Contents
Preface
A Note on Sources
Introduction
Part 1. 1888–1906: Origins
1. Eliot’s St. Louis and “The Head of the Family” ;
2. Sons and Lovers: Sex and Satan;
3. A Frail Youth, a Bookish Boy;
4. Early Landscapes, Later Poems
Part 2. 1902–1914: Early Influences
1. Eliot at Fourteen: Atheistical, Despairing, Gloomy;
2. Poetic Beginnings: Merry Friars and Pleading Lovers;
3. Missourian, New Englander: Double Identity;
4. A Soul’s Paralysis: “Denying the Importunity of the Blood”
Part 3. 1906–1911: Harvard: Out from Under
1. Prologue: A Problematic Student;
2. Bohemian Boston at the Turn of the Century;
3. Bohemian Harvard and Isabella Stewart Gardner (“Mrs. Jack”);
4. A Fellow Poet: Conrad Aiken;
5. “A Very Gay Companion”: Harold Peters;
6. Practicing to Be a Poet: From Omar’s Atheism to Laforgue’s Masks;
7. Poems Written 1906–1910
Part 4. 1906–1910: Harvard Influences: Teachers, Texts, Temptations
Teachers: 1. Irving Babbitt: Human Imperfectability;
2. Barrett Wendell: The Inexperience of America;
3. George Santayana: Philosopher of Reason;
4. William Allan Neilson: Poetic Theorist; Texts:
5. Dante and Eliot’s “Persistent Concern with Sex”;
6. Petronius’s Satyricon: A “Serene Unmorality”;
7. Symons/Laforgue: The Ironic Mask;
8. Havelock Ellis, “Sexual Inversion”;
9. John Donne: Thought as Experience; Temptations:
10. The Lure of Europe: Brooks’s The Wine of the Puritans;
11. “T. S. Eliot, the Quintessence of Harvard”
Part 5. 1910–1911: T. S. Eliot in Paris
1. The Primacy of Paris, 1910–1911;
2. Jean Verdenal: “Mon Meilleur Ami”;
3. Matthew Prichard: A Blurred Portrait;
4. Henri Bergson: A Brief Conversion;
5. Charles Maurras: The Action Française;
6. Finding the Personal in the Poem: Drafts of “Portrait” and “Prufrock”;
7. Poems Written 1911–1914
Part 6. 1911–1914: Eliot Absorbed in Philosophical Studies
1. Prologue: The Rise of Harvard’s Philosophy Department and the Santayana Controversy;
2. The Decline and Fall of Harvard Philosophy in Eliot’s Day and After;
3. Eliot and Oriental Philosophies and Religions;
4. Psychology as Philosophical, Religion as Psychological, Mysticism as Magical;
5. Eliot and the Elusive Absolute;
6. Epilogue: The Eliot Controversy,
Part 7. 1914–1915: American Chaos versus English Tradition
1. Philosophy in Marburg, War in Europe;
2. London Interlude: Pound and Russell;
3. Oxford, 1914–1915: Reconsidering Philosophy;
4. New Friends and Old: Culpin, Blanshard, Pound, Lewis;
5. The Mystery of Emily Hale: “The Aspern Papers in Reverse”
Part 8. 1915: An Inexplicable Marriage and the Consequences
1. A Sudden Marriage at the Registry Office;
2. Who Was Vivien?;
3. A Flurry of Correspondence, a Day of Decision;
4. An Unhappy Visit Home (Gloucester, July 24–September 4), a Disastrous Honeymoon (Eastbourne, September 4–10);
5. “Bertie” Russell’s “Friendship”;
6. “What I Want Is MONEY!$!£;!! We are hard up! War!”;
7. Hallucinations, Heavenly and Hellish Poetic Visions: “St. Sebastian” and “St. Narcissus”;
8. Poems Written 1914–1915
Part 9. 1916: Making Do, Finding Means, Expanding Connections
1. “The Most Awful Nightmare of Anxiety”; “Pegasus in Harness”;
2. The Triumph of Poetry over Philosophy;
3. Reviews and Essays, Teaching and Lecturing: Total Immersion;
4. A Widening Circle of Friends and Associates, Writers and Artists
Part 10. 1917–1918: T. S. Eliot: Banker, Lecturer, Editor, Poet, Almost Soldier
1. Eliot the Banker: March 19, 1917–November 1925;
2. Eliot the Extension Lecturer;
3. Eliot as Eeldrop;
4. Eliot the Assistant Editor: June 1917–December 1919, ;
5. Eliot the Poet, ;
6. America Enters War: April 6, 1917–Armistice Day, November 11, 1918;
7. “Writing . . . Again”: The French and Quatrain Poems;
8. Poems Written 1917–1918
Part 11. 1919–1920: Up the Ladder, Glimpsing the Top
1. Death of a Father;
2. Banking, Teaching, Editing, Writing: Money and Power;
3. Friendships and Relationships: Deeper and Wider;
4. A Voice from the Past; “An Encounter of Titans”; Moving Again;
5. Three New Books: Poetry and Prose;
6. “Gerontion”: Return of Fitzgerald’s Omar;
7. Poems Written 1918–1920
Part 12. 1919–1921: Notable Achievements, Domestic Disasters, Intimate Friends
1. Prologue: Paris and the Pension Casaubon, Paris Again in the Spring;
2. “A Long Poem . . . on my Mind for a Long Time”;
3. A Family Visit: Mother, Brother, Sister—Wife;
4. A Room of One’s Own, Wearing Makeup, Confidante Virginia Woolf;
5. Roommates, “Renowned Pederasts”: Kitchin, Senhouse, Ritchie
Part 13. 1922: Over the Top
1. “The Uranian Muse,” The Waste Land, and “il miglior fabbro”;
2. Publication of The Waste Land;
3. “Out into the World”: The Waste Land Reviewed;
4. Pound’s Financial Scheme for Eliot: “Bel Esprit";
5. Birth of The Criterion
Part 14. A Glance Ahead: The Making of an American Poet
1. T. S. Eliot and Walt Whitman;
2. An American Poet Discovers His American-ness
References to Works by T. S. Eliot
References to Works by Other Authors
Index

