Thomas Stearns Eliot

AuthorCATS

Thomas Stearns Eliot was born in St Louis, Missouri on 26 September 1888. He was educated at Harvard, at the Sorbonne in Paris and at Merton College, Oxford. He settled in England in 1915 and taught briefly at two schools before joining Lloyds Bank in the City of London in their foreign and colonial department. His first volume of poems, Prufrock and Other Observations was published in 1917. The Waste Land, his most famous work, came out in 1922. On 1925 he left the bank to become a director of the publishing house of Faber. There have been several collected editions of his poetry and volumes of his literary and social criticism. T S Eliot also wrote a number of verse plays, the best-known of which, Murder in the Cathedral, was commissioned for the Canterbury Festival of 1935. Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats appeared in October 1939. (Eliot had a great affection for cats and Possum’ was his alias among his friends.) Four Quartets, generally regarded as his masterpiece, was published as a single work in 1943. T S Eliot became a British citizen in 1929. He received many honours and distinctions, among them the Order of Merit and the Nobel Prize for Literature. He was awarded posthumously the 1983 Tony award for the book of Cats. He was also and Officier de la Legion d’Honneur. He died in London in 1965 and there is a memorial to him in Poet’s Corner, Westminster Abbey.