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dc.contributor.authorEliot, T. S.
dc.date.accessioned2014-04-23T19:39:18Z
dc.date.available2014-04-23T19:39:18Z
dc.date.issued2004
dc.identifier.citationEliot, T. S. (2004). Poems. thewritedirection.neten_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/123456789/181
dc.description.abstractThomas Stearns Eliot was born in Missouri on September 26, 1888. He lived in St. Louis during the first eighteen years of his life and attended Harvard University. In 1910, he left the United States for the Sorbonne, having earned both undergraduate and masters degrees and having contributed several poems to the Harvard Advocate. After a year in Paris, he returned to Harvard to pursue a doctorate in philosophy, but returned to Europe and settled in England in 1914. The following year, he married Vivienne Haigh-Wood and began working in London, first as a teacher, and later for Lloyd's Bank. It was in London that Eliot came under the influence of his contemporary Ezra Pound, who recognized his poetic genius at once, and assisted in the publication of his work in a number of magazines, most notably "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" in Poetry in 1915. 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. With the publication of The Waste Land in 1922, now considered by many to be the single most influential poetic work of the twentieth century, Eliot's reputation began to grow to nearly mythic proportions; by 1930, and for the next thirty years, he was the most dominant figure in poetry and literary criticism in the English-speaking world.en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherthewritedirection.neten_US
dc.titlePoemsen_US
dc.typeBooken_US


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