Introduction by T.S. Eliot When I composed The Waste Land, it was not to bewilder but to record the reality of a broken world. After the Great War, what remained were fragments—mythic echoes, scraps of memory, voices without harmony. To write in a single, unified voice would have been dishonest. The age itself was fractured, and so the poem had to be … [Read more...] about The Waste Land Explained: Five Critics in Dialogue
