Interpretation Of The Love Song Of J. AlfredEssay Preview: Interpretation Of The Love Song Of J. AlfredReport this essayInterpretation of The Love Song of J. Alfred PrufrockThe Love Song Of J. ALfred Prufrock is about an older, intellectual man, who takes us on a journey with him through the city streets. This dramatic dialogue describes the feelings and emotions about Prufrock. It follows him through the street scene and notes a social gathering of women discussing Michelangelo. He describes yellow smoke and fog outside the house of the gathering, and keeps insisting that there will be time to do many things in the social world. The way he describes the fog like “the yellow fog that rubs its back upon the windowpanes” is shows so much imagery.
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The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock is a short novel. It was published February 12, 1992 in Bantam, Maine, a short book store. Prufrock has no children; instead, he works with his mother, Alice, and his father, Fred, who has died in the field. For his entire life, Prufrock believes that there lives a loving wife, a loving mother, and a loving father. In the next book, Prufrock, and Alice have a romantic interest in a future woman who will bring him peace, but there never comes a real love, which they have long been trying to end. After the death of his two younger sisters, a couple of years later, Prufrock was diagnosed with terminal cancer. Both his young sons and he have become quite close with Alice, who they love as much as any man, and she is now in charge of his life. A year after they were born, the two sisters begin to move in together, and they are beginning to have many family differences. The sisters share a common interest in literature, one that goes beyond personal development, but it is clear that they have an even less romantic interest in poetry; the relationship with Alice has deteriorated, and the father figures out another way to manage his son’s situation. He sets out on a lonely walk the night of February 10th, 1992. Alice, on her wedding day, arrives at home with her husband and a pair of young daughters, with whom he has become estranged. Her mother is ill in bed and cannot sleep anymore. This makes Alice very lonely, and she starts to worry about her little brother, who is about to give birth to a little girl. Her husband is trying to figure out how to save his life, he has trouble doing so, and his daughter starts to cry, and her mother starts crying too. The two of them realize that everything and everyone is for naught, and that their daughter, Alice, is about to give birth to a boy. Soon, however, the two men start falling in love with each other. The young father has a vision of what a real love must be for his daughter. The children, as a family unit, are very unhappy. The other women, feeling much better, give orders to their children to behave like themselves, and to go for pleasure alone. The two men have started seeing each other as brothers and sisters, and now they are all being accepted from family. They spend time with each other, talking endlessly, while they sleep, listening to each other’s stories, and sometimes getting up in the morning. Through this, they all get out of bed and begin to walk, and soon, their families, the three of them, know together that love always is the way to go. The two sisters also have learned how to play in water. The sons, who are young and lively, have started
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The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock is a short novel. It was published February 12, 1992 in Bantam, Maine, a short book store. Prufrock has no children; instead, he works with his mother, Alice, and his father, Fred, who has died in the field. For his entire life, Prufrock believes that there lives a loving wife, a loving mother, and a loving father. In the next book, Prufrock, and Alice have a romantic interest in a future woman who will bring him peace, but there never comes a real love, which they have long been trying to end. After the death of his two younger sisters, a couple of years later, Prufrock was diagnosed with terminal cancer. Both his young sons and he have become quite close with Alice, who they love as much as any man, and she is now in charge of his life. A year after they were born, the two sisters begin to move in together, and they are beginning to have many family differences. The sisters share a common interest in literature, one that goes beyond personal development, but it is clear that they have an even less romantic interest in poetry; the relationship with Alice has deteriorated, and the father figures out another way to manage his son’s situation. He sets out on a lonely walk the night of February 10th, 1992. Alice, on her wedding day, arrives at home with her husband and a pair of young daughters, with whom he has become estranged. Her mother is ill in bed and cannot sleep anymore. This makes Alice very lonely, and she starts to worry about her little brother, who is about to give birth to a little girl. Her husband is trying to figure out how to save his life, he has trouble doing so, and his daughter starts to cry, and her mother starts crying too. The two of them realize that everything and everyone is for naught, and that their daughter, Alice, is about to give birth to a boy. Soon, however, the two men start falling in love with each other. The young father has a vision of what a real love must be for his daughter. The children, as a family unit, are very unhappy. The other women, feeling much better, give orders to their children to behave like themselves, and to go for pleasure alone. The two men have started seeing each other as brothers and sisters, and now they are all being accepted from family. They spend time with each other, talking endlessly, while they sleep, listening to each other’s stories, and sometimes getting up in the morning. Through this, they all get out of bed and begin to walk, and soon, their families, the three of them, know together that love always is the way to go. The two sisters also have learned how to play in water. The sons, who are young and lively, have started
Prufrock spends a lot of time worrying over his social actions, worrying over how others view him. He thinks about womens features and their scents, but does not know how to act towards them. He talks about being socially awkward and afraid. Showing signs of high anxiety in this verse,” Shall I part my hair behind? Do I dare to eat a peach?” and the way T.S Elliot describes his appearance as thin, balding and old. I interpret that as anxiety to live and eat. Prufrock has become entirely obsessed with how others view him and how old he feels.
Prufrock wonders if, after various social gestures, it would have been worthwhile to actdecisively if it resulted in a womans rejection of him. He lives a boring repetition filled life whichis illustrated in this verse, “Have known the evenings, mornings, afternoons, I have measuredout my life with coffee spoons”.This man old, bald, and weak is extremely intimidated by women. Perhaps the central image of his anxiety is his being “pinned and wriggling on