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  1. 'Macavity: The Mystery Cat' is a significant poem from Eliot's light-verse collection, 'Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats' (1939), the only collection he wrote for a younger audience. Eliot was fond of 'Sherlock Holmes'; Macavity is the main character in the collection of poems based on the character of Professor Moriarty from Arthur Canon Doyle's Sherlock Holmes.

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  2. Literature, Explained Better. A more helpful approach. Our guides use color and the interactivity of the web to make it easier to learn and teach literature. Every title you need. Far beyond just the classics, LitCharts covers over 2000 texts read and studied worldwide, from Judy Blume to Nietzsche. For every reader.

  3. Aug 7, 2020 · Neil Curry, in his book [Christopher Smart] (By: Neil Curry) [published: June, 2004], describes Jeoffry as the ‘most famous cat in the whole history of English literature’, and the 74-line excerpt from Jubilate Agno may well be the greatest cat poem in the language. The poem is religious: Jeoffry, like Smart (who was confined partly because ...

  4. Oct 18, 2021 · Cat on a Hot Tin Roof: analysis. The action of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof progresses with an inexorable energy, with each new act picking up at the exact point the previous act ended. As Big Mama is forced to face up to the fact that her husband, who seems the very paragon of virility and the life force, is dying, and Brick is forced to confront the ...

  5. In the 1950s, Decca Records released a recording of T.S. Eliot reading from his work, Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats. These poems, together with some unpublished cat and dog poems, including ...

  6. The Poem. One of the most delightful and best-known poems in praise of a house cat, Christopher Smart’s “My Cat, Jeoffry” is actually one section of a much more complex and difficult work ...

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  8. The cat in the title refers to a particular fantasy of femininity and feminine desire. The play's primary cat is Maggie, a typically dissatisfied Williams heroine who prostrates herself before Brick. Maggie's loneliness has made her a "cat," hard, anxious, and bitter. The exhilaration of Williams's dramaturgy lies in the force of the audience's ...

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