Epigraph Annotations

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Go back to [[Shoring Up Fragments Against Our Ruin: Quotations and Allusions]]
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Go to [[The Waste Land Text]]
 
Go to [[The Waste Land Text]]
  
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The importance of prophecy, especially to artists, underwrites much of "The Waste Land."  Perhaps  
 
The importance of prophecy, especially to artists, underwrites much of "The Waste Land."  Perhaps  
 
Eliot is indicating that he views himself as a poet-prophet, who writes his poetry-prophecies without care for their impact--merely because he must.
 
Eliot is indicating that he views himself as a poet-prophet, who writes his poetry-prophecies without care for their impact--merely because he must.
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== Ovid's ''Metamorphoses'' ==
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In exchange for her virginity, Apollo grants Sybil one wish.  She wishes to live almost an infinitely long time, but forgets to ask for eternal youth.  This particular portrayal of Sybil would  most probably refer to the overall themes of fertility and sterility of the poem, and perhaps, refer to a culture that straggles on, but bears no new fruit, as Eliot sees it. 
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== Virgil's ''Fourth Eclogue'' ==
 
== Virgil's ''Fourth Eclogue'' ==
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Go back to [[Shoring Up Fragments Against Our Ruin: Quotations and Allusions]]
 
Go back to [[Shoring Up Fragments Against Our Ruin: Quotations and Allusions]]
  
--Courtney Handy 22:32, 9 September 2012 (CDT)
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Go to [[The Waste Land Text]]
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--Courtney Handy 23:25, 9 September 2012 (CDT)

Latest revision as of 05:10, 10 September 2012

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