


Bradley and Aristotle to an informed synthesis of literature and philosophy in literary criticism. Apprentice Years contains a detailed historical introduction that traces Eliot’s intellectual development from broad interests in language and literature to intensive study of F. Articles and reviews written between 19 constitute the third group, beginning with pieces related to Eliot’s credentials in philosophy and the social sciences and concluding with essays and reviews in little magazines and journals Eliot published while establishing himself in literary circles. Bradley, here published for the first time in a critical edition. The culmination of this work was his doctoral dissertation on F. The second consists of essays in philosophy and ethics written between 19 when he was a graduate student at Harvard and Oxford. The first features stories and reviews written between 19 while Eliot was a day student at Smith Academy and an undergraduate at Harvard. Scrupulously edited and annotated by Jewel Spears Brooker and Ronald Schuchard, this volume is the first scholarly edition of Eliot’s early prose.Īpprentice Years, 1905-1918 is divided into three parts. The volume contains twenty-six previously unpublished essays in philosophy and nearly one hundred pieces published in periodicals but never collected. Louis and ends with a review published when he was thirty and an established man of letters in London.

Spanning the most formative period in his life, the collection begins with a story composed when he was a sixteen-year-old student at the Smith Academy in St. Eliot, Apprentice Years, 1905-1918 includes all surviving prose from Eliot’s years as a student and from his first three years as a literary journalist.
