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Mr. Eliot’s Guide to Quantum Theory

APR 01, 1989
Three recently discovered poems suggest that T.S. Eliot might have been a remarkably prescient student of physics

DOI: 10.1063/1.881166

John Lowell

Last year was the centenary of T. S. Eliot, perhaps the most influential of 20th‐century poets writing in English. That Eliot pursued careers in publishing and banking in addition to his literary work is widely known, but many of his readers will be astonished to learn of the discovery last year of manuscripts that suggest he might at one time have been a student of physics. Published here for the first time, the poems are strongly influenced by the quantum theory that was growing vigorously when Eliot was a young man. They exhibit unmistakable echoes of “The Waste Land,” “Four Quartets” and Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats. (They also show remarkable physical prescience: Several of the ideas hinted at postdate Eliot’s death in 1965.)

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John Lowell. University of Manchester, Institute of Science, Technology, UK.

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Volume 42, Number 4

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