The final stanza of T.S. Eliot’s “The Love Song of J. Alfred
Prufrock” is a quintessential moment in recognizing the poem’s existential
themes. Prufrock frankly narrates his intentions.
He is plagued by the rapid increase of aging, and confronts loneliness despite access to a room full of peopme. Retiring confidence and shallow connection to others seem to
falter a pursuit for companionship.
Prufrock’s
dwindling self-assurance is heavily influenced by discernable classist hierarchy.
He reveals details of wealth by images
describing either the party, the women, or himself. The party is a swarm of
toast, tea, ice, cakes, marmalade and porcelain partaken with chatter of novels
and Michelangelo. The Renaissance artist is worth discussion amongst braceleted,
white, bare-armed and perfumed female guests. Prufrock is a man who is subject
to the wealth of his class, hence invitation to this party. He does not seem to
see himself as someone who must keep up with his class’s outward image of
affluence. Rather, incidental picking at people for pastime is what scares
Prufrock. On his way to the party, the insincerity of its people is
acknowledged in line 27 for he has “To prepare a face to meet the faces that
you meet;”. He wonders, “Do I dare?”(38). He knows “There will be time to
murder and create”, but also that there is equal time to turn around (28, 39).
He dares to enter, begging the monumental question of why. Why would Prufrock force
himself to be around people who murder with small talk and create through rumor.
If a woman in the same class is his driving force, then affluence and its
consequential ailments are worth considering in tracking the relationship
between Prufrock’s actions and thoughts.
His
fascination and failure to connect with the women is captivated by his
perception of mermaids. These women are almost more creature like in the sense
that he has little in common with them. White gloves adorn their arms, evoking
a statuesque portrait. Prufrock’s inability to efficiently connect to them is
evident in his fear of them squinting at him as one merely does with an insect
pinned to the wall (55-58). His frustration sparks faults in these creatures, from
the hair on their arms to malodorous perfuming, and especially reducing them to
a stereotype (64-66, 55). Lines 73 and 74 is premonition of this disconnection,
as Eliot cues, “I should have been a pair of ragged claws / Scuttling
across the floors of silent seas.” He is directly comparing Prufrock to a sea
scavenger, offering several interpretations in his relationship to his world.
His neglect to connect to anyone at this party supports the notion that he
feels as removed as crabs at the bottom of an ocean are from most sectors of
their ecosystem. Equally, this spectacle construes why the mermaids concretely
resemble the women.
Prufrock fixates
the unattainability of the women at this party as a dichotomy of mermaids to
humans. The women in the room, coming and talking of Michelangelo parallels
line 124, “I have heard the mermaids singing, each to each.”. The moments
when the woman tells Prufrock he does not understand her at all reappear as the
image of the mermaids who don’t sing to him; “I do not think that
they will sing to me.”(125). The women speak a different language than he; the
insignificance of a sea scavenger to a mermaid might be how he feels to the
type of women he desperately longs for. Eliot’s illustration noting the sea-girls
wreathed in red and brown seaweed conveys evocative youth, that they have and
perhaps even the women (130).
Eliot
structures the poem in Prufrock’s frustration as an aging bachelor. An affluent
party and character provide the dynamic that socioeconomic assurance does
little for loneliness. Hyper awareness of aging surfaces from baldness, skinny
limbs and worries of fruit digestion. In talking to the woman, he can’t help
imagining the eternal Footman laughing at him descending to the grave an old
bachelor (79-86). The women he may be after might even appear as younger, the
two most crucial instances being when the woman tells him he is misunderstood,
and “sea-girls” as a latter reference to mermaids. Prufrock’s “we” in “We have
lingered in the chambers of the sea” may be himself and the “lonely men in shirt-sleeves, leaning out of windows” (72, 129).
This dynamic raises the possibility that
the sea, as does time, washes a person out of existence. The party only aggravates
his fear, for the human voices will drown him (131).
I found it very interesting how you connected certain lines, and thoughts of Prufrock to the mermaid metaphor, and made it clear how they connected. You were able to make a complicated poem sound simpler and clearer for the reader to understand the purpose of the mermaid lines, and how it relates to Prufrock's feeling of being outcast from women and society. When expanding this piece into a longer essay, it would be interesting to see examples of other interpretations people may have, but an argument expressing why your analysis seems most fit.
ReplyDeleteHi!
ReplyDeleteI thought your analysis of the mermaids in conjunction with the metaphor of the crab was really interesting. Looking deeper into mermaids, they're traditionally creatures of devastation, luring men with their melodic voices and beauty to their death. I think that could be an interesting tidbit to examine how Prufrock views women. Mermaids represent temptation, but it's important to note that they aren't attainable at all. Also I'd want to mention that your formatting is a little strange. I'd suggest just pasting plain text into the textbox so there's no lingering formatting :)