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Life & Wisdom Quote by T. S. Eliot

"What we call the beginning is often the end. And to make an end is to make a beginning. The end is where we start from"

About this Quote

Eliot makes a tidy paradox feel like a bruise you keep pressing: the line insists that our neat timelines are emotional fictions, not lived reality. The repetition of "beginning" and "end" works like a ritual chant, the kind you use when language has to carry what logic can’t. He’s not being cute. He’s staging a mind trying to survive change without lying to itself about what change costs.

Written into the grain of Four Quartets (from which this comes) is Eliot’s wartime sense of history as recurrence rather than progress. London is being bombed; Europe is watching old certainties collapse; modernity’s promise of forward motion looks shaky. In that context, "the end is where we start from" reads less like inspiration-poster wisdom and more like an anti-romantic admission: you don’t graduate out of fear, grief, faith, or doubt. You circle back, older, carrying different evidence.

The subtext is theological as much as psychological. Eliot, an Anglo-Catholic poet, is always testing whether time is a trap or a doorway. Endings become a kind of purgation: losing what you thought you were, so you can re-enter the world with fewer illusions. The syntax itself enacts the turn; each sentence reverses the previous one, like footsteps retracing a path and discovering it’s not the same path anymore. What “starts” us, Eliot implies, isn’t novelty. It’s reckoning.

Quote Details

TopicNew Beginnings
Source
Verified source: Four Quartets (T. S. Eliot, 1943)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
What we call the beginning is often the end And to make an end is to make a beginning. The end is where we start from. (Little Gidding, Part V (page number varies by edition)). This quote is from T. S. Eliot’s poem "Little Gidding" (the fourth poem in Four Quartets), specifically Part V. The earliest appearance is as a separately published poem/pamphlet and also in periodical publication in 1942; the first collected book appearance is in the 1943 Harcourt, Brace (New York) first collected edition of Four Quartets. Many web/quote compilations add punctuation (e.g., periods) not present in the poem’s lineation; the primary-source wording is line-broken verse as shown here.
Other candidates (1)
The End Is the Beginning (Jill Bialosky, 2025) compilation92.3%
... T. S. Eliot in the section of the Four Quartets , called East Coker . In those lines , he alludes to the ... What...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Eliot, T. S. (2026, February 11). What we call the beginning is often the end. And to make an end is to make a beginning. The end is where we start from. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/what-we-call-the-beginning-is-often-the-end-and-29053/

Chicago Style
Eliot, T. S. "What we call the beginning is often the end. And to make an end is to make a beginning. The end is where we start from." FixQuotes. February 11, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/what-we-call-the-beginning-is-often-the-end-and-29053/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"What we call the beginning is often the end. And to make an end is to make a beginning. The end is where we start from." FixQuotes, 11 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/what-we-call-the-beginning-is-often-the-end-and-29053/. Accessed 20 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

T. S. Eliot

T. S. Eliot (September 26, 1888 - January 4, 1965) was a Poet from USA.

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