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  1. Vivienne Haigh-Wood Eliot (also Vivien, born Vivienne Haigh; 28 May 1888 – 22 January 1947) was the first wife of American-British poet T. S. Eliot, whom she married in 1915, less than three months after their introduction by mutual friends, when Vivienne was a governess in Cambridge and Eliot was studying at Oxford.

  2. Vivien was the daughter of Rose Robinson and Charles Haigh-Wood, a popular Victorian artist. She first appeared by name in Eliot’s letters as one of two English girls, ‘emancipated Londoners’, who are ‘charmingly sophisticated (even “disillusioned”) without being hardened’.

  3. Eliot was twenty-six and, almost certainly, a frustrated virgin when, in 1915, he married Vivienne Haigh-Wood, an Englishwoman he had known for three months. Haigh-Wood was a medically...

  4. 5 de dez. de 2020 · On January 22, 1947, Vivienne Haigh-Wood Eliot died, of heart failure, at Northumberland House, the mental hospital where she had been confined for almost a decade. She was fifty-eight...

  5. Vivienne Haigh-Wood Eliot (also Vivien, born Vivienne Haigh; 28 May 1888 – 22 January 1947) was the first wife of American-British poet T. S. Eliot, whom she married in 1915, less than three months after their introduction by mutual friends, when Vivienne was a governess in Cambridge and Eliot was studying at Oxford.

  6. 9 de ago. de 2016 · Mary-Kay Wilmers reviews Vivien Eliot's diaries, which reveal her sense of sin and prophecy. She also recounts her encounters with Vivien at Faber & Faber, where T.S. Eliot worked as an editor.

  7. 16 de mar. de 2022 · A fictional account of the life and marriage of T.S. Eliot and his first wife, Vivienne Haigh-Wood, who suffered from mental illness. The novel explores their relationship, Eliot's poetry and his anti-Semitic views through the perspectives of Vivienne, a detective and Eliot's friends.