University Of London example essay topic
(In his 1028 essay 'For Lancelot Andrewes,' Eliot called himself a 'classicist,' 'royalist,' and 'Anglican. ' Later, in After Strange Gods, he regretted that declaration as 'injudicious. ' ) Military / Wartime Service: None; was rejected by the U.S. Navy, 1918, because of poor health. Memberships: Classical Association (president, 1941), Virgil Society (president, 1943), Books Across the Sea (president, 1943-46), American Academy of Arts and Sciences (honorary member), Accademia dei Lin cei (Rome; foreign member), Bayerische Akademie der Schoenen Kuenste (Munich; foreign member), Athenaeum, Garrick Club, Oxford and Cambridge Club.
Career: Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, assistant in philosophy department, 1913-14; teacher of French, Latin, mathematics, drawing, geography, and history at High Wycombe Grammar School, London, then at Highgate School, London, 1915-17; Lloyds Bank Ltd., London, clerk in the Colonial and Foreign Department, 1917-25; The Egoist, London, assistant editor, 1917-19; founder of the Criterion (literary quarterly), London, 1922, and editor, 1922-39 (ceased publication, at Eliot's decision, in 1939 because of the war and paper shortage); Faber and Gayer Ltd. (publishers), later Faber & Faber Ltd., London, literary editor and member of the advisory hoard, 1925-65. Clark Lecturer at Trinity College, Cambridge, 1926; Charles Eliot Norton Professor of Poetry at Harvard University, six months, 1932-33; Page-Barbour Lecturer at University of Virginia, 1933; resident at Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton, 1948; Theodore Spencer Memorial Lecturer at Harvard University, 1950; lecturer at University of Chicago during the fifties; lecturer at Library of Congress, at University of Texas, at University of Minnesota, and before many other groups. President of London Library, 1952-65. Awards: Sheldon Travelling Fellowship for study in Munich, 1914; Dial award ($2,000), 1922, for The Waste Land; Nobel Prize for Literature, 1948; Order of Merit, 1948; Commander, Ordre des Arts et des Lettres; Officier de la Legion d'Honneur; New York Drama Critics Circle Award and Antoinette Perry ('Tony') Award, 1950, for The Cocktail Party as best foreign play; Hanseatic Goethe Prize of Hamburg University, 1954; Dante Gold Medal (Florence), 1956; Ordre pour le Merite (West Germany), 1959; Emerson-Thoreau Medal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1959; honorary fellow of Merton College, Oxford, and of Magdalene College, Cambridge; honorary citizen of Dallas, TX; honorary deputy sheriff of Dallas County, TX; Campion Medal of the Catholic Book Club, 1963, for 'long and distinguished service to Christian letters'; received President Johnson's award for distinguished contribution to American literature and public life. Honorary degrees: Litt. D., Columbia University, 1933, Cambridge University, 1938, University of Bristol, 1938, University of Leeds, 1939, Harvard University 1947, Yale University, 1947, Princeton University, 1947, Washington University, 1953, University of Rome, 1958, University of Sheffield, 1959; LL.D., University of Edinburgh, 1937, St. Andrews' University, 1953; D. Litt., Oxford University, 1948, University of London, 1950; D. Philos., University of Munich, 1959; D. es L., University of Paris, 1959, Universite d'Aix-Marseille, 1959, University of Rennet, 1959; Antoinette Perry Award for book of a musical, 1983 for Cats..