The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock”
Download
Report
Transcript The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock”
“The Love Song of
J. Alfred Prufrock”
By
T.S. Eliot my favorite poet!
(1888-1965)
Huynh-Duc/ AP Language
Modernism
• Characterized chiefly by a rejection of 19th
century traditions
– Example—often rejected traditional meter in
favor of free verse
• Emphasized humanism over nationalism
• Argued for cultural relativism
• Emphasized the ways in which humans were
part of and responsible to nature
Modernism
• Argued for multiple ways of looking at the world
• Presented antiheroes, uncategorizable persons, and
anti-art movements like Dada
• Challenged the idea that God played an active role in
the world
• Argued no thing or person was born for a specific
use; instead, people found or made their own
meaning in the world
• Rebelled against industrialized nations because of
their greed and warmongering
Authors
• Novelists
–Introduced stream of consciousness
»Joseph Conrad
»William Faulkner
»James Joyce
»Virginia Woolf
Authors
• Poets
–Fragmentary Imagery
–Complex allusions
»Ezra Pound
»T.S. Eliot
Epigraph
• A passage from Dante Alighieri's Inferno (Canto 27,
lines 61-66) spoken by Guido da Montefeltro in
response to the questions of Dante, who Guido
supposes is dead, since he is in Hell. The flame in
which Guido is encased vibrates as he speaks: "If I
thought that that I was replying to someone who
would ever return to the world, this flame would
cease to flicker. But since no one ever returns from
these depths alive, if what I've heard is true, I will
answer you without fear of infamy."
Epigraph
– Connection to poem?
• Prufrock, like Guido da Montefeltro,
does not expect his thoughts to be heard
• Interior Monologue
Rhetorical Structure
• Question—Answer
• Contemplation—Inaction
• Invitation--Destination
Invitation--Destination
• Prufrock invites someone (“Let us go then, you
and I,…Let us go,…Let us go and make our
visit.”) to journey with him.
– To whom is the invitation extended?
» The reader?
» Something or someone inside of Prufrock?
– What is the destination?
» Ultimately, it is nowhere.
» Prufrock contemplates interacting with
people around him (especially women) but
he never does.
Who is Prufrock?
(Characterization)
• Indecisive
• Contemplative
• Reflective
• Intelligent and well-read
– Allusions to the Bible (John the Baptist),
Shakespeare (Hamlet), Marvell (“To His Coy
Mistress”), Michelangelo
• Humorous
– Mocks himself frequently
Who is Prufrock?
(Characterization)
• Thin
• Balding
• Insecure
• Lonely
• Fearful
• Foolish
• Older?
–Mid-life crisis?
Who is Prufrock?
(Characterization)
• Self-aware
–Remember, all of the information given
about Prufrock comes from Prufrock
himself
Structure of Poem
– Meter
• Not free-verse
• Meter varies
– Rhyme
• Internal and end rhyme
Setting and Imagery
• The simile comparing the evening to a “patient
etherized upon a table”
• “half-deserted streets”
• “The muttering retreats/ Of restless nights in one-night
cheap hotels”
• “And sawdust restaurants with oyster-shells:”
• “Streets that follow like a tedious argument/ Of
insidious intent”
• “yellow fog” and “yellow smoke” in later stanzas
• “dusk”
Tone
• Dismal and depressing setting
• Commentary on society?
The Actions of the Cat
– The cat rubs its back against the window
pane
– The cat rubs its muzzle on the window pane
– The cat licks the corners of the window
pane
– The cat allows the soot from the chimneys
to litter its back
– The cat recognizes it is an October night,
curls up and falls asleep
The Purpose of the Cat
–Prufrock compares himself to the cat.
–The cat stays at the window and does
not interact with other people.
»Reason for not interacting?
»“There will be time” (stanza
four)
»Repeated many times
»Delaying action.
The Purpose of the Cat
Contemplates interacting with
people, but never does.
“And indeed there will be time/ To
wonder, ‘Do I dare?’ and, ‘Do I
dare?’/ Time to turn back and
descend the stair”
“There will be time”
Repetition
• Suggests predictability of existence
– Gives a reason (or an excuse?) for why he
does not have to act now.
Allusion
• Andrew Marvell’s “To His Coy Mistress”
– “Had we but world enough, and time”
» Carpe diem
» The speaker is trying to convince his
mistress not to be coy and, instead,
seize the moment
» Ironic reference considering it carries
the opposite meaning for Prufrock
» Again, we can assume Prufrock is
aware of the irony.
Insecurities:
Physical Appearance
• Prufrock is aware of his physical
appearance
• Prufrock assumes what other people say
about his appearance
–These assumptions fuel his
indecisiveness
More Assumptions
• Prufrock believes that all people are the same.
• Uninteresting, boring people live in an
uninteresting, boring world.
• Therefore, why should he do anything?
Who He Is and Who He
Should Have Been
• “Should I say, I have gone at dusk through
narrow streets
And watched the smoke that rises from the
pipes
Of lonely men in shirt-sleeves, leaning out of
windows?...
I should have been a pair of ragged claws
Scuttling across the floors of silent seas.”
Who He Is and Who He
Should Have Been
• Prufrock is the lonely men staring out of
windows
• Why should he have been a crab?
– A crab is insignificant
– A crab is alienated
– A crab is lonely
• Not even a full crab, rather a “pair of ragged
claws”
Hypothetical Speculation
• Would his interaction with other people,
especially a woman, be worth it?
• Prufrock believes the result of his
interaction/conversation would be rejection
and criticism.
• Is interaction worth rejection and criticism?
Hypothetical Speculation
• “To have squeezed the universe into a ball”
– Another reference to Marvell’s “To His Coy
Mistress”
• “Let us roll all our strength and all/ Our
sweetness up into one ball.”
– Prufrock wonders if it would be worth it to do
the same thing with a woman he is interested in.
Hypothetical Speculation
• Lazarus
– Brother of Martha and Mary
– Friend of Jesus
– Jesus raised him from the dead
Hypothetical Speculation
• Lazarus
– Leprous beggar
– Dies and is taken into heaven
– A rich man dies, goes to hell and requests
that Lazarus returns to earth to warn the
rich man’s brothers about the horror of
hell.
– His request is denied
Hypothetical Speculation
• To which Lazarus is Prufrock comparing
himself?
– Probably both
– Prufrock believes either Lazarus would not
be listened to.
Michelangelo
• “In the room the women come and go
Talking of Michelangelo”
– Reflection of his insecurity
– Prufrock recognizes the predictability of the
conversation of women
– If the topic of their discussion is
Michelangelo, how could Prufrock possibly
interest them?
Hamlet
• Even though he has characteristics of Hamlet
(indecisiveness), Prufrock does not consider himself
to be a great man.
• Instead, Prufrock compares himself to the Fool
(Yorick) and the attendant lord (Polonius)
– “Politic, cautious, and meticulous;
Full of high sentence, but a bit obtuse;
At times, indeed, almost ridiculous”
• Prufrock mocks himself
Recapturing Youth
• “I grow old…I grow old…
I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers
rolled.
Shall I part my hair behind? Do I dare eat a
peach?
I shall wear white flannel trousers, and walk
upon the beach.”
– A futile attempt to appear young and “in-tune”
with the times
Mermaids
• References the sirens of The Odyssey
– Dangerous
– Prufrock does not believe the mermaids will
ever sing for him
• Suggests eternal loneliness
Mermaids
• Prufrock says he will dream of the mermaids’
songs “Till human voices wake us, and we
drown.”
– Humanity breaks the romantic spell of the
mermaids
– Drowning suggests loss of hope.
– Therefore, the loss of hope occurs because
of humanity.