“Poetry is not a turning loose of emotion, but an escape from emotion; it is not the expression of personality, but an escape from personality. But, of course, only those who have personality and emotions know what it means to want to escape from these things.” – T.S. Eliot
Born Thomas Stearns Eliot on this
date in 1888, Eliot was an
essayist, publisher, playwright, literary and social critic, and one of the 20th
century's major poets. He started life
as an American and ended it 76 years later as an English citizen and winner of
the Nobel Prize in Literature, "for his outstanding, pioneer contribution
to present-day poetry." The award
came in 1948 and he lamented that he was almost sad to have the award because
“No one has ever done anything after he got it.”
Having said that, he promptly wrote
his 1949 award-winning play The Cocktail
Party, then went on to author two more plays, dozens of poems, and several highly
regarded works of nonfiction before his death in 1965.
Eliot
first attracted widespread attention for his poem The Love Song of J. Alfred
Prufrock (1915), which is seen as a masterpiece of the Modernist movement.
It was followed by some of the best-known poems in the English language,
including The Waste Land (1922), The Hollow Men (1925), Ash
Wednesday (1930), and Four Quartets (1945).
“Poetry
should help, not only to refine the language of the time, but to prevent it
from changing too rapidly,” he said. “Genuine
poetry can communicate before it is understood.”
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