<p><I>The Waste Land</I> (1922) is a poem by T.S. Eliot. After suffering a nervous breakdown, Eliot took a leave of absence from his job at a London bank to stay with his wife Vivienne at the coastal town of Margate. He worked on the poem during these months before showing an early draft to Ezra Pound, who helped edit the poem toward publication. <I>The Waste Land</I>, dedicated to Pound, includes hundreds of quotations of and allusions to such figures as Homer, Sophocles, Virgil, Ovid, Dante, Saint Augustine, Chaucer, Baudelaire, and Whitman, to name only a few.</p><p>Divided into five sections¿¿The Burial of the Dead;¿ ¿A Game of Chess;¿ ¿The Fire Sermon;¿ ¿Death by Water;¿ and ¿What the Thunder Said¿¿<I>The Waste Land</I> is a complex poem that translates Eliot¿s fragile emotional state and increasing dissatisfaction with married life into an apocalyptic vision of postwar England. The poem begins with a meditation on despair before moving to a polyphonic narration by figures on the