T. S. Eliot - BookwormSearch
About us  |  Why use us?  |  Press  |  Contact us

 

Topic: T. S. Eliot



  
 T. S. Eliot - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Eliot's own experiences as an air raid warden in the Blitz power the poem, and he imagines meeting Dante during the German bombing.
Eliot's work, following his conversion to Christianity and the Church of England, is often (always?) religious in nature and also tries to preserve historical English and broadly European values that Eliot thought important.
A plaque at SOAS's Faber House for T. Eliot.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T._S._Eliot   (4051 words)

  
 T.S. Eliot Collection at Bartleby.com
Collection of twelve poems written by T.S. Eliot in 1920, including Lune de Miel, The Hippopotamus and Mr.
Louis, Mo. One of the most distinguished literary figures of the 20th cent., T. Eliot won the 1948 Nobel Prize in Literature.
(Thomas Stearns Eliot), 1888–1965, American-British poet and critic, b.
http://www.bartleby.com/people/Eliot-Th.html   (268 words)

  
 T.S. Eliot's Life and Career
Among his teachers, Eliot was drawn to the forceful moralizing of Irving Babbitt and the stylish skepticism of George Santayana, both of whom reinforced his distaste for the reform-minded, progressive university shaped by Eliot's cousin, Charles William Eliot.
Eliot (1984), and Lyndall Gordon, Eliot's New Life (1988), are extremely useful, supplemented by smaller specialized studies such as John Soldo, The Tempering of T. Eliot (1983), and by studies in biographical criticism such as Lyndall Gordon, Eliot's Early Years (1977), and Ronald Bush, T.
A poem suffused with Eliot's horror of life, it was taken over by the postwar generation as a rallying cry for its sense of disillusionment.
http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/a_f/eliot/life.htm   (3763 words)

  
 Introduction to Poetry Online Chapter 9 -- Biography
Thomas Stearns Eliot was born on September 26, 1888, in St. Louis, Missouri, the seventh and last child of Henry Ware Eliot, a brick manufacturer, and Charlotte (Stearns) Eliot, who was active in social reform and was herself a not-untalented poet.
As with reactions to the Inferno and the Paradiso of his master Dante, preference for Eliot's earlier or later poetry often seemed to be related to the religious belief, or lack thereof, of the individual reader.
In January 1957, Eliot stunned virtually everyone who knew him, when, with no prior announcement, he married Valerie Fletcher, his secretary at Faber and Faber; he was sixty-eight years old, she was thirty.
http://occawlonline.pearsoned.com/bookbind/pubbooks/kennedy2_awl/chapter9/objectives/deluxe-content.html   (1254 words)

  
 The artist as a young mandarin - The Boston Globe
Even Eliot's stoutest partisans at times seem overmatched by the blowback.
Of course, the proposition that Eliot's edicts on the impersonality of art and the machinations of the objective correlative constitute an elaborate apologia for the repressed emotions and tortured evasions of his own hermetically sealed poetry was hardening into critical dogma even during Eliot's lifetime.
Everything, according to Miller: His avowed modus operandi is ''to find Eliot somewhere, somehow lurking in all of his poems," and he duly labors to unmask the great sphinx of allusive modernism as an intensely personal poet whose every hieroglyphic page can be deciphered as encoded autobiography.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/ideas/articles/2006/01/01/the_artist_as_a_young_mandarin?page=full   (1363 words)

  
 T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)
Eliot's relation to romanticism, his significance in the development (with Ezra Pound) of modernism, his role as an expatriate effecting a "reconciliation with America" in "The Dry Salvages" are all important considerations.
Discuss Eliot's symbolism, the use of water as a symbol.
His techniques of juxtaposition, aggregation of images, symbolism, the use of multiple literary allusions, the influence of Dante are all worth attention, as is his use of "free verse" and many various poetic forms.
http://www.georgetown.edu/faculty/bassr/heath/syllabuild/iguide/eliot.html   (600 words)

  
 T.S. Eliot
Eliot's father was a prosperous industrialist and his mother wrote among others a biography of William Greenleaf Eliot.
Eliot was an incurable joker and among his many pranks was to seat visiting authors in chairs with whoopee cushions and offer them exploding cigars.
Material for the work Eliot drew from several sources, among them the Grail story, the legend of the Fisher King, Sir James George Frazer's Golden Bough, and Dante's Commedia, but when Dante finally is reunited with Beatrice in 'Heaven', The Waste Land ends ambiguously with a few words of Sanskrit.
http://www.classicreader.com/author.php/aut.7   (1472 words)

  
 GradeSaver: ClassicNote: Biography of T.S. Eliot
Eliot's reputation was bolstered by the admiration and aid of esteemed contemporary poet Ezra Pound, the other tower of Modernist poetry.
As one might expect from his work, Eliot was unhappy for most of his life, but his second marriage in 1957 proved fruitful.
Eliot continued his Renaissance man ways by writing his first play, "Murder in the Cathedral," in 1935.
http://www.gradesaver.com/classicnotes/authors/about_t_eliot.html   (812 words)

  
 Poetry of T.S. Eliot; full-text poems of T. S: Eliot, at everypoet.com
Poetry of T.S. Eliot; full-text poems of T. S: Eliot, at everypoet.com
http://www.everypoet.com/archive/poetry/t_s_eliot/t_s_eliot_contents.htm   (118 words)

  
 Poetry Authors in Depth - T.S. Eliot - Meyer Literature
One of the most influential poets of all time, considered "the" modernist poet of the twentieth century, Thomas Stearns Eliot was born in St. Louis, Missouri, in 1888.
In 1921 Eliot began work on the epic poem "The Wasteland", completing it in 1922.
An important influence on the creative development of T.S. Eliot was Ezra Pound, fellow expatriate and friend.
http://www.bedfordstmartins.com/literature/bedlit/authors_depth/eliot.htm   (580 words)

  
 Malaspina Great Books - T. S. (Thomas Stearns) Eliot (1888)
Eliot considered Four Quartets to be his masterpiece, as it draws upon his vast knowledge of mysticism and philosophy.
Eliot resolved this problem with a technique he learned from the one Victorian poet for whom the Imagists had a high regard, Robert Browning.
The man who wrote the above words, T. Hulme&; was the closest thing the early Imagists had to a philosophical spirit, and he was, interestingly enough spurred on in his speculations about imagery by the experience of living and working on the Canadian prairies.
http://www.malaspina.org/home.asp?topic=./search/details&lastpage=./search/results&ID=259   (8676 words)

  
 T.S. Eliot - What is Creativity?
Eliot manifested these imbalances in himself and his works.
Eliot, on the other hand, wrote works that require half of the page to be notes explaining what his vague and mysterious images refer to.
Although he was a learned man, a doctor or medicine as opposed to Eliot's studies in philosophy, his depictions of simple, every day objects allowed clear, uncluttered images to stand on their own merit.
http://www.coldbacon.com/poems/eliot1.html   (1472 words)

  
 Island of Freedom - Thomas Stearns Eliot
As a young poet Eliot found inspiration in French Symbolist poetry, particularly the ironic, self-deprecating verse of Jules Laforgue, and in the flexible, colloquial blank verse of the 17th-century metaphysical poets and Jacobean dramatists.
Eliot's last major poetic sequence, Four Quartets (1943), which was written in four sections from 1935 to 1942 and which he believed to be his finest achievement, is religious in a very broad sense.
Pound regarded Eliot as a truly modern poet who had developed an extraordinarily original idiom that fused tradition and superior learning with the contemporary and colloquial.
http://www.island-of-freedom.com/ELIOT.HTM   (1217 words)

  
 What T.S. Eliot Almost Believed
The progress of the artist, Eliot wrote when he was younger, is "a continual extinction of personality." The poet must not experience his experiences; he must stand self-consciously outside experience in order to watch himself experience.
But unlike Proust, Eliot is careful to remain outside them, for his purpose is not to invest these "spots of time" (as Wordsworth called them) with mystical significance but to develop in them a metaphor for what the mystical enfolding of all time in God's Eternal Now would be like.
What I mean instead is that I think Eliot never did truly believe and that his poetry is not about faith's wait for God but about the hollow man's wait for faith.
http://www.leaderu.com/ftissues/ft9508/bottum.html   (4137 words)

  
 Heath Anthology of American LiteratureT.S. Eliot - Author Page
As Eliot was being recognized as the premier poet of the 1920s, he was also noted for his essays on literature.
As for Vivien Eliot, always high-strung, her intermittent instability eventually worsened into a nervous breakdown, and she was institutionalized from 1939 until her death in 1947.
Born in St. Louis, Missouri, Thomas Stearns Eliot was the son of Charlotte Stearns, a sometime amateur poet strictly committed to New England beliefs, and Henry Ware Eliot, a successful businessman.
http://college.hmco.com/english/lauter/heath/4e/students/author_pages/modern/eliot_ts.html   (1026 words)

  
 TheCriticalPoet - Featured Poet - T.S. Eliot
T.S. Eliot is one of the leaders of the modernist movement in poetry, and with Ezra Pound reformed poetic diction.
In 1948, King George VI bestowed the Order of Merit on Eliot, and that same year he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature.
Through his work as a prolific reviewer and essayist, Eliot helped to structure the modern Canon of Literature.
http://thecriticalpoet.tripod.com/eliot.htm   (345 words)

  
 The Bones in Mr. Eliot's Closet - Books & Culture - ChristianityTodayLibrary.com
That Eliot was a conservative in almost every aspect of life he himself admitted in the famous preface to his 1928 book of essays For Lancelot Andrewes: "Meanwhile, I have made bold to unite these occasional essays merely as an indication of what may be expected, and to refute any accusation of playing 'possum.
Among the most provocative and widely discussed indictments of Eliot is Anthony Julius's book T.S. Eliot, Anti-Semitism and Literary Form.
The general point of view may be described as classicist in literature, a royalist in politics, and anglo-catholic in religion." Such an agenda, dismissed by many of Eliot's contemporaries as merely anachronistic, is taken by our own contemporaries as utterly damning.
http://www.ctlibrary.com/bc/2000/novdec/10.36.html   (325 words)

  
 A Short Biography of T.S. Eliot
Tom and Viv starring Willem Dafoe as Eliot and Miranda Richardson as Vivienne.
Louis, Missouri, U.S.A. on September 26, 1888 to Henry Ware (a businessman) and Charlotte Stearns Eliot (a poetess).
Endowed with and proud of their social connections and respectability, the Eliot family made the most of it.
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acropolis/5616/bio.html   (503 words)

  
 T.S. Eliot
Because of Eliots use of alien emotional content in his poetry, and because of Eliots own stated theoretical positions in his literary essays, Donoghue believes that not only was Eliot not the cold and bloodless figure of caricature, but a man, especially in his youth, of exceptionally intense and dangerous feelings.
Donoghue thinks that Eliot was quite literally describing his own poetry in those words, and he believes that Eliot saw his own poetic work as a form of escape from the self.
One quality of Eliots poetry that strikes the reader forcibly in Prufrock is the indeterminate nature of the character or voice of the poem.
http://www.educationreview.homestead.com/TSEliot.html   (1844 words)

  
 T S Eliot Biography
In his essays, especially the later ones, Eliot advocates a traditionalism in religion, society, and literature that seems at odds with his pioneer activity as a poet.
But although the Eliot of Notes towards the Definition of Culture (1948) is an older man than the poet of The Waste Land, it should not be forgotten that for Eliot tradition is a living organism comprising past and present in constant mutual interaction.
Painted Shadow: The Life of Vivienne Eliot, First Wife of T. Eliot, and the Long-Suppressed Truth About Her Influence on His Genius
http://www.literature-awards.com/nobelprize_winners/tseliot_biography.htm   (426 words)

  
 East Meets : T.S. Eliot
T.S. Eliot, who was born in St. Louis, Missouri, studied at Harvard, the Sorbonne and Oxford and received the Nobel Prize for literature in 1948, drew his intellectual sustenance from Dante, Shakespeare, the Bible, St. John of the Cross and other Christian mystics, the Greek dramatists, Baudelaire, and the Bhagavad Gita.
In a sense Eliot follows in the giant footsteps of Emerson and Thoreau and the early Transcendentalists, but, it would seem, with a greater sense of urgency and relevance.
is echoed in Eliot's use of imagery drawn from several religions.
http://www.gosai.com/chaitanya/saranagati/html/nmj_articles/east_west/east_west_6.html   (357 words)

  
 T.S. Eliot
Though influenced by many sources, it is sometimes overlooked what a keen interest Eliot had in children's nonsense poetry.
Of course, Cats is not mentioned on the tablet, but Eliot would probably be happy to know that, a few of us anyway, remember him with a song from Broadway or for a simple, humorous children's rhyme.
Fifteen years after Eliot's death, composer and lyricist Andrew Lloyd Weber found a copy of Old Possum's Book and decided to make a musical out of it.
http://www.recess.ufl.edu/transcripts/2004/0923.shtml   (475 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Complete Poems and Plays,: 1909-1950: Books: T. S. Eliot
The Cambridge Companion to T. Eliot (Cambridge Companions to Literature) by A.
TSE's style is concentrated and intense, and virtually every collection of his work has the sense to begin each poem on a new page.
The One True Eliot Collection was never published in the United States: "The Complete Poems and Plays of T. Eliot" (Faber and Faber, 1969 and later reprintings).
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/015121185X?v=glance   (1602 words)

  
 Thomas Stearns (T. S.) Eliot Poet and Playwright
This definitive collection of Eliot's poetry is arranged in chronological order, and in a manner that faciliates a better understanding of his growth as a poet and writer.
Gordon has combined her award-winning works, "Eliot's Early Years" (1977) and "Eliot's New Life" (1988), into one authoritative biography that acknowledges Eliot's literary greatness while conceding his personal flaws.
Eliot reads Eliot on this 2 cassette set.
http://www2.lucidcafe.com/lucidcafe/library/95sep/eliot.html   (640 words)

  
 A craving for reality: T. S. Eliot today by Roger Kimball
Reading Eliot imparts a peculiar sense of buoyancy, of tensed vitality—in Edmund Wilson’s phrases, “vibrations” and “curious life.” One reason, I believe, is that Eliot is everywhere embarked on a voyage of discovery.
If Eliot was a “literary dictator,” as was sometimes maintained, this had more to do with what, inspired by Eliot’s practice, educated people habitually required of themselves in the way of taste, judgments, and standards than with anything Eliot might have wished to require of them.
The chief reason that Eliot commanded the attention he did was doubtless the originality, power, and quality of his work.
http://www.newcriterion.com/archive/18/oct99/eliot.htm   (4323 words)

  
 T.S. Eliot
The Cambridge Companion to T.S. Eliot (Cambridge Companions to Literature)
With the publication of his first two works, "Prufrock and other Observations" and "The Wasteland," Eliot's reputation was made.
American-born poet, critic, and playwright Thomas Stearns Eliot settled in London after studying at Oxford.
http://www.multied.com/Bio/people/Eliot.html   (93 words)

  
 The T. S. Eliot Page
The T. Eliot cluster: Here is a list of books I'd recommend to people who want to know more about Eliot's works, and some personal thoughts on his poetry and his life.
So if you are curious about Eliot, this might be good for you.
Some comments and insights from visitors of the Eliot Cluster and Eliot Page.
http://virtual.park.uga.edu/~232/eliot.taken.html   (666 words)

  
 Literary Encyclopedia: T. S. Eliot
Eliot’s fascination with latter’s ironic detachment is apparent in some of his early work; but his engagement with Baudelaire lasted much longer, only being surpassed in intensity and persistence by his life-long preoccupation with Dante.
In 1909, the hard-working, aloof and slightly dandyish T. Eliot took his A. degree in philosophy, history, modern languages and literature at Harvard.
As early as 1908, while still at Harvard, Eliot had discovered Charles Baudelaire and, by way of Arthur Symons, the Symbolist movement in literature, and notably Jules Laforgue.
http://www.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=4861   (629 words)

  
 Home of The T.S. Eliot Society
The 25th Annual Meeting of The T.S. Eliot Society was held in London, England, from 5 to 11 June, 2004.
The Society seeks proposals on Eliot for the Twentieth-Century Literature and Culture Conference in Louisville.
The 26th Annual Meeting of The T.S. Eliot Society will be held in St. Louis, Missouri, from 23 to 25 September, 2005.
http://www.luc.edu/eliot   (154 words)

  
 Poetry Previews: T.S. Eliot
Eliot's release of "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" in 1917 (included in the book Prufrock and Other Observations) garnered him great attention as an important modernist poet.
It was his publication of The Waste Land in 1922 that would secure Eliot his place as one of the greatest poets of the 20th Century.
Befriending Ezra Pound, Eliot moved to England in 1914.
http://www.poetrypreviews.com/poets/poet-eliot.html   (296 words)

  
 TIME 100: T.S. Eliot
Two hundred and eighteen years later, his direct descendant, Thomas Stearns Eliot — who would become the most celebrated English-language poet of the century — was born in St. Louis, Mo., to a businessman and a poet, Henry and Charlotte Eliot.
In 1670 Andrew Eliot left East Coker in Somerset, England, for Boston.
Dorothy Wellesley, writing to W.B. Yeats, said petulantly, "But Eliot, that man isn't modern.
http://www.time.com/time/time100/artists/profile/eliot.html   (284 words)

  
 T.S. Eliot and Hermann Hesse
Quoted by T.S. Eliot in one of his notes to
Eliot visited Hesse in Montagnola while Eliot was in Switzerland.
Among those impressed was T.S. Eliot, who visited Hesse and enlisted him as collaborator on his new periodical
http://world.std.com/~raparker/exploring/tseliot/people/hesse.html   (2295 words)

  
 James E. Miller, Jr.: T.S. Eliot
Late in his life T. Eliot, when asked if his poetry belonged in the tradition of American literature, replied: “I’d say that my poetry has obviously more in common with my distinguished contemporaries in America than with anything written in my generation in England.
Ultimately, Miller demonstrates that Eliot’s poetry is filled with reflections of his personal experiences: his relationships with family, friends, and wives; his sexuality; his intellectual and social development; his influences.
In its sources, in its emotional springs, it comes from America.” In Eliot: The Making of an American Poet, James Miller offers the first sustained account of Eliot’s early years, showing that the emotional springs of his poetry did indeed come from America.
http://www.psupress.org/books/titles/0-271-02681-2.html   (844 words)

  
 The Academy of American Poets - T. S. Eliot
After a notoriously unhappy first marriage, Eliot separated from his first wife in 1933, and was remarried, to Valerie Fletcher, in 1956.
His first book of poems, Prufrock and Other Observations, was published in 1917, and immediately established him as a leading poet of the avant-garde.
An excellent site devoted to the works and life of T. Eliot, created by Raymond Camden.
http://www.poets.org/poet.php/prmPID/18   (587 words)

  
 Voices and Visions Spotlight -- T. S. Eliot
Attend an Eliot reading of "La Figlia Che Piange," read other Eliot poems and a succinct Eliot biography, and discover an excellent bibliography.
They also recognized the originality of Eliot's poetic technique and admired his insistence on the need for spiritual values in an age of popular kitsch.
This site has a timeline of Eliot's life, a list of other Eliot sites, and even a brief review of Tom and Viv, a film about Eliot's doomed relationship with his first wife, Vivienne Haigh-Wood.
http://www.learner.org/catalog/extras/vvspot/Eliot.html   (320 words)

  
 T.S. Eliot Tribute
Performed in Gloucester City Hall 25 September 1999 as the concluding event of the series "T.S. Eliot and Gloucester" presented by the Gloucester Lyceum and Sawyer Free Library in cooperation with the T.S. Eliot Society.
http://jeffrysteele.com/eliot.html   (175 words)

  
 Salon.com Audio "Burnt Norton"
Harper's magazine calls Eliot "one of the great readers-aloud of this century." "We have been educated by T.S. Eliot long enough," says poet Richard Howard.
In 1948 Eliot was awarded the Nobel Prize in literature.
Encouraged by Ezra Pound, he began publishing his work in 1915 and soon established himself as an important voice of the modern world.
http://archive.salon.com/audio/poetry/2001/03/22/eliot/index   (347 words)

  
 T. S. Eliot Life Stories, Books, & Links
Their meeting was after years of correspondence, beginning with an Eliot fan letter expressing admiration for Groucho's films.
Thomas Stearns Eliot, 1948 Nobel Prize in Literature
On this day in 1922 T. Eliot's The Waste Land (originally titled "He Do the Police in Different Voices") was published.
http://todayinliterature.com/biography/t.s.eliot.asp   (585 words)

  
 The Waste Land by T.S. Eliot as hypertext
In it, Eliot takes the reader on a dreamlike odyssey through time, space and the imagination.
The Waste Land by T.S. Eliot as hypertext
One of its most prominent features is Eliot's extensive use of literary collage.
http://eliotswasteland.tripod.com   (161 words)

  
                { SATISFIED PROCESSION } ...
Welcome to Satisfied Procession, the only approved fanlisting for the wonderful author T.S. Eliot, probably most well-known for his poem, "The Wasteland."
{ SATISFIED PROCESSION } The T.S. Eliot Fanlisting
http://fans.papervixen.net/tseliot   (30 words)

  
 T.S. Eliot Poems (On One Easy Page)
The Rythm of T.S. Eliot and The Supa Lines
Well, here it is, the collected poems of T.S. Eliot for about $15.
This is the major T.S. Eliot website out there.
http://www.coldbacon.com/poems/eliot.html   (2895 words)

  
 T. S. Eliot
The Philosophy of T. Eliot: From Skepticism to a Surrealist Poetic 1909-1927 (U of Pennsylvania P, 1986)
Concordance-like word searches within the complete text of Eliot's Collected Poems 1909-1962.
A Reader's Guide to T. Eliot, 2d ed.
http://www.lit.kobe-u.ac.jp/~hishika/eliot.htm   (361 words)

  
 ++ Little Gidding Church - TS Eliot at Little Gidding ++
Eliot may also have met Alan Maycock, who was about to publish his life of Nicholas Ferrar, and who later asked Eliot to be an honorary Patron of the Friends of Little Gidding.
++ Little Gidding Church - TS Eliot at Little Gidding ++
That is, they did not follow the doctrine of the Trinity, (Father, Son and Holy Spirit as the simultaneous but different faces of God).
http://www.littlegiddingchurch.org.uk/lgchtmlfiles/lgpeople2.html   (493 words)

  
 T.S. Eliot: Four Quartets - an accurate online text
T.S. Eliot: Four Quartets - an accurate online text
http://www.tristan.icom43.net/quartets   (37 words)

  
 The San Antonio College LitWeb T. S. Eliot Page
On-Line Criticism of Eliot's Poetry from Modern American Poetry
Southam, A Guide to the Selected Poems of T. Eliot.
George Williamson, A Reader's Guide to T. Eliot.
http://www.accd.edu/sac/english/bailey/eliotts.htm   (93 words)

  
 St. Louis Walk of Fame - T.S. Eliot
Leslie Konnyu, Founder, T.S. Eliot Society, accepted on behalf of Mr.
Visit Encarta® Online for a more extensive biography of the late T.S. Eliot.
He is best known as a poet and critic, and his The Waste Land is one of the most influential works of the twentieth century.
http://www.stlouiswalkoffame.org/inductees/ts-eliot.html   (118 words)

  
 T.S. Eliot Quotes - Literary Quotes About T.S. Eliot and Practically Everything Else
The more perfect the artist, the more completely separate in him will be the man who suffers and the mind which creates; the more perfectly will the mind digest and transmute the passions which are its material.
T.S. Eliot Quotes - Literary Quotes About T.S. Eliot and Practically Everything Else
The remarkable thing about television is that it permits several million people to laugh at the same joke and still feel lonely.
http://quotes.prolix.nu/Authors?T.S._Eliot   (136 words)

  
 What the Thunder Said: T.S. Eliot
The T.S. Eliot page has been moved to...
If you are looking for the Death Clock, it may be found here.
http://www.deathclock.com/thunder   (21 words)

  
 T.S. Eliot Page 1 poetry archive plagiarist.com
» Poems by T.S. Eliot at Poetry X
Updated and corrected versions of poems by T.S. Eliot, plus additional poems, are now available at our Poetry X Site:
Poems by T.S. Eliot remain at Plagiarist.com as a courtesy to those arriving via external links or through a search engine.
http://plagiarist.com/poetry/poets/18   (57 words)

  
 T.S. Eliot discussion group
>> >>Long Description: >> TSE is a new electronic discussion list devoted to the works and >> life of the Anglo-American poet, playwright, and critic T. >> Eliot (1888-1965).
>>Name: TSE >>Short Description: T. Eliot Discussion Forum >>Listowners: >> Greg Foster
In addition to providing an open forum for >> conversation about any aspect of Eliot's poems and other >> writings, the list will be a resource for working scholars, who >> are encouraged to post queries and confer about work in progress.
http://www.writing.upenn.edu/~afilreis/88/eliot-listserv.html   (161 words)

Bookwormsearch
 About us   |  Why use us?   |  Press   |  Contact us

 Copyright © 2006 BookwormSearch.com Usage implies agreement with terms.