The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock | Understanding "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock"

In the following excerpt, Fryxelll characterizes Eliot's character J. Alfred Prufrock as a trimmer (a term from Dante's Inferno)—a "lifeless, spiritless, mindless " person.

T.S. Eliot is one of the best known poets in the twentieth century. And yet, when "The Waste Land," which is Eliot's longest, his most difficult, and certainly his most controversial poem, was first published in the year 1922, T.S. Eliot was comparatively unknown, despite a volume of poetry he had written entitled Prufrock and Other Observations, which appeared in 1917, and which contained, among other poems, "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock."...

Eliot's poems certainly are complex poems; they're never simple ones, and Eliot himself justified their complexity by arguing...

[The entire page is 1849 words long]

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