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T. S. EliotA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
The poem opens with urban imagery of “half-deserted streets” (Line 4), “One-night cheap hotels” (Line 6) and “sawdust restaurants with oyster-shells” (Line 7), establishing Prufrock’s hopelessness and despair. The landscape of his mind is grimy, seedy, and anxiety-inducing; the city through which he progresses through as he relays his monologue represents the loneliness and meaninglessness he feels in life. The city is devoid of other people and populated with impermanent or transitory items: The hotel suggests a string of shallow, one-night encounters, and the cheaply made sawdust restaurants will not last. Later, Prufrock returns to this imagery, noting the smoke-filled “narrow streets” (Line 70) with “lonely men […] leaning out of windows” (Lines 72). As he progresses through the poem, the city landscape does not change, suggesting that Prufrock is trapped and doomed to suffer in this world.
The yellow fog, or smoke, represents the onslaught of the new, modern era, and the dangers that accompany it. By presenting the fog as a cat, a creature that “rubs its back [… and] muzzle on the window-panes / lick[s] its tongue into the corners of the evening” (Lines 15-17), Eliot notes the way in which the trappings of modernity have been integrated into Prufrock’s world.
By T. S. Eliot
Ash Wednesday
T. S. Eliot
East Coker
T. S. Eliot
Four Quartets
T. S. Eliot
Journey of the Magi
T. S. Eliot
Little Gidding
T. S. Eliot
Mr. Mistoffelees
T. S. Eliot
Murder in the Cathedral
T. S. Eliot
Portrait of a Lady
T. S. Eliot
Preludes
T. S. Eliot
Rhapsody On A Windy Night
T. S. Eliot
The Cocktail Party
T. S. Eliot
The Hollow Men
T. S. Eliot
The Song of the Jellicles
T. S. Eliot
The Waste Land
T. S. Eliot
Tradition and the Individual Talent
T. S. Eliot