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By S. L. Parsonson

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Sample text

Eliot did not, as Pound had hoped, become a regular contributor to the Little Review, although it published his whimsical philosophical dialogue "Eeldrop and Appleplex" and two groups of poems. In June 1917 Eliot became assistant editor of The Egoist, which Huxley called a "horrid little paper" and hoped Eliot would improve. The Egoist had been started in 1913 as The New Freewoman, an organ of philosophical feminism; the name was shortly changed and Pound took over the literary section, then passed the job on to Richard Aldington.

Although Eliot was to live in England for the rest of his life his early impressions were not favorable. " Oxford was no better: "Oxford is very pretty, but I don't like to be dead . . " During 1914-1915 Eliot was energetically cultivated by Pound, and was noticed as an enigmatic new arrival among the LONDON REPUTATION 31 visitors to the celebrated triangular sitting-room of Pound's small Hat in Kensington. For all his longing for conversation, Eliot was chieHy remarkable for his immense taciturnity-Douglas Goldring was struck by his ability to sit for a whole afternoon in complete silence-as well as for his exotic good looks.

A crisply legislative tone is already apparent. Eliot did not, as Pound had hoped, become a regular contributor to the Little Review, although it published his whimsical philosophical dialogue "Eeldrop and Appleplex" and two groups of poems. In June 1917 Eliot became assistant editor of The Egoist, which Huxley called a "horrid little paper" and hoped Eliot would improve. The Egoist had been started in 1913 as The New Freewoman, an organ of philosophical feminism; the name was shortly changed and Pound took over the literary section, then passed the job on to Richard Aldington.

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