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      • Eliot's relationship with Hale was said by some biographers to provide Eliot with a model of a silent, ethereal woman and chaste love that could be indefinitely sustained.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emily_Hale
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  2. 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).

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  3. Sep 6, 2024 · Their audience would have included friends and relatives, but Emily’s mother, Emily Jose Milliken Hale, wasn’t present. In 1897, shortly after the Hales returned to Boston, her son, William, died of dysentery a few days before his second birthday.

    • Sara Fitzgerald
  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Emily_HaleEmily Hale - Wikipedia

    Eliot's relationship with Hale was said by some biographers to provide Eliot with a model of a silent, ethereal woman and chaste love that could be indefinitely sustained. [8] Hale's own feelings for Eliot are largely unknown, partly because Eliot arranged for nearly all of her letters to be burned after he married his much younger secretary ...

  5. 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. The writer knew that Hale had given a collection of his letters to...

    • Brigit Katz
  6. 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 ...

  7. Dec 13, 2020 · There was speculation over the exact nature of the relationship between Emily Hale and T.S. Eliot, but the letters revealed an intensely emotional, if chaste, relationship between the two for nearly two decades.

  8. Jan 4, 2020 · I was not in love with Emily Hale,” Eliot wrote on Nov. 25, 1960, in a statement that he instructed was to be released “as soon as” his letters to Hale were made public.