The Art of T. S. Eliot

Front Cover
Dutton, 1950 - 185 pages
Gardner's now classic book focuses on Eliot's poetic style, a welcome addition to a body of criticism which often neglects the prosodic elements of the poetry in favor of analyzing its images. Tracing Eliot's style in terms of his artistic maturation, Gardner identifies a turning point in his poetry from his earlier work, in which he often imitates the voices of other poets, to a newly developed independent style after "The Waste Land," a style which underscores the musicality inherent in natural rhythms, in part by its use of semi-accentual meter, and allows Eliot equal access to the poetic and the prosaic in his work. A thematic evolution is evident in Eliot's corpus as well, and Gardner does not allow her attention to Eliot's mechanics to overshadow his core ideas.

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Contents

Auditory Imagination
1
The Music of Four Quartets
36
Poetic Communication
57

4 other sections not shown

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