РефератыИностранный языкLoLove Songs By Prufrock And Preludes By

Love Songs By Prufrock And Preludes By

Eliot Essay, Research Paper


Both Prufrock and Preludes are based in the same rootless world of sordid


tedium. In Prufrock Eliot is conveying a theme a strong theme and is based


heavily in the Persona of Prufrock himself. Preludes is a poem of changing


moods, some subtle, some profound but this time conveyed primarily through


diction and repetition. One theme of Eliot?s, The Love Song of J. Alfred


Prufrock, is the exposure of the modern individual?s inability and refusal to


address inadequacies that he sees in both him and his society. Two ways Eliot


conveys his theme is through the persona of Prufrock and repetition . One method


used by Eliot to expose this theme is his use of the persona of J Alfred


Prufrock. Prufrock is in part a shallow conformist, 41 ….My morning coat, my


collar mounting firmly to the chin, 42 My necktie rich and modest, but asserted


by a simple pin- 43 (They will say: ?But how his arms and legs are


thin!?)…… However, almost tragically, Eliot has Prufrock aware of the


shallowness of the society to which he conforms. 26 There will be time, there


will be time 27 To prepare a face to meet the faces that you meet. Prufrock


observes his society?s ability to totally disregard any question of substance,


that is, the ?overwhelming? questions. Yet despite his observations Prufrock


is not prepared to confront his society, more importantly, himself. In deeper


tragedy Prufrock is defeated by his knowledge of his inadequacies and states


quite sincerely, ?And in short, I was afraid? Two of the minor themes of


?The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock? concern the frustrations felt by the


individual towards their society. Specifically the individuals insignificance in


their society and the individuals inability to express themselves and be


understood as an individual within that society. Repetition plays a crucial role


in conveying the theme of insignificance. The repetition of, ?They will


say:..?, conveys Prufrock?s feeling of insignificance and reveal a man


totally absorbed in the judgments of others and not at all concerned with his


worth as an individual. Eliot?s repetition of ?Do I dare?? within the


sixth stanza emphasises Prufrock?s feeling of insignificance. ?Do I dare/


Disturb the universe?? Despite the superficial judgments his society passes on


him, Prufrock is still hesitant in speaking out against their empty lives.


Prufrock is an extraordinary character and one who, despite his struggles, could


easily erode into a world content with the futile pleasures of the society he


scorns. Preludes is a series of four lyrics describing a modern city. The poem


moves through four different time periods, beginning with one evening and


continuing though to the following evening. Through these lyrics Eliot conveys


the impression of a life that is soul destroying and meaningless. Preludes is


used to explore the theme of the alienation of the individual from society. The


mood is integral to understanding Eliot?s vision. It is the moods of


desolation and despair, loneliness and struggle, affection and gentle care that


reflects Eliot?s observations of the individual alienated from society. These


moods are conveyed throughout the careful use of diction, imagery and


repetition. Prelude I begins with an attractive, familiar setting, a winter


evening. This however is short lived as we are immediately confronted with a


decaying, suffocating world, 2 With smells of steaks in passageways… 4 The


burnt-out ends of smoky days. Eliot creates a mood of desolation and loneliness


through diction and imagery. The precise use of descriptive words compose this


very mood. Words such as, ?burnt out?, ?gusty?, ?grimy?,


?vacant?, ?broken?, and ?lonely?, help set the mood for the


remai

nder of the poem. In Prelude II the poem shifts to morning, but instead of


the freshness and optimism normally associated with such a time, the morning is


depicted, like a drunk awakening on the footpath, as coming ?to


consciousness?, vague and unsure of itself. Eliot creates a mood of desolation


through sense-imagery: 14 The morning comes to consciousness 15 Of faint stale


smells of beer 16 From the sawdust-trampled street… Eliot?s repetition of


?all? and use ?a thousand? in his description of the masses as an


anonymous herd the impersonal mood of emptiness. While through imagery Eliot


develops a mood of despair and meaninglessness, the robotic movements of the


occupance of rented apartments lift ?dingy shades?. 17 With all its muddy


feet that press 18 To early coffee-stands. 21 ….One think of all the hands 22


That are raising dingy shades 23 In a thousand furnished rooms. In Prelude III


the poem narrows its perspective from the masses down to a particular


individual. Eliot creates a mood that lacks all human warmth through his


repetition of ?You? in the first three lines. This mood continues throughout


the lyric as every image presented, of souls filled with sordid images, of


sparrows gathered in the gutter, of jaundiced yellow soles of feet and of soiled


hands, all lack any trace of beauty. Prelude IV depicts the struggle of an


individual to preserve his particular morals and values against those of modern


society, symbolised by the street. Eliot achieves a mood of struggle through


surrealist imagery depicting the individual?s agony as his morals and values


are, ?…stretched tight across the skies…? The unrelenting nature of city


life is captured in the lines, 41… trampled by insistent feet 42 At four and


five and six o?clock; This mood of regimental movements contrasts with the


reflective mood later in the lyric when Eliot addresses the reader. The second


stanza in this lyric conveys a entirely distinct mood. It is here that Eliot,


compassionately observes scene. It could be said that the observer in this


stanza was the person behind the masquerade mentioned earlier in the poem. The


observer notices something, ?infinitely gentle?, kind and sad about the


suffering beings. This mood is expressed through the combination of sound and


repetition. The humane quality of the phrases, ?I am moved…? and ?..that


are curled/ Around these images,…? convey a considerably softer, more


reflective mood. This mood is furthered in the repetition of such words as


?infinitely? as their sympathetic appeal to time lulls the reader into a


sense of security. The third stanza reverses this feeling of gentleness when the


view point is again reversed, this time reverting to the impersonal observer


seen earlier. Through this observer Eliot appears to scorn sentiment and deny


any purpose at all to human suffering. Eliot ends Preludes by reaffirming his


previous moods, leaving us with the sentiment that the actions of the world are


desolation, despair and continuing struggle. 53 The worlds revolve like ancient


women 54 Gathering fuel in vacant lots. Through the use of diction, imagery and


repetition Eliot conveys an array of moods; from the desolation and despair in


the majority of the poem to the flicker of soft, compassionate human touch felt


briefly in the forth lyric. The three major methods Eliot utilises to convey his


moods and themes are the introduction of complex persona, precise diction and


emphasizing repetition. It is through these tools the constant struggle between


the individual and society is conveyed.


Warren. Understanding Poetry. Holt, USA 1966 (p. 112-5) Spurr. The Poetry of


T.S. Eliot. Glebe, Sydney 1992 (p. 2-10) Powell. Appreciating Poetry. Malaysia,


1986 (p. 91-93) 1 2 3 0 Wds

Сохранить в соц. сетях:
Обсуждение:
comments powered by Disqus

Название реферата: Love Songs By Prufrock And Preludes By

Слов:1314
Символов:8859
Размер:17.30 Кб.