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Comment 17 of 67, added on May 9th, 2005 at 1:33 PM.
i like this poem. but i cant understand.
Donald from United States
Comment 16 of 67, added on May 3rd, 2005 at 4:50 PM.
I think the poem isn't about love at all but about a man who never took any
chances in life. He's grown old and realized that he hasn't done anything
to make him stand out in life, never done anything to be remembered by. He
keeps saying there's time and he still has time to do something meaningful
but then is too scared to act because he's afraid of other peoples opinions
and what they will think of him (and they will so 'Oh! How he's grown
thin!). In the end this poems moral is: never put off until tomorrow
something you can do today.
amber from Canada
Comment 15 of 67, added on May 3rd, 2005 at 8:03 AM.
i think the most striking idea of the poem is belonging nowhere(etherized
patient,neither alive nor dead;deserted islands and the athmosphere)living
with superficial people poet feels estranged;however he has no strenght to
change his life.
aycan from Turkey
Comment 14 of 67, added on April 18th, 2005 at 12:38 PM.
Can anyone help me analyze 6 poems of ts eliot on rhtym and rhyme, form and
meaning, speaker and tone, imagery, firguative language, and theme? One
poem for each? Help please!!!!
Kallie from United States
Comment 13 of 67, added on April 15th, 2005 at 6:21 AM.
hi....
LOVE means here the suffer ,the egony the speaker feels.What a joke!do you
really think so?i think so too..
ahmed from Iraq
Comment 12 of 67, added on April 14th, 2005 at 9:46 PM.
One part no one has commented on is the reference to Hamlet towards the
end. Hamlet paralleled Prufrock in his inability to take action. But
Prufrock then says he is not a prince Hamlet in the sense that Hamlet
eventually took action but he never has. This has left him old and in
despair which is what the poem is about. Prufrock is expressing his
hopelessness and regret at the wasted lives he sees around him (In the room
the women come and go talking of Michelangelo)as well as his own wasted
life.
Keith from United States
Comment 11 of 67, added on April 12th, 2005 at 10:59 PM.
I think the 'love' in the title is meant to be ironic - he's talking to
himself, a love song to himself, because he has been too afraid to roll the
universe into a ball and love some of those women in their perfumed dress
who make him digress. It's the anti-love song of a man who has been too
wimpy to bust a move on love - his moment of greatness has flickered and
he's a bald spotted old man walking on a beach and not even the mermaids
are going to singe to him. Love song indeed! He has only imagined and
wished for love. It's pretty sad. This is a man who never took a chance.
pdiz from United States
Comment 10 of 67, added on March 29th, 2005 at 6:08 AM.
I don't know.., I just read it for the first time. I wonder why did he
ever mention word 'love', why 'love song'?.. Anybody?
iNITA
Comment 9 of 67, added on March 26th, 2005 at 7:43 PM.
How beautiful
to share eternity in every moment
it makes me cry every time
Toria McMullin from United States
Comment 8 of 67, added on March 16th, 2005 at 2:14 PM.
There is something about this poem that just has me hook. I think it is
because I really want to know the meaning of every single line and word.
When I say those things I really mean everything. The setting, physical
description of Prufrock, and his self-esteem. Please help me out. I really
want to know what your interpretation and opinion on the subject mention
above are. If you're reading this please pass it along to anybody who is
interested in this poem as much as I am. Thank you.
Sephiroth from United States
This poem has been commented on more than 10 times. Click below to see the other comments.
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i like this poem. but i cant understand.
Donald from United States