Here is a video of Paul Scofield reading a portion of Four Quartets:
It's a timeless reflection on time.
Now where is 'religion' in all this?
But some have a way of dismissing Eliot's later poetry as merely 'religious.'
Which it certainly is not.
CR
On Sunday, May 22, 2016, Chanan Mittal <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
Please read "a set of beliefs."
CR
On Sunday, May 22, 2016, Chanan Mittal <
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Conversely, there's a lot that is religious in Eliot's early poetry up to The Waste Land, whether or not he formally came to subscribe to a set of belief.
CR
On Friday, May 20, 2016, Chanan Mittal <
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And this should remind us that there are large tracts of poetry here which have nothing to do with 'religion' as such.