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Emily Hale (October 27, 1891 – October 12, 1969) [2] was an American speech and drama teacher, who was the longtime muse and confidante of the poet T. S. Eliot. There were 1,131 letters from Eliot to Hale deposited in Princeton University Library in 1956; they were made accessible to the public on January 2, 2020.
Sep 6, 2024 · Tom played opposite Emily in a sketch based on Jane Austen’s Emma. When their rehearsals began, he started “to realise what had happened” to him. Their audience would have included friends and relatives, but Emily’s mother, Emily Jose Milliken Hale, wasn’t present.
- Sara Fitzgerald
This is a digital edition, free-to-access, of the complete surviving correspondence between T. S. Eliot (1888–1965) and Emily Hale (1891–1969) – the 1,131 letters that Eliot sent to Hale between 1930 and 1957 (deposited at Princeton University Library, they were embargoed until 2020) – together with a number of important additional ...
Jan 6, 2020 · In 1960, T.S. Eliot penned a blistering statement about Emily Hale, a woman he’d fallen in love with decades earlier.
- Brigit Katz
Dec 5, 2020 · In 1913, Thomas Stearns Eliot and Emily Hale performed in a theatrical adaptation of Jane Austen’s “Emma,” in a parlor room right off Harvard’s campus. Eliot was a Ph.D. student in philosophy:...
Dec 13, 2020 · Who was Emily Hale? What have these letters revealed about her relationship with Eliot? Emily Hale was an American speech and drama teacher who worked at Simmons, Scripps, and Smith colleges.
In his 1960 statement, Eliot finds himself unable to explain why he so suddenly married Haigh-Wood, but claims, most pointedly, that “it saved me from marrying Emily Hale” (also that it brought him to the state of mind out of which he wrote “The Waste Land” (1922), perhaps his most famous poem).