because he hipnotized him
Writer Ezra Pound nicknamed T.S. Eliot as "Old Possum" because of Eliot's playful and witty demeanor. This nickname inspired Eliot's collection of light verses for children called "Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats," which later inspired the musical "Cats" by Andrew Lloyd Webber.
"The Wasteland" is a poem published by T.S. Eliot in 1922. Considered as being perhaps the foremost example of high-modernism, "The Wasteland" is a 443-line poem riddled with allusions to Christ, references to Greek mythology, French poetry, as wells as a litany of classical works. Though the tone of "The Wasteland" is considered somewhat somber, and full of despair, some interpret the ending to offer a glimmer of hope, foreshadowing Eliot's conversion to Anglicanism; Eliot was a devout member of the Anglican church at the time of his death.
TS Eliot died in London in 1965 of emphysema from heavy smoking.
he didn't
TS Eliot
3
yes because he had emphysema from heavy smoking and that is also how t.s. eliot died.
Thomas Stern Eliot... look it up it would make it a LOT easier... sheesh
Yes, T.S. Eliot's poem "Virginia" does have meaning. In this poem, Eliot explores themes of identity, memory, and perception through the use of Virginia Woolf as a symbol of literary and artistic influence. The poem delves into the complexities of creativity and the interconnectedness of past and present.
No, Eliot considered the different possible interpretations of Hamlet's character and motivations a defect in Shakespeare writing.
T.S Eliot was not.
Stearns. His full name was Thomas Stearns Eliot.