Your Status: Logged out Log in

An essay on the first stanza of 'A game of chess'  

Member rating: No Rating | Words: | Submitted: Tue Aug 26 2003

Page Preview
Preview
Previous 1 of 2 Next

On the left is an image preview of every page of this document, and below are the first 150 words with formatting removed:

An essay on the first stanza of 'A game of chess' Through calling this poem 'A game of chess', Eliot continues with the theme he starts in 'The burial of the dead' of people who are trapped in a wasteland and making no effort to escape it, so are therefore stuck like a those in a check-mate during a real game of chess. The title is also a reference to 'Women beware women' by Middletone, a story in which a mother-in-law is playing chess, unaware that each move she makes on the chess board is matched by a move in the seduction of her daughter-in-law by the duke in the story. The reference to Middleton's 'Women beware women' gives a depiction of passion and lust which Eliot uses as a contrast in the poem. In the first stanza, Eliot describes a room that is elaborately decorated and filled with beautiful...

To see the full version of this document, and 143,614 others

Register Now