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      • By anchoring his poetry in actual, remembered places, Eliot drops his masks and achieves an authentically moving and indi vidualized tone, one he calls the poet's first voice in his essay, "The Three Voices of Poetry" (1953).
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  2. Dec 14, 2023 · Quick answer: T.S. Eliot's poem "Landscape" conveys themes of the fleeting passage of time, the inevitability of death, and the continuity of nature. Through vivid...

  3. The comfortable, maternal English landscape which embraces its inhabitants, and can itself be embraced by the perceiving eye and the reflective mind, is set against foreign landscapes which speak in a different voice; or, rather, which do not speak at all but remain mute and loftily indifferent, dwarfing man by their immensity.

  4. “The first is the voice of the poet talking to himselfor to nobody. The second is the voice of the poet addressing an audience, whether large or small.

  5. The voice that addresses the reader in scraps of experience remembered and fearfully anticipated and in fragments of historical- and self-consciousness does so in response to a question,...

  6. The first "voice," that of the poet speaking to himself, seems in many ways to be the most fundamental. "What I am maintaining," Mr. Eliot writes, "is, that the first effort. The Three Voices of Poetry. By T. S. Eliot. Cambridge University Press. $1.75. The Confidential Clerk. By T. S. Eliot. Harcourt, Brace and Company. $3.00. MR. ELIOT'S VOICES.

  7. In his 1921 essay ‘The Metaphysical Poets’, T. S. Eliot made several of his most famous and important statements about poetry – including, by implication, his own poetry. It is in this essay that Eliot puts forward his well-known idea of the ‘dissociation of sensibility’, among other theories.

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