1. Acceptance in T.S.Eliot
Actoins of both scenes take place in the poet's mind but the movements in the rose garden seem more physical. These two scenes are very different because because while the first one is full of dry thoughts, there are intense feelings in the second. "Scene I begins in the midst of things. [. . .] ... Thompson's opinion about this part is the following: Section II is like a chronic interlude; the protagonist is the chorus; and we must not think of the inte...
- Word Count: 2598
- Approx Pages: 10
- Has Bibliography
- Grade Level: High School