In the period covered by this richly detailed collection, which brings the poet to the age of forty, T.S. Eliot was to set a new course for his life and work. Forsaking the Unitarianism of his American forebears, he was received into the Church of England and naturalised as a British citizen - a radical and public alteration of the intellectual and spiritual direction of his career.
The demands of Eliot's professional life as writer and editor became more complex and exacting during these years. The celebrated but financially-pressed periodical he had been editing since 1922 - The Criterion - switched between being a quarterly and a monthly, before being rescued by the fledgling house of Faber & Gwyer. In addition to writing numerous essays and editorials, lectures, reviews, introductions and prefaces, his letters show Eliot involving himself wholeheartedly in the business of his new career as a publisher. His Ariel poems, Journey of the Magi (1927) and A Song for Simeon (1928) established a new manner and vision for the poet of The Waste Land and 'The Hollow Men'. These are also the years in which Eliot published two sections of an exhilaratingly funny, savage, jazz-influenced play-in-verse - 'Fragment of a Prologue' and 'Fragment of an Agon' - which were subsequently brought together as Sweeney Agonistes . In addition, he struggled to translate the remarkable work Anabase , by St.-John Perse, which was to be a signal influence upon his own later poetry.
This correspondence with friends and mentors vividly documents all the stages of Eliot's personal and artistic transformation during these crucial years, the continuing anxieties of his private life, and the forging of his public reputation.
Thomas Stearns Eliot was a poet, dramatist and literary critic. He received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1948 "for his outstanding, pioneer contribution to present-day poetry." He wrote the poems The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock, The Waste Land, The Hollow Men, Ash Wednesday, and Four Quartets; the plays Murder in the Cathedral and The Cocktail Party; and the essay Tradition and the Individual Talent. Eliot was born an American, moved to the United Kingdom in 1914 (at the age of 25), and became a British subject in 1927 at the age of 39.
Trying to gather info on Eliot’s conversion to Anglo-Catholicism at my retirement, I bought this - and was slightly disappointed. For it is obvious that Eliot’s doctors have given him the false hope that a robust and boisterous masculinity would be an effective cure for his hypomania:
Wrong play, Shakespeare.
But it does get better - even though it takes a LOT of letters to see that. And though Eiot's marriage COLLAPSED, alas, and that hell of living with an unrepentant schizoid-affective wife brought his entire House of Cards down - Eliot broke too, "in a sudden shaft of sunlight."
For suddenly, he was visited in the Depths of Despair with a concrete insight into the forgiving teaching of Jesus. He SAW now that it made perfectly illogical sense, at a profound level, if you get my drift.
A real lightbulb moment, just as Ionesco would later use to have us explode into gales of laughter, as I did, when he produced The Bald Soprano ( a MUST READ).
One's an existentialist's insight, OK, but they're primarily the same - because the existentialists, Saint Paul at Tarsus, and T. S. Eliot suddenly saw this entire makeshift global enterprise of our lives in the world to be little more than an Upside-Down Kingdom (see Donald Kraybill's book by that name).
USURPING the Real Kingdom - "death's twilight kingdom." And the stress of that insight was enormous! For we are in the minority.
For at my back from time to time I hear Time's winged chariot drawing near.
And Eliot still had a very long way to go to find the Kingdom of Peace - death's other kingdom - as we see here, though the vision that was The Hollow Men was all he needed for starters.
The rage directed at his sometimes on, sometimes badly off better half was regrettable, if forgivable. We all have been pawns of demonic passion - myself included - and we will forgive the worst in others when we TRULY see the evil in our own hearts!
That latter insight was very much in evidence in Eliot after his conversion.
So, these letters are not a neat little bundle of bons-mots by a great writer.
Forget it.
His life was every bit as messy as ours, bless him. And he was not to find real peace beckoning till the 1940's, though the insight of The Hollow Men was a necessary first step.
So, in a nutshell:
This is a portrait of a mixed-up young man who had the best of intentions -
Hounded, like his estranged wife, by unforgiving Eumenides -
Slowly learning Never Again to Cast the First Stone, by becoming a Christian.
Reading the third volume of Eliot's letters, which span what might be called **The New Criterion / Faber years, is an exercise in vicarious living among people to whom Important Things, like ideas, Mattered. We're invited into the company of names now familiar to us, such as “Aiken,” “Forster,” “Lawrence,” “Lewis,” “Moore,” “Murry,” “Pound,” “Read,” “Sitwell,” and “Woolf” (both). They, with many others, are given painstaking biographies at the volume’s close; the volume is a masterpiece of scholarship, and, so to speak, “more.”
While many letters accept work for the journal whose editorship Eliot had assumed, others solicit, in exacting terms, critical essays and not always for the most breathlessly awaited title. Eliot was well aware that the lasting value of any publication rests not solely on "what passes for the new"; indeed, we must often look back, beyond the most-praised poems—and prose—of our time.
And what a kaleidoscopic time Eliot’s seems! Dispatching masses of correspondence on a daily basis for the magazine, beginning the *Ariel* poems, a break-through helping him into the longer *Ash Wednesday*, the acquisition of the *New Criterion* by Faber and Gwyer, the publishing house he joined and would help make into one of the world’s most prestigious...there would seem no room for the pettiness and backbiting that too frequently characterizes contemporary Po Biz.
Yet, like so much else in Eliot, things aren’t exactly what they appear: can any reader imagine the fastidious belle-lettrist having to write his closest sibling, following a pleasant nine days with him and his wife, that his own spouse, claiming torment by the latter, had swallowed poison? “Of Vivien’s conduct at Malmaison [a sanitarium],” TSE tells his brother on 24 June: “‘She is very affectionate and gentle, and her regrets and self-accusations are terribly pathetic . . . she has not made any attempts on her life for over a fortnight.’” This is to be considered as progress on the Eliots’ homefront?
Surely the inevitable loneliness made for a surprising Mr. Eliot when it came to the poems of young writers in whom he could discern genuine gifts. The twentysomething Terence Prentis, who had thanked him for his scrupulous critique of three poems submitted to the New Criterion, received the following response:
As I was away from England when I wrote to you I did not expect you to write, but I am very glad to hear from you. I only deprecate your discouraged tone. You certainly ought to go on writing, and I am sure from what I have seen of your work that if you do keep it up you will arrive at something quite definite in the end. I am sorry to hear that you are so very busy although I suppose that from another point of view it is very encouraging, but I know that nevertheless you can, if you will, find time for a little practice in writing. And remember that it is not merely the time you spend with pen and paper but is as much, or more in fact, that you always keep a corner of your mind working on poetry, more or less unconsciously (a sort of continuous chemical process of transformation of sensations, emotions and ideas into poetical material) that makes all the difference. (p.60)
Eliot, of course, is writing about himself, just as when, reviewing *Speculations,* (ed. Herbert Read, 1924) the posthumous essays of T. E. Hulme—one of the Great War’s casualties—he calls Hulme’s “the most fertile mind of my generation.” (C. 2, April 1924)
With its peculiar merits, this book is most unlikely to meet with the slightest comprehension from the usual reviewer; with all its defects—it is an outline of a work to be done, and not an accomplished philosophy—it is a book of very great significance . . . . In this volume he appears as the forerunner of a new attitude of mind, which should be the twentieth-century mind, if the twentieth century is to have a mind of its own. Hulme is classical, reactionary, and revolutionary; he is the antipodes of the eclectic, tolerant, and democratic mind of the end of the last century (231-232).
What? This from Eliot, who was soon to change his citizenship, be baptized in the Anglo-Catholic Church, and famously declare himself a royalist and classicist in the bargain, without also attributing to himself similarly “revolutionary”? Of course! Think of *The Waste Land* itself: does the poem not fit the “antipodes” Eliot describes above, ranging from the body of classical literature to Sanskrit to Cockney demotic, with iambic pentameter and the syncopations of jazz driving the various rhythms?
“Writing about himself.” We’ve known to read Eliot as a highly personal poet in disguise ever since Randall Jarrell’s 1962 lecture called “Fifty Years of American Poetry”:
Won’t the future say to us in helpless astonishment: “But did you actually believe that all those things about objective correlatives, classicism, the tradition, applied to his poetry? Surely you must have seen that he was one of the most subjective and daemonic poets who ever lived, the victim and helpless beneficiary of his own inexorable compulsions, obsessions? From a psychoanalytical point of view he was far and away the most interesting poet of your century. But for you, of course, after the first few years, his poetry existed undersea, thousands of feet below the deluge of exegesis, explication, source listing, scholarship and criticism that overwhelmed it. And yet how bravely and personally it survived, its eyes neither coral nor mother-of-pearl but plainly human, full of human anguish!”
And that’s precisely how I first read Eliot at age fifteen, first “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock,” then, for a paper, *The Waste Land.* Fortunate enough not to be walled off from the actual poems by mountains of explanatory footnotes that often take up more space on the page than lines from the poem do, as in certain anthologies, I knew Eliot’s poetry because it can, in fact, communicate before it is fully understood, a life’s work that continues.
A natural culmination which, with Denis Donoghue, resulted in both *Words Alone*, arguably the single best study of Eliot, and his reviews, in the American version of *The New Criterion*, of the two volumes of Eliot’s letters, most recently “Eliot’s Fine Italian Hand.” In fact, I find myself rabidly envious of Donoghue, who didn’t labor under the very eerie coincidence of Eliot’s widow’s death halfway through reading the book and taking notes for this piece.
A smattering of items appeared in the *Guardian*, most wondering how future editions of the *Letters* would appear, and in what frame of time. Thus far, we have learned that Valerie Fletcher Eliot had her sights set on becoming Eliot’s secretary while still an adolescent, and if her dream was further realized by becoming his wife, it was even more helpful to her in solidifying her position as the “Real Mrs. Eliot” by owning the copyright of letters from Vivien (née) Haigh-Wood, a/k/a Mrs. Eliot #1 and VHE, who died intestate; and thus being able to publish them here as in earlier volumes. VSE appears, indeed, like the “painted shadow” used as a title for her biographer, Carole Seymour-Jones; in all three volumes published thus far, her truly adoring but pathetic letters to TSE, and especially here to Ottoline Morrell—who seems always to have been laughing and gossiping, often with Virginia Woolf, behind “Viv”’s back—depict her in various states of hysteria, to use the title of Eliot’s most famous prose poem.
For Donoghue, what leapt from these pages is the footnoted incident in which Eliot, occasioned by the surgery for an anal fistula undergone by Aiken in London, preceded by receiving a copy of Eliot’s Poems 1909-1925, apparently had a fit of physical disgust—a lifelong condition usually kept under better control—and sent his old friend from Harvard
a page torn from The Midwives’ Gazette, on which he had underlined in ink certain words and phrases — Blood— mucous — shreds of mucous --purulent offensive discharge . . . TSE, in response to a copy of Ushant that Aiken had sent him on publication, would write on 7 November 1952: “I was, as a matter of fact, somewhat shocked to find myself described as having a streak of sadism in my nature. I haven’t the faintest recollection of the two incidents on which you base this diagnosis, but if it was like that, then it seems to me that I must have behaved very badly. I hope in that case you have forgiven me.” (p. 45)
As regards publishing VSE’s letters here, the second Mrs. Eliot would seem to have “a streak of sadism”—or jealousy—in her nature too. Or, perhaps, she was simply trying to give the truest account of the relationship between her husband and his first wife: the couple write of each other with great mutual concern and adoration, all the while recognizing that they feed, like vampires, off the other’s pain.
What riveted my attention, however, is another footnoted item, this one from Derek Patmore, the elder son of Brigit:
In “T. S. Eliot as a young man (unpub. memoir, 1970), he recalled: I was anxious to work in publishing and follow a literary career. So one day [TSE] invited me to dine with him at Pagani’s Restaurant, near the flat off Baker Street where he and Vivienne were living at the time. I was flattered and excited that he should ask me out alone, and my only fear [was] that I might bore — after all, I was only nineteen, and even in those days, T. S. Eliot had a formidable reputation. We agreed that I should pick him up at his mansion flat. When I arrived and entered the living room, I stood for a moment rather shyly at the door. To my surprise, Tom turned to his wife Vivienne and exclaimed:
“Isn’t Derek beautiful?”
“It is true that I was very tall and handsome at this age, and this remark, which I have never published before, confirmed a secret suspicion which I have always believed that T. S. Eliot had a hidden streak of homosexuality in his nature. It comes out at times in his poetry but he was very Puritan and careful to hide his real feelings.” (Father K. G. Schroder, English Dept., Loras College, Dubuque, Iowa).
This comes as no surprise to those familiar with James E. Miller, Jr.’s *T. S. Eliot’s Personal Wasteland: The Making of An American Poet, 1888-1922* or its predecessor—work by John Peter—which resulted in threats of a lawsuit for his emphasis on the strongly homoerotic content of Eliot’s early work. Thus, Miller is only the most recent critic who points to “Jean Verdenal, mort aux Dardanelles,” the dedicatee of *Prufrock and Other Observations* (1917) as being Eliot’s strongest attachment, and one that remained until his remarriage to his late widow.
According to Miller, Verdenal, a handful of whose letters appear in the first volume of Eliot’s letters, is revived, cleansed, and reborn as both “the hyacinth girl” and “Phlebas the Phoenician.” The book drew praise by luminaries such as G. Wilson Knight and Louis Simpson, whose names—redolent of serious Eliot study and scholarship, not gossip-mongering—carry irreproachable authority. What Miller writes is lent further credence by their endorsements, though there’s no mention of either in the Letters, although there might be with Valerie Eliot’s death, talk now afoot of a biography that draws on archival material heretofore deemed verboten.
Time, the Peter Ackroyd and Lyndall Gordon **natures vivantes, and these first three volumes of letters have proved Jarrell, as so often, exactly right. Newer biographies, critical studies, and creative explorations of Eliot—Gordon’s *An Imperfect Life* and Donoghue’s aforementioned *Words Alone*, to name perhaps the two most stellar, also novelist Martha Cooley’s *The Archivist* and poet Mary Kinzie’s *California Sorrow*—indicate that the driving emotion in *The Waste Land* isn’t toward his soul-friendship with Verdenal during his year at the Sorbonne, but Emily Hale.
In the end, however, does the identity of the one loved and lost matter? What remains more interesting is the hole in Eliot’s heart, which was partly filled by Hale, yes, if only by acting as Eliot’s Beatrice, the vehicle through which the poet allowed God to enter, and his happier, if far blander years as husband to his former secretary. If what Valerie Eliot offered motherly protection and produced weekly versified love notes on her pillow, it’s “VSE” who pulled perhaps the greatest work of the 20th century from Eliot and gave him one of The Waste Land’s best lines: “What you get married for if you don’t want children?”
Sources cited in the order in which they appearL
Donoghue, Denis. *Words Alone.* New Haven and London: Yale University Press, date. Print.
Donoghue, “Eliot’s Fine Italian Hand.” Rev. of *The Letters of T.S. Eliot: Volume 3: 1926-27* by T. S. Eliot,Valerie Eliot, and John Haffenden. The New Criterion, October 2012, p. 64.
Perhaps the most interesting is Aida Edemarian’s, which questions whether Valerie Eliot’s self-appointed status as watchdog to her late husband’s work ultimately did more harm than good: http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/....
While much of what I write here has become, in forty years’ time, part of my own “mental furniture,” I retain a debt to Vereen M. Bell, Jr., and a website painstakingly reconstructing the relationship between Verdenal and Eliot with correspondence, footnoted passages, and the home of the various sources, provided by Rickard A. Parker, who appears to have abandoned the project in 2002: http://world.std.com/~raparker/explor....
As in the 2d volume of the Letters, these in the 3d are mostly business letters dealing with his duties as editor of the quarterly The Criterion. During these two years that publication went from a quarterly to a monthly magazine. In late 1927 the patron of The Criterion, Lady Mary Rothermere, withdrew her financial support meaning Eliot and the publishers might have to cease publication altogether, a matter not resolved at the close of the volume. Being letters primarily concerned with the issue-to-issue management of The Criterion, most of these letters don't show the personal and human Eliot. However, there are some to friends like Virginia Woolf and Ottoline Morrell which reveal a warmer side. Also to his old friend Ezra Pound. It's in letters such as these, and in the many to his brother and mother in America, that Eliot discusses the chronic psychiatric and physical illnesses of his wife Vivien. Though she spent months away at a sanitarium near Paris, there are no letters here between the two of them. Only occasionally does Eliot unwind. These two years are the beginnings of the correspondence with Bonamy Dobree, the Leeds University professor and critic, which contain the ribald verse history of C. Colombo and the prose descriptions of the strange practices of the Bolovians and the necessary devotions to the God Wux, showing Eliot's penchant for scatological humor. Despite the businesslike, professional nature of the majority of these letters, they're never dry. Eliot was always interesting.
During which time he is received into the Anglican church, the Criterion goes monthly and has a cash crisis, and his father-in-law dies, leaving him to execute his estate.
Interesting in joining the Anglican church was the discovery that TSE's infant baptism was Unitarian and therefore invalid.