Alfred J. Prufrock
Essay by review • December 15, 2010 • Essay • 552 Words (3 Pages) • 1,487 Views
In my opinion, the Poem The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock by T.S. Eliot is about a man who can not get up the nerve to ask a woman out on a date. He just keeps coming up with different reasons not to do it. J. Alfred Prufrock enters a restaurant or coffee shop before work each day where he sees the woman with whom he is in love with. She is either a waitress or another woman who hangs out there everyday also. Mr. Prufrock sees himself getting older and older each day and thinks that she will not be interested in him when he gets older.
Mr. Prufrock imagines himself with this woman through lines like 'Let us go then, you and I' and through lines 62-68 he describes her arms, hair, perfume, and how she is wrapped up in a shaw. In lines 70 -74 Mr. Prufrock is wondering if she even notices him. He basically answers his question with a no when he states, 'I should have been a pair of ragged claws scuttling across the floors of silent seas'. He so bad wants to ask this woman out but can not seem to find the right time. He asks, "Do I dare, do I dare?"
Mr. Prufrock is obviously in a restaurant coffee shop because he states that he has measured out his life in coffee spoons. It is probably a high class restaurant because he says that woman come and go talking of Michelangelo. I believe he is there in the morning before work because he says, "My morning coat, my collar mounting firmly to the chin, my necktie rich and modest." Most people would not be dressed like that on a regular day.
Mr. Prufrock believes that he has plenty of time to ask this woman out because he constantly tells himself, 'There will be time, there will be time'. He marks the end of the day with yellow fog and yellow smoke. I think it is yellow because of the light the sun puts out while going down. He is afraid that if he does not ask her soon that he will not have a chance later because he will have a bald spot and thinned out hair. He is already a little self conscious over his thin arms and legs. Mr. Prufrock is so infatuated with this woman that he thinks of nothing but her all day and all night. He says that he has wept, fasted, and prayed for this woman. At the end he sees himself old and alone walking down the beach.
The poem The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock by T.S Eliot is about a man in love with a woman whom he is afraid to ask out. He visits her every morning before work at the restaurant or coffee
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