3. T. S. Eliot
Thomas Stearns
Eliot OM (26 September
1888 – 4 January 1965),
usually known as T. S.
Eliot, was an essayist,
publisher, playwright,
literary and social critic,
and "one of the
twentieth century's
major poets".
7. The oppressed with a sense of not being free,
consequently, withdraws from the world of
experience to the world of contemplation.
Marie in the mountains
In the mountains, there you feel free.
8. The spirit that animates handful
of dust in the present, is
decaying and sickened one.
It is the eternal ‘present’ of the human
condition: ‘Fear of handful of dust’.
9. Fatal love and inevitable.
Love mixed
with death
and rebirth.
love Lust Death
10. Death of God
The crucifixion
represents the
mythological
slaughter of God .
Meaninglessness of cultural
values for example Christian
culture.
The death of God
render human life
and human death
meaningless.
11. Knowledge of what is needed is not the same as
attaining what is necessary.
Our need are limited but what we required is endless.
Datta- Give- God.
Dayadhvan- Compassion- Humans.
Damyata- Self Control- Demous.