Authors: Robert Crawford
There were books at school, too, of course. In his second year at Smith Academy in 1899â1900 these included not just Edward Eggleston's
History of the United States and Its People
, with its emphasis on âcorrectness' and âclearness', but also a more imaginatively alluring group of âEnglish Classics', including the Lambs'
Tales from Shakespeare
, Dickens's
A Christmas Carol
and a work entitled
Legends of King Arthur
.
81
Probably this was a book by Thomas Bulfinch, but there is a similarly titled volume by Sir James Knowles; either way, here was Tom's introduction to the legend of the quest for the Holy Grail which, reinterpreted by anthropological writer Jessie L. Weston, would play an important part in
The Waste Land.
The boy worked assiduously. When his father signed to certify that he had âexamined' Tom's report card for the second term of session 1899â1900, Hal was pleased to see that whether for coursework or final examinations every grade â for
Arithmetic, English Literature, English Grammar, English Composition, US History, Spelling, Drawing, Writing and Deportment â was an A.
82
Tom's performance in the first-year class of the main school was a marginal improvement on his report card for the comparable term in his previous year. Then he had dropped to a B for one element of Arithmetic coursework, and had scored consistent Bs for Writing â probably meaning handwriting, not the separate subject of âEnglish Comp'. For composition, as in everything else, he had been awarded straight As for âexceptional work'.
83
Tom drew on his schoolwork for his writing at home, and sometimes anticipated it. He wrote in pencil the tiny booklet,
George Washington, A Life
, presenting the author on the title page as âThos. S. Eliot, S.A., Former Editor of the “Fireside”'. He then crossed out the word âFormer', so probably this briefest of works (which compresses Washington's life into just twelve lines of prose) was contemporary with the early 1899
Fireside
productions. Tom's Washington âwanted to go to sea but his mamma didn't want him to'.
84
Tom repeated this detail in a tiny piece on Washington in the
Fireside
.
85
Mammas were commanding figures.
In St Louis around 1900 there were local newspaper features on London life and on Charles Dickens â an author whose work Tom grew to love. One could attend a Literary Symposium lecture on St Paul's Cathedral and the area of London known as âthe City' centred round âold London Bridge' near which had been the âshrine' of âThomas à Becket'.
86
At schools like Smith Academy private education for boys was relatively Anglophile. Tom worked through a history of England during session 1900â1901, but read American literature too â not just
Hiawatha
but also Longfellow's âThe Courtship of Miles Standish', which, blending amorous pursuit with a rather plain name, anticipates âThe Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock'. Another text the boy read in 1900 was Oliver Goldsmith's
The Vicar of Wakefield
; as he later acknowledged, words from a song contained there (âWhen lovely woman stoops to folly') entered
The Waste Land
.
87
When he was thirteen the third page of John Williams White's
First Greek Book
introduced him to the term
logos
.
88
The meanings of that word came to fascinate him.
His schooling sculpted his imagination, as, indeed, it was designed to do. Overseen by Washington University whose junior âAcademic Department' it had been from 1856, then financed by local philanthropists James and Persis Smith, Tom's all-male school was a private, non-residential establishment with about three hundred pupils and twenty teachers. Its substantial multi-storey brick building stood on land owned by Washington University at the corner of Washington Avenue and Nineteenth Street. Next door, but quite separate in gender and ethos, was the Women's Christian Home, a fifty-bedroom hostel for young women of good character but relatively low income: nurses, teachers and shop assistants.
89
A âpreparatory school for colleges, schools of engineering and business', Smith Academy attracted the sons of prosperous St Louis folk, just as the similarly constituted Mary Institute admitted their daughters.
90
Entrance to Smith Academy was by examination. Pupils had to buy their own textbooks. Fees were about $70.00 for each of the year's two twenty-week terms. Facilities were good. There were chemistry and physics laboratories on the second floor equipped for practical experimental work as well as lectures, and a first-floor gymnasium âhandsomely furnished with the most serviceable pieces of apparatus of modern pattern'. Tom took part in daily gymnastic exercises to which each class was sent around the middle of the school day. The object was âto give a systematic physical training, not only to those who enjoy athletic sports and would practice them of their own accord, but also to the large number who neglect bodily exercise, unless opportunity is furnished them'.
91
Many Smith boys in their white shirts, neatly knotted ties and formal jackets went on to become students at Washington University, but the school also sent students regularly to Ivy League colleges including Harvard, Yale and Princeton. For all its ties to Missouri education, Smith in the 1890s boasted that âThe methods of instruction are such as prevail in the oldest and most popular preparatory schools of New England.'
92
Pupils intending to pursue a university arts degree followed a six-year âClassical Course': Tom took this traditional option including Greek. Cautioning its students âlest self-love should rule the mind', Smith Academy had a Ciceronian motto: â
Non nobis solum sed patriae et amicis
'; as one of the school's songs (written by Tom's favourite English teacher, Roger Conant Hatch) translated it, âNot for ourselves alone but for / Our friends and native land'.
93
This ethic of subordinating self to community accorded both with Tom's grandfather's teaching, and with his own mature thought.
Smith's lean, experienced headmaster Charles P. Curd from Louisville, Kentucky, set the tone. Curd had arrived in 1879 at the age of twenty-eight and risen through the pedagogical ranks. Given at times to platitudes, he believed, as he put it when Tom was fifteen, that âEnergy, enthusiasm, honesty and an unbounded determination are among the chief requisites of success.'
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His âpupils' were âexpected to prepare at home a part of the lessons assigned for each day, and their hours of study should be regular and free from interruption'.
95
A Latinist, a Germanist and an English teacher who had studied arts at the University of Nashville, then law at Vanderbilt University, Principal Curd held forth at school-chapel morning assemblies. Enthusiastic about public speaking (the school had regular oratory contests), he was known in the press as âan idolater of athletics'.
96
Neither of these passions Tom shared. However, Curd was keen to inspire his boys in other ways too. He invited the school's best-known former pupil, American author Winston Churchill (not to be confused with the British politician) to address the school on Citizenship when Tom was twelve. Shortly before, an extract from Churchill's recently successful novel,
Carvel Hall
, had been read at the school's Christmas chapel exercise. Here, as one of the highlights of the school year, was work by a living writer.
Tom's was a markedly literary education. He went to a school where it was possible to encounter a practising author, and where writing of different kinds was celebrated. Curd's staff included outstanding English teachers such as young Percy H. Boynton, who taught at Smith from 1898 until 1902, lectured extramurally in St Louis on Tennyson, then went on to become a professor of English at the University of Chicago.
97
When Tom was thirteen Boynton, who ran the school's annual oratorical contest, launched a series of chapel exercises on the topic of âBoys' Books'. There were sessions on Abbott's Rollo books and on Kipling's
Captains Courageous
.
98
After Boynton left, Harvard graduate Roger Conant Hatch arrived. A sporty, broad-shouldered young man of twenty-four, Hatch was completing his master's degree at Washington University and had written verse about striving to be âAn honest Christian man'.
99
When Tom was fifteen, Hatch took charge of âhigher English and elocution', but his passion was lyric poetry. He had a taste for Elizabethan verse and Robert Burns. Though his contributions to
Songs of Smith Academy
sang of the school's âlofty halls' and âfeats of brawn', he could also pen erotic verse about a woman's âwarm soft arms'.
100
Hatch enjoyed teaching, later calling his Smith Academy pupils â“aygnorant young divils,” God bless 'em'.
101
Tom liked him.
He did not, however, like every aspect of schooling. It no longer exists, but the earliest poem he remembered writing was about not wanting to go to school on a Monday morning. He regarded himself as having been well taught; yet, with the exception of âTom Kick' whom he knew before he went to Smith, he tended not to recall having close St Louis friends. Later he described F. Anstey's Victorian novel
Vice Versa
in which an older man is sent back to school as a ânightmare'.
102
Back in St Louis as a sixty-five-year-old, he stated, with some qualification, that his âmemories of Smith Academy' were âon the whole happy'; he wanted to âpay tribute to' the institution as âa good school', not least âbecause of the boys who were there with me'. Yet he named no fellow pupils, and contemporaries from his schooldays recalled him as âdiffident and retiring' (as Tom Kick put it). To another, less well-disposed classmate he was âdreary, bookish'.
103
This last description suggests shy, hernia-afflicted Tom kept his mischievous side well hidden, maintaining a low profile in a school whose most celebrated pupils tended to be sports stars like August R. Krutzsch, fullback in the Smith football team.
104
In 1903, about a month after Tom's fifteenth birthday, Smith fielded burly, broad-shouldered Frederick Klipstein in centre position, though a week later he left the field when a fellow footballer, Otto H. Schwarz, was brought on as a substitute in a convincing Smith victory.
105
While playing no part at all in football, Tom knew these players' names well. He stored them up for decades only for them to re-emerge in unattractive contexts in his poetry. In the drafts of what became
The Waste Land
âGus Krutzsch' is one of several men out for a night on the town, while Eliot also used the name as a pseudonym when he published his âSong to the Opherian' (later modified as part of âThe Hollow Men') in 1921.
106
Klipstein would appear in âSweeney Agonistes' as part of the American duo Klipstein and Krumpacker, who at one point sing a jazzy duet accompanied by âSwarts' on tambourine.
107
J. Louis Swarts was at Smith along with Tom but when, years afterwards, Otto H. Schwarz (who had also captained the Smith Academy basketball team) was convinced that he recognised a version of his own name and that of Klipstein in Tom's writings, the poet confessed, adding that, in part at least, his character of Sweeney had been based on Klipstein.
108
It is hard not to think that in giving such names to less than reputable characters in his work, Tom was taking a kind of revenge on some of the sporting boys from whose circles he was excluded at Smith Academy. In a footballing school where lads were routinely weighed, measured and examined, Tom's physique and shyness meant he did not conform to the gregarious norms of sporty masculinity.
When he did incorporate names from high school into his later work, several sound Jewish. As a little boy in his
Fireside
, he had advertised a book called âHistory of the Jews by Fulish Writers', illustrating his advertisement with a drawing of a man with a bulbous nose.
109
Evidently the
Fireside
circulated among his immediate family, so presumably it was acceptable at Locust Street to link âJews' to âFulish Writers'. If so, this prejudice, very common indeed in his youth and early manhood, did not come from Tom's religion: his early minister, the Reverend Snyder, was aware of hostility towards Jews but sympathetic to them. Yet, with some embarrassment, Tom's mother commented much later, in 1920 when her younger son was dealing with a writer called Bodenheim:
It is very bad in me, but I have an instinctive antipathy to Jews, just as I have to certain animals. Of course there are Jews and Jews, and I must be not so much narrow-minded, as narrow in my sympathies. There must be something in them which to me is antipathetic. Father never liked to have business dealings with them â¦
110
The way his mother articulates this implies that anti-Semitism was a prejudice substantially unspoken in the Eliots' St Louis household, but indisputably present. Tom's attunement to it in the
Fireside
suggests that he took it on board early. His deployment of names like that of the sports star Klipstein hints that it may have stayed with him during his time at Smith Academy. It continued to dog him, part of an early conditioning which he sometimes went along with, sometimes questioned. Tom would benefit from Jewish critics and publishers, and during World War II would go out of his way to call attention to and denounce what was happening at Auschwitz. When directly confronted with the charge of anti-Semitism decades after his childhood, he denied it.