Thomas Stearns Eliot

Born September 26, 1888
St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.
Died January 4, 1965 (Aged years)
London, England
Region Northern Europe
British
Language English
Profession Critic, Essayist, Playwright, Poet, Publisher
Education Harvard University
Merton College, Oxford
Period Modernist
Movements Modernism
Notable Works The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock (1915), The Waste Land (1922), The Hollow Men (1925), Murder in the Cathedral (1935)
Awards Nobel Prize in Literature
Order of Merit
Pulitzer Prize for Poetry
Politics Conservative
Bio T. S. Eliot was a major figure in 20th-century literature, known for his influential modernist poetry and critical essays. His work, characterized by its innovative use of language and exploration of themes such as disillusionment and fragmentation, had a profound impact on the literary world. Eliot’s conversion to Anglicanism and his conservative views also shaped his later works and public life.
NoPoemTopic
27HysteriaInvolvement, Laughter, Muscles, Tea
26La Figlia Che Piange (The Weeping Girl)Flowers, Grief, Resentment, Sunlight
25Macavity: The Mystery CatCriminal, Disappearance, Levitation, Mystery
24Morning At The WindowDespondency, Faces, Fog, Streets
23Mr. ApollinaxApollinax, Coral, Fragilion, Laughter
22Mr. MistoffeleesConjuring, Eccentric, Illusions, Magic
21Mungojerrie And RumpelteazerAcrobats, Cats, Mischief, Reputation
20Of The Awefull Battle Of The Pekes And The PolliclesBarking, Foes, Intervention, Pugs
19Old DeuteronomyProgeny, Proverb, Vicarage, Wives
18Portrait Of A LadyAfternoon, Candles, Fornication, Jew
17PreludesEvening, Smells, Street, Winter
16Rhapsody On A Windy NightLunar, Memory, Midnight, Woman
15Skimbleshanks: The Railway CatNight, Search, Signal, Skimble
14SpleenAbsolute, Alley, Faces, Sunday
13Sweeney Among The NightingalesCoffee, Giraffe, Moon, Stocking