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The Love Song Of J. Alfred Prufrock By T. S.

Decent Essays

The realistic narrative of The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock as told by T. S. Eliot invited readers into the mind of an old man as he struggled against the social norm created by the new youth. As “the eternal footman” (Eliot 720) approached the aging, but relatable man, Prufrock began to question the world around him that was changed by the youth, but he failed to change with society, creating the mental prison he cannot escape. Since The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock had modernism in mind Prufrock was a character that anyone should be able to connect with even if the reader is younger than Prufrock. For example, has the story progressed Prufrock asked questions such as “What is it?” (Eliot 718), “Do I dare?” (Eliot 719), and “How …show more content…

He never explicitly explained his past because if Eliot had him talk about his specific past, then he would become less relatable to the reader, but the reader can take hints of Prufrock’s/their age as they say in pretend dialogue with a woman, “How his hair is growing thin!” and “But how his arms and legs are thin!” and “with a bald spot in the middle of my hair” (Eliot 719) giving us the idea that he was aging but still young enough to not be married and still looking for love. Most important however was how Prufrock/the reader debate on whether he should “part my hair behind? Do I dare to eat a peach? I shall wear white flannel trousers, and walk upon the beach” (Eliot 721). Prufrock/the reader were trying to decide whether he should accept his old age and give in to the new society or if he should “disturb the universe” (Eliot 719) and fight against the new society and live the way he wants to and not the life society had given him. It was this struggle that created the story, but the item that separated it from the reader was that Prufrock’s decision was given the definitive answer that he was forced to give into society’s demands because he “[does] not think that they will sing to [him]” (Eliot 722). Prufrock struggled and fought against society, but lost to its social norms.
T. S. Eliot’s poem The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock told the story of a man struggling against society. However, he was more than a man because Prufrock was actually a reflection of the reader and the life that they faced or the life that they will face in the future. Prufrock/the reader asked many questions, but only the reader can decide whether they will succeed in denying social norms unlike

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