Summary
The Complete Prose of T. S. Eliot: The Critical Edition gathers for the first time in one place the collected, uncollected, and unpublished prose of one of the most prolific writers of the twentieth century. Highlights include all of Eliot's collected essays, reviews, lectures, and commentaries from The Criterion; essays from his student years at Smith Academy, Harvard, and Oxford; and his Clark and Turnbull lectures on metaphysical poetry. Each item has been textually edited, annotated, and cross-referenced by an international group of leading Eliot scholars, led by Ronald Schuchard, a renowned scholar of Eliot and Modernism.
In this Volume
-
Vol. 4: English Lion, 1930-1933
- 2015
- Published by: Johns Hopkins University Press
Among the highlights of work included in this volume are two books of collected lecture series, The Use of Poetry and the Use of Criticism and John Dryden: The Poet, The Dramatist, The Critic; two pamphlets, Thoughts after Lambeth and Charles Whibley; and substantial essays on seventeenth-century drama, “Cyril Tourneur,” “Thomas Heywood,” and “John Ford” that originally appeared as leading articles in the Times Literary Supplement. Also included are a dozen BBC broadcasts, restoring material cut from the original typescripts, and more than fifty miscellaneous essays, including previously uncollected Criterion editorials, prefaces, letters, and reviews.
Eliot returned to the United States in 1932 for the first time in seventeen years to assume the Charles Eliot Norton Professorship of Poetry at Harvard, providing in his Norton lectures his most important statement on the history and development of English literary criticism, his major engagement with the legacy of the English Romantic poets, and a principal defense of the obscurity of modern verse. He delivered more than forty public talks during the nine months he spent in the United States. Most of his talks were never intended for publication. This volume includes the texts of five unpublished American lectures reconstructed by the editors from a range of contemporary eyewitness accounts. They supplement and enrich our knowledge of Eliot’s statements on literary, cultural, and religious matters, and provide revealing glimpses into his thoughts about particular authors.
The most important previously unpublished materials in this volume are the lecture notes to Eliot’s undergraduate class on contemporary literature at Harvard, English 26: “Contemporary English Literature (1890 to the Present Time).” Ninety-two pages of handwritten notes for twenty lectures reveal unparalleled evidence of Eliot’s thoughts on his contemporaries, including James Joyce, Ezra Pound, W. B. Yeats, and D. H. Lawrence.
Upon his return to the United Kingdom in 1933, Eliot embarked upon a new direction as a creative writer—composing verse choruses for a religious drama. His hopes for creative renewal, however, did little to assuage the guilty qualms ascribed to the “honest poet” in the concluding lecture of The Use of Poetry and the Use of Criticism, who worried that he had “wasted his time and messed up his life for nothing.”
Table of Contents
- English Lion, 1930-1933: Introduction
- Pages: ix-xxxii
- Editorial Procedures and Principles
- Pages: xxxiii-xl
- Acknowledgments
- Pages: xli-xliv
- List of Abbreviations
- Pages: xlv-xlvii
- List of Illustrations
- Pages: xlix
Part I: Essays, Reviews, and Commentaries
1930
- A Commentary (Jan 1930)
- Pages: 3-6
- Poetry and Propaganda
- Pages: 20-35
- Religion without Humanism
- Pages: 36-43
- Rhyme and Reason: The Poetry of John Donne
- Pages: 57-70
- To the Editor of The Bookman
- Pages: 85-88
- A Commentary (Apr 1930)
- Pages: 89-93
- The Minor Metaphysicals: From Cowley to Dryden
- Pages: 109-119
- John Dryden
- Pages: 120-131
- Preface to Anabasis: A Poem by St.-J. Perse,
- Pages: 132-137
- Second Message to the Anglo-Catholic Congress
- Pages: 139-140
- A Commentary (July 1930)
- Pages: 141-144
- Introduction to The Wheel of Fire, by G. Wilson Knight
- Pages: 145-154
- Baudelaire
- Pages: 155-167
- Arnold and Pater
- Pages: 176-189
- A Commentary (Oct 1930)
- Pages: 190-193
- To the Editor of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Pages: 194-196
- Cyril Tourneur
- Pages: 197-208
- Mocking-Birds. To the Editor of The New Statesman
- Pages: 209-210
1931
- A Commentary (Jan 1931)
- Pages: 213-220
- Thoughts after Lambeth
- Pages: 223-250
- A Commentary (Apr 1931)
- Pages: 253-264
- Dryden the Poet
- Pages: 265-274
- Dryden the Dramatist
- Pages: 275-285
- Dryden the Critic
- Pages: 286-295
- If I Were a Dean
- Pages: 296-299
- A review of The Prospects of Humanism, by Lawrence Hyde
- Pages: 300-302
- A Commentary (July 1931)
- Pages: 303-312
- The Modern Dilemma. Syllabus for Four BBC Broadcasts
- Pages: 323-326
- Thomas Heywood
- Pages: 327-337
- The Pensées of Pascal
- Pages: 338-353
- A Commentary (Oct 1931)
- Pages: 354-361
- Preface to Transit of Venus: Poems, by Harry Crosby
- Pages: 365-368
- Donne in our Time
- Pages: 369-382
- To the Editor of The Times
- Pages: 383
- Charles Whibley
- Pages: 384-398
1932
- A Commentary (Jan 1932)
- Pages: 403-411
- George Herbert
- Pages: 412-416
- Christianity and Communism
- Pages: 422-431
- Mr. Harold Monro: A Poet and his Ideal
- Pages: 432-435
- Religion and Science: A Phantom Dilemma
- Pages: 436-445
- The Search for Moral Sanction
- Pages: 446-455
- A Commentary (Apr 1932)
- Pages: 456-463
- Building Up the Christian World
- Pages: 464-473
- A Commentary (July 1932)
- Pages: 488-496
- Preface to Selected Essays,
- Pages: 497
- A Commentary (Oct 1932)
- Pages: 498-505
1933
- A Testimonial for The Cantos of Ezra Pound
- Pages: 506-507
- A Commentary (Jan 1933)
- Pages: 508-514
- A Commentary (Apr 1933)
- Pages: 515-521
- Critical Note to The Collected Poems of Harold Monro,
- Pages: 522-526
- A Commentary (July 1933)
- Pages: 527-533
- Catholicism and International Order
- Pages: 534-546
- A Commentary (Oct 1933)
- Pages: 550-556
- Report on The Listener Poems
- Pages: 561-566
PART 2: LECTURES IN AMERICA, 1932-33
- A. Chronology of Lectures and Readings
- Pages: 571-573
- Introduction: November 4th, 1932
- Pages: 579-596
- The Age of Dryden: December 2nd, 1932
- Pages: 608-624
- Wordsworth and Coleridge: December 9th, 1932
- Pages: 625-640
- Shelley and Keats: February 17th, 1933
- Pages: 641-653
- Matthew Arnold: March 3rd, 1933
- Pages: 654-667
- The Modern Mind: March 17th, 1933
- Pages: 668-684
- Conclusion: March 31st, 1933
- Pages: 685-694
- The Bible as Scripture and as Literature
- Pages: 695-708
- Toward a Definition of Metaphysical Poetry
- Pages: 710-725
- The Conceit in Donne and Crashaw
- Pages: 726-741
- Laforgue and Corbière in our Time
- Pages: 742-757
- The Modern Dilemma [originally "Two Masters]
- Pages: 810-816
- Edward Lear and Modern Poetry
- Pages: 828-833
- The Development of Taste in Poetry
- Pages: 834-836
- The Study of Shakespeare Criticism
- Pages: 837-839
- The Tendency of Some Modern Poetry
- Pages: 840-845
- English Poets as Letter Writers
- Pages: 846-849