Love Song Of Prufrock
In his poem "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock," Eliot explores
the
timeless issues of love and self-awareness - popular themes in
literature.
However, through his use of Prufrock's profound
self-consciousness he skews the
reader's expectations of a "Love Song" and
takes a serious perspective
on the subject of love, which many authors do,
but few can create characters as
deep and multi-layered as Prufrock; probably
the reason that this poem still
remains, arguably, Eliot's most famous. The
beginning of the poem is pre-empted
by an excerpt from Dante's Inferno which
Eliot uses to create the poem's serious
tone, but also to begin his
exploration of Prufrock's self-consciousness. By
inserting this quote, a
parallel is created between Prufrock and the speaker,
Guido da
Montefeltro, who is very aware of his position in "hell" and
his personal
situation concerning the fate of his life. Prufrock feels much the
same way,
but his hell and the fate of his life are more in his own mind and
have less
to do with the people around him. The issue of his fate leads Prufrock
to an
"overwhelming question..."(10) which is never identified, asked,
or answered
in the poem. This "question" is associated somehow to his
psyche, but both
its ambiguity to the reader and Prufrock's denial to even ask
"What is
it?"(11) gives some insight into his state of internal
turmoil and inability
to reason. Prufrock's dissatisfaction in his personal
appearance is one, but
not the most important of his idiosyncrasies. Not only is
he unhappy with the
nature of his appearance, having "To Prepare a face to
meet the faces that
you meet;" but he is fearful of what others will have
to say about him:
"(They will say: ‘How his hair is growing
thin!')"(41) and "(... ‘But how his
arms and legs are
thin!')"(44). Prufrock is insecure and frightened of
peoples' reactions to
his balding head and slim, aging body. Unfortunately,
his lack of confidence
isn't limited to his looks. Prufrock has difficulty
communicating with people -
not surprising considering his extreme lack of
confidence in his appearance.
He's indecisive and unsuccessful in his
attempts to communicate with other
people, repeating "visions and
revisions"(33) and "decisions and
revisions..."(48). Eliot uses repetition
here to emphasize the concept of
Prufrock's alterations in behavior -
whether he does change his behavior or not
is another issue... most likely he
doesn't because he also repeats the question
"‘Do I dare?' and, ‘Do I
dare?'"(38). Possibly, he's asking if he
should dare "and drop a question on
your plate;"(30) meaning one of
his "dares" could be something that he'd like
to ask a woman but
can't; he also asks "Do I dare/ Disturb the
universe?"(45-46). In this
case Eliot uses hyperbole to give the reader the
impression of the seriousness
of Prufrock's insecurities - they are his whole
"universe." However,
this is only one explanation where there are a number of
possibilities. Once
again, Eliot uses the device of ambiguity to reflect the
internal struggle in
Prufrock and lead the reader to ask themselves again
"What is the
‘overwhelming question' that Prufrock is asking?" Unfortunately
even
Prufrock himself doesn't have the answer... even recognizing the
issue itself is
beyond the simplicity of his mind, which he confesses by
saying "I am no
prophet- and here's no great matter;"(84). By downplaying the
importance of
the issue, Prufrock echoes his lack of self-worth. In fact, to
Prufrock, the
issue is extremely important - the fate of his life depends on
it. His
declaration that he isn't a prophet indicates Prufrock's view on his
position in
society, which he is as confused about as everything else. To
interject a little
history: Eliot wrote this poem during a time in which
social customs, especially
in Europe, were still a very important issue.
There were basically two classes -
rich and poor, neither of which Prufrock
really fits into. Eliot creates the
idea of Prufrock being caught between the
two classes in the very beginning of
the poem, (if not by J. Alfred
Prufrock's unusual pompous/working class sounding
name) when he juxtaposes
the images of "restless nights in one-night cheap
hotels/ And sawdust
restaurants with oyster-shells"(4-5) and the women who
"come and go Talking
of Michelangelo."(13-14). These two images
represent two completely different
ways of life. The first image is of a dingy
lifestyle - living among the
"half-deserted streets"(4) while the
second is the lifestyle that Prufrock
longs to be associated with - much like
the image of Michelangelo's painting
on the ceiling of the Sistine chapel where
God and Adam's hands are
nearly touching, but not quite. While Prufrock doesn't
belong to either of
these two classes completely, he does have characteristics
of both. He claims
to be "Full of high sentence; but a bit obtuse"
while "At times, indeed,
almost ridiculous-"(117-118). Being the
outsider that he is, Prufrock will
not be accepted by either class; even though
he can clearly make the
distinction between the two and recognize their members:
"I know the voices
dying with a dying fall/ Beneath the music from a
farther room."(52-53). This
Shakespearean allusion (Twelfth Night (1.1.4) -
"If music be the food of
love, play on... That strain again! It had a dying
fall.") suggests that
Prufrock is just out of reach of the group of people
that he wishes to be
associated with in life and love, but most likely his
feelings of
insignificance prevent him from associating with anyone at all. He
sees
himself as a unique "specimen" of nature, in a class all by
himself - "And
when I am formulated, sprawling on a pin/ When I am pinned
and wriggling on
the wall,"(57-58). This image suggests that not only is he
an object for
speculation, but he is trapped in that role; a situation which he
is
obviously unhappy with but has no idea how to change; he asks himself,
"Then
how should I begin"(59). At this point in the poem, Prufrock is
beginning to
feel especially detached from society and burdened by his awareness
of it. He
thinks "I should have been a pair of ragged claws/ Scuttling
across the
floors of silent seas." Eliot not only uses imagery here to
create a picture
of a headless crab scuttling around at the bottom of the ocean,
but he uses
the form of the poem itself to help emphasize his point here. The
head is
detached from the crab, and the lines are detached from the poem in
their own
stanza, much like Prufrock wishes his self-consciousness would just
"detach"
itself. This concept is echoed in the very next stanza when
he says, "Though
I have seen my head (grown slightly bald) brought in/ upon
a platter,"(83),
an allusion to the beheading of John the Baptist by
Princess Salome.
These two headless images represent Prufrock's desire to be rid
of his
self-consciousness (obviously in his head) and possibly some
suicidal
tendencies which can be tied into just about all of the ambiguous
questions
Prufrock asks of himself throughout the poem. Prufrock's series
of questions can
also be tied into his unsuccessful attempts at relationships
with women. His
insecurities keep him from doing the things he wants to do;
he feels inadequate
and unable to express his true feelings to women, "Should
I, after tea and
cakes and ices,/ Have the strength to force the moment to
its
crisis?"(79-80). He knows what he wants to say, but doesn't have
the
confidence or mental capacity to put his feelings into words. He
compares
himself to Hamlet, "No! I am not Prince Hamlet, nor was meant
to
be;"(111), who, in contrast, was able to express his feelings
very
successfully to his lover - an ability which Prufrock is envious
of,
characterized by his emphatic "No!" He is also second-guessing
himself
constantly throughout the poem: "Do I dare?"(38), "So how
should
I presume?"(54) and "Then how should I begin"(59) are
all
questions Prufrock repeats to himself during his monologue. His feelings
of
inadequacy toward women are not only related to his appearance and lack
of
mental strength, but to the passage of time and its effect on him.
Throughout
the poem, Prufrock struggles with the concept of time. He tries to
keep
reassuring himself that "indeed there will be time"(23), an
allusion
to a love story (Andrew Marvell - To His Coy Mistress - "Had we but
world
enough and time.") which suggests that Prufrock fears that he will in
fact
not have time for love before the prime of his life is over. His
obsession with
the passage of time is characterized by its repetition
throughout the poem,
especially the beginning of the poem. Eliot uses time as
a tool to shape
Prufrock's complicated, disturbed psyche into the form of
a mid-life crisis.
Prufrock keeps assuring himself that, "indeed, there
will be time" to
do all of the things he wants to do in his life, but first
he must come to terms
with his insecurities. However, his insecurities are
related to his aging and
the passage of time, so he is truly a tragic, doomed
character. This is not to
say, however, that Prufrock is unaware of the
connection between time, his
aging, and his unsuccessful attempt at a social
life... on the contrary, he
claims that he's "measured out his life with
coffee spoons,"(51) a
true testament to the self-proclaimed insignificance of
his life. Prufrock
claims that "I have known them all already, known them
all-"(49)
referring to the "evenings, mornings, and afternoons"(50) of his
life
which he has seen pass by, insignificantly. He also says "And I have
known
the eyes already, known them all-"(55) and "I have known the
arms
already, known them all-"(61) which illustrate both his failure with
and
fear of women. Ironically, Prufrock dreams of saying: "I am Lazarus,
come
from the dead,/ Come back to tell you all, I shall tell you all"(94-95),
a
biblical allusion to Lazarus, an elderly man brought back to life by Jesus
-
unfortunately for Prufrock, even if his dream came true, he still wouldn't
know
what to tell them all, or how. Prufrock echoes the old cliche "Ah... to
be
young again; and know then what I know now." Unfortunately for Prufrock,
it
will take a miracle to make him either younger or give him the knowledge
he
seeks. Eliot doesn't give any sense of hope for him in the poem - he
remains a
doomed character until the very end. Prufrock even admits that he
has "seen
the moment of my greatness flicker,"(84) - a victim of time and
natural
selection. Prufrock's connection to nature and the cycle of life is
also an
important factor in understanding his state of mind. In the third
stanza, Eliot
creates an image of yellow fog, connecting Prufrock's
consciousness and emotions
to nature in a lazy, animal-like way. This
connection echoes not only the
insignificance of Prufrock's emotional state
in a "natural world"
context, but the futility of Prufrock's efforts should
he try to contend with
Mother Nature and change his behavior - relating
to Prufrock's feeling of
entrapment and inability to change his situation. He
wishes to himself, instead,
that he could be a mindless crab, scurrying
around the bottom of the ocean;
another example of Prufrock's impression of
his position in the natural world -
rarely comparing himself to real people.
In fact, in his dream sequence at the
end when he imagines how his life might
end up, he envisions himself as an ocean
creature, surrounded by mermaids
"Till human voices wake us, and we
drown." Once again, Eliot disconnects
Prufrock from the real world. Even
though Prufrock's fantasies to be a crab,
swim with the mermaids, be young again
like Lazarus, talk to women about
Michelangelo with the poise and eloquence of
Hamlet, slink around the
city like a lazy yellow fog, and have his head chopped
off like John the
Baptist give him a detachment from his day-to-day worries
about love and
aging, he will never stop torturing himself trying to figure out
that
"overwhelming question." The only hope that Eliot gives the
reader out of
this poem is the hope that we don't end up like Prufrock.