the love song of J.Alfred Prufrock

             T.S. Eliot an unprecedented part of the early 20th century was deeply influenced by his age. The current social, economical & political condition had a tremendous effect on him. After the First World War, the western world suffered a loss of faith in the existing values. Moreover, the moral disintegration caused by violence & destruction fueled the sufferings of urban civilization. During this time, emerged the modern man, sophisticated but absorbed in personal embarrassments &disillusions.
             An interior dramatic monologue, 'the love song of J. Alfred Prufrock' mirrors the frustration of one such modern man, Prufrock. He is a victim of the urban civilization, caught up in a modern society, which by contrast emphasizes his isolation.
             The protagonist, prufrock is too proud to admit his despair to another person, but he can suggest that to a part of his own self. This is evident from the quotation of Dante's Inferno. He is an embodiment of split personality. Evening is lifeless and unattractive to prufrock. He says:
             "When the evening is spread out against the sky
             Like a patient etherized upon a table;
             It rather reminds him of disease & death. Other phrases like, 'eternal footman', 'I am Lazarus', gives evidence of pfufrock's or modern man's obsession with death. The feline character of fog resembles prufrock who is secretive & self-indulgent. He puts on his mask of happiness when he meets other people.
             Prufrck denies he's not like hamlet, the celebrated hero of all time impact. He is like Polonius, middle-aged submissive & at times ridiculous.
             The incapability, insignificance, tottering, indecisive nature of prufrock reflects the character of a modern man. Thus, the poem is abou...

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