T. S. Eliots playsMurder in the Cathedral, The Family Reunion, The Cocktail Party, The Confidential Clerk, and The Elder Statesmanare brought together for the first time in this volume. They summarize the Nobel Prize winners achievements in restoring dramatic verse to the English and the American stage, an effort of great significance both for the theater and for the development of Mr. Eliots art. Between 1935, when Murder in the Cathedral was first produced at the Canterbury Festival, and 1958, when The Elder Statesman opened at the Edinburgh Festival prior to engagements in London and New York, T. S. Eliot had given three other plays to the theater. His paramount concerns can be traced through all five plays. They have been said to be closely related, marking stages in the development of a new and individual form of drama, in which the poet worked out his intention to take a form of entertainment, and subject it to the process that would leave it a form of art. What Mark Van Doren said, in reviewing Murder in the Cathedral in The Nation, is true of all these plays: Mr. Eliot adapts himself to the stage with dignity, simplicity, and skill.