ASir Patrick Spens
BTess Durbeyfield
CThe Drowned Phoenician sailor
DArthur Hallam
Answer:
C. The Drowned Phoenician sailor
Read Explanation:
1. Source of the line
This comes from T.S. Eliot’s The Waste Land (1922), specifically from the second section A Game of Chess. In this section, Eliot inserts a prophetic warning from the Tarot card reader, Madame Sosostris, who describes different symbolic figures, including The Drowned Phoenician Sailor.
2. Meaning in context
The “Drowned Phoenician Sailor” is one of the Tarot cards mentioned.
The phrase “fifty fathoms deep” recalls Shakespeare’s The Tempest (Ariel’s song: “Full fathom five thy father lies”), which also speaks of death beneath the sea.
“Abendour” (sometimes spelled Aberdour, a Scottish place) reinforces the imagery of drowning and being carried away by the sea.
3. Symbolism
Drowning here represents both literal death and symbolic death (the collapse of old civilizations, particularly Phoenicia, a great ancient sea-trading culture).
The “Phoenician Sailor” thus becomes a symbol of cultural decline, death, and transformation — fitting into Eliot’s larger theme of the spiritual barrenness of the modern world.