The
audience at the British Library for a discussion about a new
annotated edition of T.S. Eliot’s poetry was largely an academic one:
professors, students, researchers with the British Library, likely a few poets.
And two Americans on (mostly) vacation.
Our trip was punctuated by poetry and writing highlights: a Keats
Walk in Hampstead and Hampstead Heath; a visit to the Charles Dickens Museum; the Samuel Johnson House; a visit to Merton College at Oxford (Eliot’s
college and where J.R.R. Tolkien taught).
And
finally, with two days left in London before we departed, we were listening to this
discussion at the British Library by Jim McCue and Christopher Ricks,
co-editors of T.S.
Eliot: The Poems, Vol. I (Collected & Uncollected Poems) and T.S.
Eliot: The Poems, Vol. II (Practical Cats & Further Verses).
Collecting
and annotating the poetry of a write like T.S. Eliot is fraught with challenges
and difficulties, not the least reason being Eliot himself editing his poems
over time, or manuscripts of the same poem with variations, and one version
published in one collection and a slightly different version published in
another.
To
continue reading, please see my post today at Tweetspeak
Poetry.
Photograph: The British Library in London by Mohammed Abushaban via Wikimedia Commons.
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