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The Love Song Of J. Alfred Prufrock

 

             Alfred Prufrock" is an extraordinary masterpiece by T. Eliot may possibly give us the essence of twenty-first century poetry. Through the "Love Song," Eliot expresses exuberant writing technique via random comments deposited together. Certainly much of what he writes is unrecognizably queer, but it is all emphatically amusing. One cannot pretend to follow the drift of "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock," however every aspect woven together reveals the direct message.
             "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" is a lovely piece of poetry written to describe a young man's attempt to find a common point with his date. The sentences are not at all lengthy. The verbiage might be somewhere around the lower collegiate level with understandable confusion. The stanzas hold no structure rather that the dawning and closure of each thought. This poem is composed in blank verse.
             Eliot is one of those clever men who find it amusing to pull the leg of a temperate reader. Rather than simply stating that two young people are out on their first date, Eliot finds the most roundabout way to explain just that. As the poem progresses, Eliot has the male counterpart rambling about while the female seems to show no interest. The young man expresses thought on a variety of themes, ranging from his appearance to classic literature to death. At the conclusion of the poem, it is distinct that the lady has exhaustively lost interest in her engagement.
             Through the "Love Song," one might get the impression that all first dates go bad. However, the theme of this poem is that finding a point of joint concern might not always transpire in a fresh relationship. This could also be an explanation on how not to go about a first date. "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" explained the turmoil around courting in the early twentieth century. As in the day it was written the "Love Song" also has an effect on the "clicking" of an uncontaminated couple.


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