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  1. Yes: even arms are imbued with curious symbolism in Eliot’s poem. Prufrock has noticed the women’s arms – white and bare, and wearing bracelets – just as he is attracted by the smell of the perfume on the women’s dresses. He seems simultaneously attracted to the women and unwilling, or unable, to envision asking one of them out.

  2. Jul 6, 2021 · Prufrock breaks through the surface ground at an angle, as shown in the graphic below. One of the photos recently shared of a Boring Company TBM shows the machine pointed at an angle, hinting that ...

  3. And time for all the works and days of hands. That lift and drop a question on your plate; Time for you and time for me, And time yet for a hundred indecisions, And for a hundred visions and revisions, Before the taking of a toast and tea. In the room the women come and go. Talking of Michelangelo. And indeed there will be time.

  4. The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock at Wikisource. " The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock ", commonly known as " Prufrock ", is the first professionally published poem by American-born British poet T. S. Eliot (1888–1965). The poem relates the varying thoughts of its title character in a stream of consciousness.

    • T. S. Eliot
    • 1915
  5. May 3, 2024 · The poem consists of the musings of Prufrock, a weary middle-aged man haunted by the feeling that he has lost both youth and happiness: “I have measured out my life with coffee spoons.”. “Prufrock” was both Eliot’s first major publication and the first masterpiece of modernism in English. Eliot’s experiment with poetic form, metre ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. Jun 24, 2015 · The auteur with the most prevalent Prufrock references: Woody Allen. He cited the poem in three pictures (two of which were released in the last decade). In Celebrity (1998) Kenneth Branagh’s ...

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  8. Jul 5, 2020 · Analysis of T.S. Eliot’s Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock By NASRULLAH MAMBROL on July 5, 2020 • ( 0). No poet in memory has ever had quite so spectacular a debut as the young T. S. Eliot when his poem The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock was first published in Poetry magazine in 1915, thanks in large part to the good offices of another relatively young American poet, Ezra Pound.

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