some of its most
brilliant artistic and other successes after the religious faith has fallen
into decay” (29).
The author saw Western culture as already in decline at the
time of writing, by comparison with the standards 50 year previously. Eliot
“saw no reason why the decay of culture should not proceed much further”
(18-19).
Although I am skeptical of such sweeping claims, I think
Eliot makes an important point about the potential for cultural disintegration
to ensue from cultural specialization:
“Religious thought and practice, philosophy and art, all
tend to become isolated areas, cultivated by groups with no communication with
each other” (26).
From my perspective, one of the most interesting aspects of
this book is Eliot’s suggestion that “within limits, the friction, not only
between individuals but between groups”, is “quite necessary for civilization”
(59). In discussing the impact of sectarianism on European culture he
acknowledges that “many of the most remarkable achievements of culture have
been made since the sixteenth century, in conditions of disunity” (70). Perhaps
disunity helped by encouraging artistic freedom of expression.
My reading of Notes Toward the Definition of Culture left
me feeling optimistic that Western culture can survive the current culture
wars. The culture wars seem to me to be akin the historical sectarian disputes
between Catholics and Protestants.
Western culture has previously survived attempts of dogmatists
to silence their enemies, so it can probably do so again.
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