T.S. Eliot’s Murder in the Cathedral: Divine vs. Human?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
It is possible that my very superficial acquaintance with Barthian theology is from the wrong end. That is, I got the impression that it was a movement back to Luther; that as a counter-reformation of Liberal Protestantism it was all to the good; but that it had little to offer to the less Protestant minded, and indeed held dangers in stressing the chasm between the spiritual and the temporal order. In fact, the Bishop of Stepney asked me if I had been influenced by Barth, because he thought that I was emphasising the division of ‘Church’ and ‘World’ to such an extent!
And I think that the tendency of the time is opposed to the view that the religious and the secular life of the individual and the community can form two separate and autonomous domains. I know that a theology of the absolute separation of the life of the Spirit and the life of the World has spread from Germany. Such a doctrine appears more plausible, when the Church’s position is wholly defensive, when it is subject to daily persecution, when its spiritual claims are questioned and when its immediate necessity is to keep itself alive and to keep its doctrine pure. But this theo-logy is incompatible with the assumptions underlying everything that I have been saying. The increasing complexity of modern life renders it unacceptable, for, as I have already said, we are faced with vital problems arising not merely out of the necessity of cooperating with non-Christians, but out of our unescapeable (sic!) implication in non-Christian institutions and systems. And finally, the totalitarian tendency is against it, for the tendency of totalitarianism is to re-affirm, on a lower level, the religious-social nature of society. And I am convinced that you cannot have a national Christian society, a religious-social community, a society with a political philosophy founded upon the Christian faith, if it is constituted as a mere congeries of private and independent sects. The national faith must have an official recognition by the State, as well as an accepted status in the community and a basis of conviction in the heart of the individual.
What I am opposing is not merely a division of religious and secular drama into watertight compartments; what I am proposing is not merely that we need to go to a religious play or to a secular play in much the same spirit. It is an opposition to the compartmentalisation of life in general, to the sharp division between our religious and our ordinary life. I know that in the world in which we live this compartmenta-lisation is constantly being forced upon us. I am not only thinking of certain countries, and of certain tendencies which exist in every country; of the explicit doctrine that religion is for a man’s private life, and that his public life belongs to the secular state. The terminus of such a doctrine is of course to put an end to man’s private life altogether, for the division cannot be maintained.
How clear and how serious Barth saw the whole situation at the time came to the fore in an article in December 1931 in the Zofinger Zentralblatt. Here he characterized fascism as a ‘religion in its dogmatically fixed acquaintance with only one reality, the national, in its appeal to reasons, which are no reasons at all, in its behavior as unqualified power’. Indeed, as a religion, from which Christianity could only expect hostility, and towards which, at the same time, Christianity might stand under the greatest temptation to adapt.5
in believing Christ, who was a Jew himself and died for heathens and Jews, one simply must not go along with the disrespect and cruelty towards the Jews which is the order of the day.6
We must rather begin with the admission that we do not know in ourselves what we say when we say “God”, indeed that all that we believe to know when we say “God” does not capture and comprehend the one who is called “God” in the creed. We will always only capture an idol of ours, thought out and made by ourselves, whether, in truth, we aim for the “Spirit” or “Nature”, “Fate” or the “Idea”.7
An exploration of the murder of Archbishop Thomas Becket by agents of King Henry II in the twelfth century, Murder in the Cathedral may at first appear to offer only a further pageant of imaginative medievalism. But Eliot himself acknowledged the dimension of an all too recognizable pragmatism by converting his murderers into self-interested public servants justifying themselves in work-a-day prose. Privately, at least, it is said that Eliot himself saw this work as a response to Hitler. We shall never know how many in those early audiences saw the connection.
2. Murder in the Cathedral: The Divine and the Human
A martyr is never the design of man; for the true martyr is he who has become the instrument of God, who has lost his will in the will of God, not lost it but found it, for he has found freedom in submission to God. The martyr no longer desires anything for himself, not even the glory of martyrdom.
Thomas: | Who are you, tempting with my own desires? |
Others have come, temporal tempters, | |
With pleasure and power at palpable price. | |
What do you offer? what do you ask? | |
Tempter: | I offer what you desire. I ask |
What you have to give. Is it too much | |
For such a vision of eternal grandeur? | |
Thomas: | Others offered real goods, worthless |
But real. You only offer | |
Dreams to damnation. | |
Tempter: | You have often dreamt them. (Eliot [1935] 1937, pp. 39–40) |
Tempter: | You know and do not know, what it is to act or suffer. |
You know and do not know, that acting is suffering, | |
And suffering action. Neither does the actor suffer | |
Nor the patient act. But both are fixed | |
In an eternal action […] (Eliot [1935] 1937, p. 40, cf. 21) |
Chorus: | […] what tribulation |
With which we are not already familiar? There is no danger | |
For us, and there is no safety in the cathedral. Some presage of an act | |
Which our eyes are compelled to witness, has forced our feet | |
Towards the cathedral. We are forced to bear witness. (Eliot [1935] 1937, p. 11) |
O Thomas Archbishop, save us, save us, save yourself that we may be saved;Destroy yourself and we are destroyed.
Thomas: | While I ate out of the King’s dish |
To become servant of God was never my wish. | |
Servant of God has chance of greater sin | |
And sorrow, than the man who serves a king. | |
For those who serve the greater cause may make the cause serve them, | |
Still doing right: and striving with political men | |
May make that cause political, not by what they do | |
But by what they are. I know | |
What yet remains to show you of my history | |
Will seem to most of you at best futility, | |
Senseless self-slaughter of a lunatic, | |
Arrogant passion of a fanatic. | |
[…] | |
I shall no longer act or suffer, to the sword’s end. | |
Now my good Angel, whom God appoints | |
To be my guardian, hover over the swords’ points. (Eliot [1935] 1937, p. 45) |
Thomas: | It is not I who insult the King, |
And there is higher than I or the King. | |
It is not I, Becket from Cheapside, | |
It is not against me, Becket, that you strive. | |
It is not Becket who pronounces doom, | |
But the Law of Christ’s Church, the judgement of Rome. | |
Go then to Rome, or let Rome come | |
Here, to you, in the person of her most unworthy son. (Eliot [1935] 1937, p. 62) |
Unbar the door!You think me reckless, desperate and mad.You argue by results, as this world does,To settle if an act be good or bad.You defer to the fact. For every life and every actConsequence of good and evil can be shown.And as in time results of many deeds are blendedSo good and evil in the end become confounded.It is not in time that my death shall be known;It is out of time that my decision is takenIf you call that decisionTo which my whole being gives entire consent.I give my lifeTo the Law of God above the Law of Man.Those who do not the sameHow should they know what I do?How should you know what I do? Yet how much moreShould you know than these madmen beating on the door.Unbar the door! unbar the door!We are not here to triumph by fighting, by stratagem, or by resistance,Not to fight with beasts as men. We have fought the beastAnd have conquered. We have only to conquerNow, by suffering. This is the easier victory.Now is the triumph of the Cross, nowOpen the door! I command it. OPEN THE DOOR!
I am here.No traitor to the King. I am a priest,A Christian, saved by the blood of Christ,Ready to suffer with my blood.This is the sign of the Church always,The sign of blood. Blood for blood.His blood given to buy my life,My blood given to pay for His death,My death for his Death.
For I have given unto them the words which thou gavest me; and they have received them, and have known surely that I came from thee, and they have believed that thou didst send me. I pray for them: I pray not for the world, but for them which thou hast given me, for they are thine. And all mine are thine, and thine are mine; and I am glorified in them. And now I am no more in the world, but these are in the world, and I come to thee. Holy Father, keep through thine own name those whom thou hast given me, that they may be one, as we are. […] I have given them thy word; and the world hath hated them, because they are not of the world, even as I am not of the world. I pray not that thou shouldest take them out of the world, but that thou shouldest keep them from evil. They are not of the world, even as I am not of the world.(John 17: 8–11, 14–16)9
3. The Women of Canterbury and the Knights
Numb the hand and dry the eyelid, |
Still the horror, but more horror |
Than when tearing in the belly. |
Still the horror, but more horror |
Than when twisting in the fingers, |
Than when splitting in the skull. |
More than footfall in the passage, |
More than shadow in the doorway, |
More than fury in the hall. |
The agents of hell disappear, the human, they shrink and dissolve |
Into dust on the wind, forgotten, unmemorable; only is here |
The white flat face of Death, God’s silent servant, |
And behind the face of Death the Judgement |
And behind the Judgement the Void, more horrid than active shapes of hell; Emptiness, absence, separation from God; |
The horror of the effortless journey, to the empty land |
Which is no land, only emptiness, absence, the Void, |
Where those who were men can no longer turn the mind |
To distraction, delusion, escape into dream, pretence |
[…] |
Not what we call death, but what beyond death is not death, |
We fear, we fear. Who shall then plead for me, |
Who intercede for me, in my most need? |
Dead upon the tree, my Saviour, |
Let not be in vain Thy labour; |
Help me, Lord, in my last fear. |
Dust I am, to dust am bending, |
From the final doom impending |
Help me, Lord, for death is near. (Eliot [1935] 1937, pp. 68–69)11 |
Clear the air! clean the sky! wash the wind! take stone from stone and wash them.The land is foul, the water is foul, our beasts and ourselves defiled with blood.[…]We are soiled by a filth that we cannot clean, united to supernatural vermin,It is not we alone, it is not the house, it is not the city that is defiled,But the world that is wholly foul.Clear the air! clean the sky! wash the wind! take the stone from the stone […] Washthe stone, wash the bone, wash the brain, wash the soul, wash them wash them!
Eliot’s own consciousness of the play as play is emphasized when he boldly brings forth the Knights, the murderers of Thomas, out of the intense interior space of the play’s spiritual and poetic experience, to have them address the audience in “platform prose”, as he called their speeches […]. This is Metatheatre. This is the play drawing attention to itself as play, as illusion.
abandoned every policy that he had heretofore supported; he affirmed immediately that there was a higher order than that which our King, and he as the King’s servant, had for so many years striven to establish; and that—God knows why—the two orders were incompatible.
At another time, you would condemn an Archbishop by vote of parliament and execute him formally as a traitor, and no one would have to bear the burden of being called a murderer. And at a later time still, even such temperate measures as these would become unnecessary.
4. Conclusions
Funding
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Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. The Historical Conflict between Archbishop Thomas Becket and King Henry II
Appendix B. Representations of the Becket Story in Theatre and (Music) Drama
1 | I thank the anonymous peer reviewers of a former version of this article for pointing me to recent scholarship on T.S. Eliot and Karl Barth. I also thank Fran Hopenwasser and Leif Stubbe Teglbjærg for helpful language improvements. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2 | I refer to an electronic version of Domestico’s 2017 volume; seemingly, page numbers do not correspond to those of the printed book; for that reason I also add chapter numbers. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3 | For a broader discussion of the British reception of Karl Barth in the mid-1930s, after the English translation of (the second edition of) Barth’s Epistle to the Romans had appeared in 1933 (it was published in German in 1922), see Morgan (2010, pp. 119–48). In 1933–1934, Chaning-Pearce emphasized Barth’s faithfulness to classical Christianity in an article (Morgan 2010, pp. 122–23). | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
4 | I refer to the Adobe Digital edition of The Complete Prose of T.S. Eliot with its particular numbering of pages. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
5 | My translation. Original German text: “Wie klar und wie ernst Barth zu der Zeit die ganze Lage sah, zeigte auch ein Artikel im Dezember 1931 im Zofinger Zentralblatt, in dem er den Faschismus—‘in seinem dogmatisch fixierten Wissen um diese eine, die nationale Wirklichkeit, in seinem Appell an Gründe, die gar keine Gründe sind, in seinem Auftreten als unqualifizierte Macht’—als eine ‘Religion’ charakterisierte: und zwar als eine Religion, von der das Christentum ‘nur Gegnerschaft’ zu erwarten habe und der gegenüber das Christentum doch zugleich in gröβter Versuchung stehe, sich ihr anzupassen. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
6 | My translation. Original German text: “daβ man im Glauben an Christus, der selbst ein Jude war und der für Heiden und Juden gestorben ist, die Miβachtung und Miβhandlung der Juden, die heute an der Tagesordnung ist, einfach nicht mitmachen darf“. (Original emphasis). | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7 | My translation. Original German text: “Wir haben vielmehr anzufangen mit dem Eingeständnis, daß wir aus uns selbst nicht wissen, was wir sagen, wenn wir ‘Gott’ sagen, d. h. daß alles, was wir zu wissen meinen, wenn wir ‘Gott’ sagen, nicht denjenigen trifft und begreift, der im Symbol ‘Gott’ heißt, sondern immer eines von unseren selbsterdachten und selbstgemachten Götterbildern, ob es nun der ‘Geist’ oder die ‘Natur’, das ‘Schicksal’ oder die ‘Idee’ sei, auf die wir dabei in Wahrheit hinzielen“. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
8 | In the film this voice was spoken by Eliot himself; see (Eliot 1951). | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
9 | All biblical texts are quoted from the King James Bible (including emphases). | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
10 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
11 | The last two triplets as well as the two previous lines of Eliot’s chorus evidently paraphrase stanzas 7, 10, and 17 of the Latin Dies Irae (see The Latin Library 2022: https://www.thelatinlibrary.com/hymni.html (accessed on 3 April 2022); the English translation given here is from William Josiah Irons’ 1849 version, which, according to Matthew Britt, writing in 1922, was the most common in liturgical uses; see Britt 1922):
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12 | Opinions, however, have been divided, at Becket’s time as well as among modern scholars, as to whether Thomas could have acted in a more cautious, diplomatic, maybe cleverer way. John of Salisbury had occasionally criticized him for some of his actions while he was chancellor, but, conversely, also for his unbending attitude, at a later time, when Becket as archbishop was his superior. Herbert of Bosham, originally a clerk under chancellor Thomas Becket, remained in his service when Thomas became archbishop; Herbert was a close advisor to Thomas all the way during the conflict. He encouraged Becket to take an uncompromising position, often in disagreement with John concerning tactics and timing, but when it came to “basic principles, they tended to agree” (Guy 2012, p. 173, see also pp. 173–75 and 226–28). Herbert of Bosham wrote the last of the early Lives of Thomas Becket, finished between 1184 and 1186. This substantial work contains a very personal, even emotional account of Thomas’s life and death and includes lengthy discussions of the major questions involved, and also has personal comments pertaining to the philosophy of history. See Staunton (2006, pp. 63–74) and Bainton (2018). |
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Petersen, N.H. T.S. Eliot’s Murder in the Cathedral: Divine vs. Human? Religions 2022, 13, 1068. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13111068
Petersen NH. T.S. Eliot’s Murder in the Cathedral: Divine vs. Human? Religions. 2022; 13(11):1068. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13111068
Chicago/Turabian StylePetersen, Nils Holger. 2022. "T.S. Eliot’s Murder in the Cathedral: Divine vs. Human?" Religions 13, no. 11: 1068. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13111068
APA StylePetersen, N. H. (2022). T.S. Eliot’s Murder in the Cathedral: Divine vs. Human? Religions, 13(11), 1068. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13111068