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Eliot and had
Like Eliot, in my fantasies, I had a proud bearing and, with a skill that was vaguely continental, I would lead Jessica through an evening of dancing and handsome descriptions of my newest exploits, would guide her gently to the night's climax which, in my dreams, was always represented by our almost suffocating one another to death with deep, moist kisses burning with love.
After age sixteen, Eliot had little formal education.
Eliot spent the next two years editing Lewes's final work Life and Mind for publication, and she found solace with John Walter Cross, a Scottish commission agent whose mother had recently died.
* 2008 – The New York Times reveals that Governor of New York Eliot Spitzer had patronized a prostitution service.
In 1936 he told TS Eliot that he was starting to meditate, and he used other therapies too ; the Alexander Technique and the Bates Method of seeing had particular importance in guiding him through personal crises.
Samuel Eliot Morison wrote that had Marshall carried out his constitutional duties, assumed the presidency, and made the concessions necessary for the passage of the League of Nations treaty in late 1920, the United States would have been much more involved in European affairs and could have helped prevent the rise of Adolf Hitler, which began in the following year.
The growing threats of the 1930s brought new criticism from younger writers of " what the last lot had done ( Bloomsbury, Modernism, Eliot ) in favour of what they thought of as urgent hard-hitting realism "; while " Wyndham Lewis's The Apes of God, which called Bloomsbury élitist, corrupt and talentless, caused a stir " of its own.
A year later he offered " a fatter typescript ( the London chapters had been added )" to Faber & Faber, where T. S. Eliot, then an editorial director, also rejected it.
With Lady Ottoline Morrell, Leonard Woolf and Harry Norton he took part in Ezra Pound's scheme to ' get Eliot out of the bank ' ( Eliot had a job in the international department of Lloyd's, a London bank, and well-meaning friends wanted him full-time writing poetry ).
On June 5, 2009, The Times revealed that in 1937 Eliot had composed a 34-line poem entitled " Cows " for the children of Frank Morley, a friend and a fellow director of the publishing company.
Zumalacárregui, however, had signed the Lord Eliot Convention, which aimed to end the indiscriminate executions by firing squad of prisoners of both sides.
In her 1859 novel Adam Bede, George Eliot refers to this when she makes Jacob Storey say: " He thought it < nowiki ></ nowiki > had only been put to finish off th ' alphabet like ; though ampusand would ha ' done as well, for what he could see.
Scholar Marjorie Perloff had said of Stain that " nlike her contemporaries ( Eliot, Pound, Moore ), she does not give us an image, however fractured, of a carafe on a table ; rather, she forces us to reconsider how language actually constructs the world we know.
Before legal actions initiated by New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer, which later became known as the Global Settlement enforcement agreement, some large investment firms had initiated favorable research coverage of companies in an effort to aid Corporate Finance departments and retail divisions engaged in the marketing of new issues.
Symbolism had a significant influence on modernism, and its traces can be detected in the work of many modernist artists, including T. S. Eliot, Wallace Stevens, Conrad Aiken, Hart Crane, and William Butler Yeats in the anglophone tradition and Rubén Darío in Hispanic literature.
Rothko's vision of myth as a replenishing resource for an era of spiritual void had been set in motion decades before, by his reading of Carl Jung, T. S. Eliot, James Joyce and Thomas Mann, among others.
Author David Morrell had his fictional character " Eliot " recruit two brothers from an orphanage in Johnstown to train as assassins in Brotherhood of the Rose.
Biographer Marc Eliot wrote that McQueen had an affair with his Bullitt co-star Jacqueline Bisset, although Bisset has not confirmed this.
Their work led to the design initiatives of noted landscape architects Charles Eliot and Arthur Shurcliff, both of whom had apprenticed with Frederick Law Olmsted and Guy Lowell.
A few years previously he had formed a friendship with the poet and playwright T. S. Eliot.
Tippett asked Eliot to write the libretto for his new oratorio, but the poet refused, feeling that Tippett had already written a major part and that his contribution would compete with the music for attention.
Martin Gardner, author of The Annotated Alice, wondered if T. S. Eliot had the Cheshire Cat in mind when writing Morning at the Window but notes no other significant allusions in the pre-war period.
In his book, Cary Grant: Grant's Secret Sixth Marriage ( 2004 ), Marc Eliot claims Grant had a sexual relationship with Scott after they met on the set of Hot Saturday ( 1932 ).
Author Marc Eliot wrote that Bisset had an affair with the actor Steve McQueen, which she has not publicly discussed, though she said in a 2007 interview " was sort of manic and yet very hard to know.

Eliot and published
T. S. Eliot published two plays in the 1950s, while Basil Bunting, born in 1901, published his most important modernist poem Briggflatts in 1965.
He was on the editorial board, with Conrad Aiken, Eliot, Lewis and Aldous Huxley, of Chaman Lall's London literary quarterly Coterie published 1919 – 1921.
Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats is a collection of whimsical poems by T. S. Eliot about feline psychology and sociology, published by Faber and Faber.
Eliot published The Waste Land which became a literary sensation and overshadowed Williams ' very different brand of poetic Modernism.
In Parenthesis, which was published by Faber and Faber with an introduction by T. S. Eliot, was written in a mixture of verse and prose: it defies categorization as either poem or novel.
In the United Kingdom, the tuxedo cat is sometimes known as the " Jellicle cat ", after the fictional tribe of black and white cats described by T. S. Eliot in Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats, which was first published in 1939.
In the American colonies, John Eliot of Massachusetts translated the Bible into the Massachusett language, also called Wampanoag, or Natick ( 1661 – 1663 ; he published the first Bible printed in North America ).
* Death In the Dark, a crime novel edited and published by T. S. Eliot ( 1930 )
The internationally respected poet and author Norman Nicholson, one of the most important English poets of the twentieth century whose work was published by T. S. Eliot at Faber and Faber, spent his entire life in Millom, living at his father's outfitters shop at 14 St George's Terrace.
Ashbery's Charles Eliot Norton Lectures at Harvard University were published as Other Traditions in 2000.
After some heavy editing, " The Waste Land " in the form in which we now know it was published, and Eliot came to be seen as the voice of a generation.
The following year, he published " A Wrong Turning in American Poetry ", an essay in which he made a case against the influences of Eliot, Pound, Marianne Moore, and William Carlos Williams, in favour of the more direct work of writers such as Pablo Neruda, César Vallejo, Juan Ramón Jiménez, Antonio Machado, and Rainer Maria Rilke.
However, during its period, Collins published many notable literary and social critics, including T. S. Eliot, G. K. Chesterton, Hilaire Belloc, and many of the Southern Agrarians.
He has published over thirty collections and won a Pulitzer Prize for Poetry and the T. S. Eliot Prize.
Commager and his co-author Samuel Eliot Morison received vigorous criticism from African American intellectuals and other scholars for their very popular textbook The Growth of the American Republic, first published in 1930.
* The Growth of the American Republic ( with Samuel Eliot Morison, New York: Oxford University Press, 1930 Oxford History of the United States ; 7th ed., 1980 .. Revised and abridged edition with Samuel Eliot Morison and William E. Leuchtenburg published by Oxford University Press in 1980 as A Concise History of the American Republic, rev.
The History of United States Naval Operations in World War II is a 15-volume account of the United States Navy in World War II, written by eminent historian Samuel Eliot Morison and published by Little, Brown and Company between 1947 and 1962.
Mirrlees ' 600-line modernist poem, Paris: A Poem, published in 1918 by Leonard and Virginia Woolf's Hogarth Press, was the subject of considerable study by scholar Julia Briggs, and is considered by some literary critics to have had an influence on the work of her friend, T. S. Eliot, and on that of Virginia Woolf.
Benjamin Gale, son-in-law of Jared Eliot, a Corporation member, had published a pamphlet arguing for discontinuation of the colonial grant to the college, and no grant was given in 1755.
" The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock ", commonly known as " Prufrock ", is a poem by T. S. Eliot, begun in February 1910 and published in Chicago in June 1915.
Composed mainly between February 1910 and July or August 1911, the poem was first published in Chicago in the June 1915 issue of Poetry: A Magazine of Verse, after Ezra Pound, the magazine's foreign editor, persuaded Harriet Monroe, its founder, that Eliot was unique: " He has actually trained himself AND modernized himself ON HIS OWN.
In June 1917 ( see 1917 in literature ), The Egoist, a small publishing firm run by Dora Marsden, published a pamphlet entitled Prufrock and Other Observations ( London ), containing twelve poems by Eliot.
" Eliot said " The Love Song of " portion of the title came from " The Love Song of Har Dyal ," a poem by Rudyard Kipling, published in the 1888 collection Plain Tales from the Hills.

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