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Macavity is being anthropamorphised (Personifying Animals), and there are several examples of imagery
and alliterations, like "You would know him if you saw him, for his eyes are sunken in". The rhyme
scheme is A,A,B,B. The only simile in this poem is "He sways his head from side to side, with movements
like a snake", and one of the few metaphors is " For he's a fiend in feline shape, a monster of depravity".
An example of assonance is "You may meet him in a by-street, you may see him in the square"Lines 1-3

LET us go then, you and I,

When the evening is spread out against the sky

Like a patient etherised upon a table;

"We" are being invited on a trip somewhere. Oh, fun!

But who am "I"? Am I the reader of "J. Alfred Prufrock," or am I someone else? For the purposes of the
poem, you are someone else.

Right from the very start, by addressing itself to a fictional person, the poem is announcing that it’s a
"dramatic monologue." We know that a "dialogue" is two people talking, so a "monologue" must be one
person talking, because "mono" means "one." The poem is "dramatic" because it is written in the voice
of a speaker other than the poet.
We know this from the title, which tells us that the speaker is a guy named J. Alfred Prufrock – this is his
song. (In olden times, poems were called "songs").

It’s not clear who Prufrock is singing to, but the title gives us a hint. Love songs are usually sung to
people you’re in love with, so it’s a safe bet that Prufrock is addressing someone he loves.

Because these were more traditional times, we’ll assume this "someone" is a woman. Also, just to liven
things up a bit, let’s pretend that we, the readers of the poem, are the woman he loves. Feel free to
giggle now if you want.

Prufrock tells us the time of day that we’re taking this trip: evening. But, this is not your ordinary
evening: this "evening" is "spread out against the sky like a patient etherised upon the table."

Holy cow! What does that mean?

Really, it’s hard to overstate how shocking this opening was to readers of Eliot’s time. We’re still a bit
shocked ourselves. It’s one of the most famous opening images – ever.

The image compares the evening sky to a patient strapped to an operating table and given ether, a kind
of anesthetic, to numb the pain of the surgery that is about to happen. (In case you were wondering, the
word is pronounced: ee-thur-ized). It’s an amazing, jarring, outrageous image.

This is how you start a love song? You suckered us into taking an evening stroll, Prufrock, and now it’s
like we’re about to watch a gory surgery happen. Give us a moment to calm down.

Lines 4-7

Let us go, through certain half-deserted streets,

The muttering retreats

Of restless nights in one-night cheap hotels

And sawdust restaurants with oyster-shells:

Prufrock repeats his invitation for us to come along with him. One of things you’ll notice about this
poem is that it repeats itself a lot.

Now, usually when you go on a walk with someone, especially someone you love, you try to pick
someplace romantic – a moonlit beach, a tree-lined avenue, that sort of thing. Not Prufrock. He’s going
to take us through "half-deserted streets," where people walk around "muttering" to themselves.

Hm. These are the kind of streets that are filled with "cheap hotels" where you might stay for one night
only as a last resort, if you had no other options.

Well, at least the street has "restaurants."


Actually, these are the kind of restaurants that have "sawdust" on the floor to clear up all the liquor that
people are spilling as they start to get drunk. It’s also littered with oyster-shells that no one bothers to
clean up.

Eliot is sending us a lot of small signals in this section. "Half-deserted" makes the streets sound pretty
sketchy, and "one-night cheap hotels" only adds to this impression. "Oysters" are an aphrodisiac, which
means, to put it bluntly, that they make people want to have sex…

Oh dear. It looks like Prufrock has taken us on a stroll through the seedy red-light district, where
prostitutes and vagrants hang out.

Remember the epigraph, which comes from Dante’s Inferno? Well, we’re in a different kind of hell – the
underbelly of a modern city.

Lines 8-12

Streets that follow like a tedious argument

Of insidious intent

To lead you to an overwhelming question …

Oh, do not ask, "What is it?"

Let us go and make our visit.

The streets twist and turn like a "tedious argument." It’s an argument with "insidious intent" – the
streets are so confusing it’s as if they were trying to trick us into getting lost.

But, by this point, we might feel that Prufrock is also being "insidious" by trying to trick us into taking a
walk through the seedy part of town.

We could even go a step further and say that both the streets and Prufrock resemble Guido da
Montefeltro, who tried to fool God (see "Epigraph").

The streets are leading somewhere, however. They lead "to an overwhelming question," a question of
huge and possibly life-altering significance.

Oh, tell us, tell us!

Nope, Prufrock isn’t going to tell us, and he doesn’t even want us to ask what it is. If we want to find out,
we’re going to have to take a walk with him. Sounds pretty tricky, if you ask us.

For good measure, he repeats his favorite phrase, "let us go," for a third time. Seriously, folks, when
people warn you about bad peer-pressure situations, this is what they mean. Lines 13-14
In the room the women come and go

Talking of Michelangelo.

There’s not much to explain about what’s going on in these lines. Women are entering and leaving a
room talking about the Italian Renaissance painter Michelangelo.

Eliot loves those Italians. The quote is adopted from a poem the 19th century French writer Jules
Laforgue, but that doesn’t really help us figure out what it means here.

And, no, you’re not missing anything – these lines really do come out of nowhere and seem to have
nothing to do with Prufrock’s question.

They do, however, add to the general atmosphere. For one thing, the women must be pretty high-class
to be talking about Renaissance art, but their repeated action of "coming and going" seems surprisingly
pointless.

Remember how we said that Eliot includes sneaky references to Dante everywhere? Well, Dante’s Hell
features a lot of really smart people who repeat utterly pointless physical gestures over and over again
in small, cramped spaces. Just something to think about.

Finally, these lines have an incredibly simple, singsong rhyme that could get really annoying if you had to
listen to it for a long time. It sounds like a nursery rhyme, which totally doesn’t fit with the intellectual
subject of famous painters.

Lines 15-22

The yellow fog that rubs its back upon the window-panes,

The yellow smoke that rubs its muzzle on the window-panes

Licked its tongue into the corners of the evening,

Lingered upon the pools that stand in drains,

Let fall upon its back the soot that falls from chimneys,

Slipped by the terrace, made a sudden leap,

And seeing that it was a soft October night,

Curled once about the house, and fell asleep.

It appears that the poem is back to talking about the "half-deserted streets" from stanza I.
The streets are filled with a "yellow fog," which sounds really nasty, actually. This detail might allow us
to take a stab at the location of the poem.

Eliot was really interested in England, and he moved there before this poem was published. The capitol
of England is London, which gets really foggy. You’ve probably heard the phrase, "London fog."

So maybe we’re in London. Around the beginning of the 20th century, London was a really modern city
that also had some of the roughest, seediest neighborhoods anywhere.

This fog seems pretty acrobatic. It has a "back" and a "muzzle," which sounds like either a dog or a cat.
Also, it "licks" things and makes "sudden leaps." OK, definitely sounds like a cat.

The poem is comparing the quiet, sneaky, and athletic movement of the fog to a common housecat. It’s
a pretty sweet image. If you’ve ever been around a cat, you know how they can sneak up on you. One
moment you’re sitting on the couch, reading a book, and the next moment, something soft and furry is
rubbing against your leg.

The fog is wandering around the streets like a cat wanders around a house.

Finally, the fog gets tired and "curls" around the city houses to "fall asleep" like a cat would curl around
something smaller, maybe the leg of a table or chair.

One interesting detail: it’s a "soft October night," which means the poem is set in autumn.

Stanza IV

Lines 23-25

And indeed there will be time

For the yellow smoke that slides along the street,

Rubbing its back upon the window-panes;

Eliot knew a lot about literature. He read more books than almost any other writer in the 20th century –
maybe more than any other writer, period. He could make subtle references to all kinds of literary
figures without even trying. His brain worked like that. Good for him.

But you don’t have to "get" these references to understand his poems. Sometimes, though, they are fun
to point out.
Here, the phrase "there will be time" refers to a poem called "To His Coy Mistress" by the 17th century
English poet Andrew Marvell.

"To His Coy Mistress," like many poems, is about a man trying to get a woman to sleep with him, and it
begins: "Had we but world enough, and time, / This coyness, lady, were no crime." The woman is being
"coy" by pretending that she won’t sleep with the poet. The poet is saying, "Look, we both know you
want to sleep with me, and if we had until Eternity to be together, it would be fine for you to waste time
playing games. But we don’t, so let’s hop to it."

Prufrock, however, uses the reference to "time" in exactly the opposite way. He thinks there’s plenty of
time for delays and dawdling.

Just like in Marvell’s poem, Prufrock addresses himself to a "mistress," someone he "loves," but here it’s
Prufrock, and not the mistress, who is being "coy."

By talking about the smoke, he’s trying to justify the fact that he wasted our time with an entire stanza
of description of the fog instead of asking that "overwhelming question" he told us about.

Lines 26-34

There will be time, there will be time

To prepare a face to meet the faces that you meet;

There will be time to murder and create,

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.

He keeps repeating that "There will be time," as if he hasn’t quite convinced himself, or his lover.

Plenty of time to get your "face" ready to meet other people. Also, plenty of time to "murder and
create," which sounds pretty sinister. Is this supposed to be a good thing or a bad thing? We’re not sure.

In the next line, he says there’s "time for all the works and days of hands." Allusion alert: Works and
Days was the name of a work written by the Greek poet Hesiod. It's a poem about the importance of
working for a living and not living a lazy, pointless existence.
Hmm…pointless existence…sounds like someone we know, eh, Prufrock?

Also, have you noticed how Prufrock seems to refer to individual body parts instead of people? So far
we have "faces" and "hands." The hands are dropping a "question" onto a "plate," as if it were
something we could dig into like a fancy steak dinner. Bring it on!

But no, we still don’t learn what the question is.

Plenty of time for that later. There’s also time for "indecisions," for not deciding things. We have all this
time "before the taking of a toast and tea."

Now this really seems like England, doesn’t it?

Stanza V

Lines 35-36

In the room the women come and go

Talking of Michelangelo.

This lines seem to "come and go" from the poem just like the women they describe. Hello, women!
Goodbye, women!

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Stanza VI

Lines 37-39

And indeed there will be time

To wonder, "Do I dare?" and, "Do I dare?"

Time to turn back and descend the stair,

There’s still plenty of time to do all the important things Prufrock wants to do, except now he’s second-
guessing himself.

The setting gets more specific, too. We might imagine him standing outside the upstairs room his "love"
is in. He paces back and forth and tries to decide whether to ask his big question. "Do I dare?" he
wonders. But no, he doesn’t dare. He turns around and heads back downstairs.

Of course, Prufrock doesn’t exactly describe this scene to us: he’s much too tricky for that. Instead, he
poses it as a hypothetical situation – "Well, if I wanted to chicken out and not ask my question, there’s
plenty of time for that, so what’s the big deal?"

Sure there's time, Prufrock, sure there is.

Lines 40-44

With a bald spot in the middle of my hair—

[They will say: "How his hair is growing thin!"]

My morning coat, my collar mounting firmly to the chin,

My necktie rich and modest, but asserted by a simple pin—

[They will say: "But how his arms and legs are thin!"]

Now he’s going to describe his appearance, and the first thing we learn is he has a big bald spot. He’s
probably a middle-aged man, or at least close to it.

Also, he seems worried about what people will say about him and his bald spot and his thin arms and
legs.

His only attractive features, funny enough, are his clothes. He has a nice coat and necktie, which he
wears according to the fashion of the time. He’s not a trend-setter, though, he’s a trend-follower.
As for "they," we don’t know who "they" are, but according to Prufrock, they’re a gossipy bunch – and
not so nice.

Prufrock’s concern about what other people think might make us suspicious. Back to the Epigraph we
go!

Recall that Guido da Montefeltro was also worried about his reputation, even though it didn’t matter
because he was already in hell.

Prufrock, too, seems to have nothing to lose by asking his question – it’s not like we were in love with
the guy already. To the contrary, he seems like kind of a coward. But now, on top of cowardice, he also
seems superficial.

Lines 45-48

Do I dare

Disturb the universe?

In a minute there is time

For decisions and revisions which a minute will reverse.

Prufrock doesn’t want to rock the boat or "disturb the universe." That would involve taking a risk, and
risks aren’t Prufrock’s thing.

But he still insists (again) that he has plenty of time. Truth be told, he’s starting to sound pretty kooky,
like a broken record.

Even though he hasn’t done anything in the poem yet, he insists that everything could change "in a
minute" – if only he could make a decision.

But things can also change back again in another "minute," once he "revises" the decision he made. Kind
of like when he was about to enter the room to tell his love something, and then went back down the
stairs.

But, Prufrock, doesn’t that just leave you where you started?

Stanza VII

Lines 49-54
For I have known them all already, known them all:—

Have known the evenings, mornings, afternoons,

I have measured out my life with coffee spoons;

I know the voices dying with a dying fall

Beneath the music from a farther room.

So how should I presume?

Now he’s trying to convince us that he’s a wise man with lots of experience. He doesn’t need to do
anything, because he’s done everything already!

And by "done everything," we mean he has survived "evenings, mornings, afternoons." Impressive.

What else have you done, Prufrock? Well, he has drank a lot of coffee – in fact, his whole existence can
be "measured" by how much coffee he has drank.

This is a wicked image. Prufrock thinks he is impressing us, but he’s really damning himself before our
eyes. He basically lives from one cup of coffee to the next, with nothing interesting in between.

Prufrock says he has heard voices "dying" or fading away when music starts to play in a "farther room."
We already know that he has a hard time entering rooms that contain people he wants to talk to (see
lines 37-39), so he has to settle on overhearing other people’s voices through the walls. He lives through
other people.

The phrase "dying fall" is, you guessed it, another literary reference, this time to Shakespeare’s famous
play, Twelfth Night. In the first scene of the play, a lovesick count named Orsino is listening to music that
has a "dying fall." The music reminds him of his love for one of the other characters.

In this poem, however, it’s as if Prufrock were overhearing the "voices" of another couple – maybe
Orsino and his love? – in another room, which get covered up by yet another room even "farther" away.

It’s a tricky image, we know, but the point is that Prufrock can only experience love at second- and third-
hand. If Orsino’s love is the real thing, then Prufrock’s is just a copy of a copy of a copy.

Finally, he asks, "So how should I presume?" To "presume" is to take for granted that something is the
case. The speaker of Andrew Marvell’s "To His Coy Mistress" presumes that his mistress wants to sleep
with him.

This can be a bad thing, if you presume too much, but Prufrock is just looking for any reason not to ask
his important question. He doesn’t want to "presume" that he’ll get a favorable response. This is pretty
cowardly of him.
Stanza VIII

Lines 55-56

And I have known the eyes already, known them all—

The eyes that fix you in a formulated phrase,

Here he goes with the body parts again – this time it’s "the eyes." The guy has seen a lot of eyes in his
time. (Are we supposed to be impressed?)

He’s trying to cover up his fear but not doing a very good job.

He doesn’t like how eyes seem to "fix" or freeze him, and a "formulated phrase" means a phrase that
judges, summarizes, and reduces something complicated to something simple. We don’t know what
phrase he has in mind, but it shouldn’t be surprising by now that he’s afraid of judgments of any kind by
other people.

Lines 57-61

And when I am formulated, sprawling on a pin,

When I am pinned and wriggling on the wall,

Then how should I begin

To spit out all the butt-ends of my days and ways?

And how should I presume?

Oh my. Now he’s really starting to lose it. He’s starting to confuse his verb tenses. He just told us that he
has "already" known the eyes that would formulate him, but now he talks as if this event hasn’t
happened yet. Which is it, Prufrock?

We’re starting to think he hasn’t really "known" anything at all.

He imagines himself "sprawling on a pin" and put, "wriggling," on a wall.

He’s referring to the practice, in his time, where insects that were collected by scientists were "pinned"
inside a glass frame and hung on a wall so they could be preserved and inspected. If you go to a really
old science museum, you can sometimes see examples of these insect specimens.
So Prufrock is imagining that the eyes are treating him like a scientist treats an object of study. He
doesn’t like that so much.

The image of a guy tied down and "wriggling" might also remind you of the very first lines of the poem,
when the evening was "spread out" like a patient on the operating table.

Prufrock seems pretty spooked by doctors and scientists – maybe because these people can see things
for what they really are.

He thinks that once these scientific eyes have got a hold on him, he’ll have to talk about or rather "spit
out" the story of his life ("days and ways").

The "butt-ends" could refer to any kind of end – the little odds and ends of his daily life, the evenings he
spent, etc. But it’s also the word people use for the end of a cigarette, the part that doesn’t get smoked.
Prufrock is comparing his life to a used-up cigarette.

Oh, and, by the way, he’s still worried about "presuming" too much about the situation. Thanks for the
reminder, Mr. P.

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Stanza IX

Lines 62-64

And I have known the arms already, known them all—

Arms that are braceleted and white and bare

[But in the lamplight, downed with light brown hair!]

Considering how much he dislikes scientific observation of himself, he sure does it a lot to other people.
Here he sees women merely as "arms," and he uses the same repetitive phrase about how he has
"known them all."

He sounds tired and bored, as if he were saying, "If I have to see one more white arm with a bracelet on
it . . .!"

But he seems pretty excited about the arm in line 64. This is probably the arm of the woman he invited
on a walk (the "you" of the poem).

If they did go for a walk through half-deserted streets, it would make sense to see her arm under the
"lamplight." The soft, "light brown hair" makes this arm different from all the other ones and would
seem to contradict his claim to have seen all the arms.

Lines 65-66

Is it perfume from a dress

That makes me so digress?

Finally! Just when we were wondering where the heck this poem was going, Prufrock admits that he has
been "digressing," or wandering away from the main point.

And what is that main point? We’re not sure anymore: that’s how far he has digressed.

He blames his digression on the scent of a woman’s perfume. For a guy that claims to have known all the
women, he’s still fairly preoccupied with all things feminine.

Lines 67-69

Arms that lie along a table, or wrap about a shawl.


And should I then presume?

And how should I begin?

Lots of arms. Loooots of arms. It reminds us of Dr. Seuss's "Green Eggs and Ham." "Did you see them in a
shawl? Did you see them down the hall?"

Oh, and in the off chance that you forgot, he still doesn’t know whether he should "presume" to do
something.

He still hasn’t told us what that something is. He doesn’t even know where to "begin" talking about it.

Stanza X

Lines 70-72

Shall I say, I have gone at dusk through narrow streets

And watched the smoke that rises from the pipes

Of lonely men in shirt-sleeves, leaning out of windows?…

Here he wonders how to "begin" to talk about that difficult subject. And the difficult subject is…himself!
Oh, brother.

This is the story of his "days and ways" from line 60, and it begins "I have gone at dusk through narrow
streets."

But, of course, we know that already. He’s basically taking us back to the beginning of the poem. The
most interesting new detail he has to offer us is that he saw "lonely men" smoking pipes out of their
windows.

Some people bring the party with them wherever they go; Prufrock brings the loneliness with him.

Stanza XI

Lines 73-74
I should have been a pair of ragged claws

Scuttling across the floors of silent seas.

Here’s another image from way out of left field. It might also be the most accurate self-evaluation that
Prufrock offers in the entire poem.

It would have been more fitting, he says, to have been born as a pair of crab claws that "scuttle" across
the floor of the ocean.

The crab is the perfect image of Prufrock, because it seems suited to a single over-riding goal: self-
protection.

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Stanza XII

Lines 75-78

And the afternoon, the evening, sleeps so peacefully!

Smoothed by long fingers,

Asleep … tired … or it malingers,

Stretched on the floor, here beside you and me.


Prufrock continues to confuse the past, present, and future. He winds the clock back to the afternoon
and then plays it forward to the evening, which is when we started the poem.

The afternoon and evening are "sleeping," much as the cat-like fog was asleep outside the house in line
22. He’s wondering if he should "wake" the day up somehow, say, by asking (cough, cough) a certain
question? But he’s hesitant because the day seems so peacefully asleep, as if it were being "smoothed
by long fingers."

This image of the fingers makes us think of petting a cat, but it may remind you of something different.
The evening is "asleep" and "tired" – nothing is happening. But it might also be "malingering," or
pretending to be tired.

At any rate, it looks pretty comfortable stretched out there on the floor – and, hey, there’s "you" again!
We haven’t seen the second person for quite some time. Nice of you to mention us, Prufrock.

Lines 79-80

Should I, after tea and cakes and ices,

Have the strength to force the moment to its crisis?

Well, some time must have passed in the poem, because "tea" is over. In line 34, he hadn’t had tea yet,
but now he’s digesting all the sweet and tasty things he consumed.

It must be a pretty easy life for Prufrock, what will all the eating and doing nothing.

He’s feeling so lazy, in fact, that’s he’s not sure he has the "strength" to ask the "overwhelming
question," which would produce a big decision or a "crisis."

Lines 81-83

But though I have wept and fasted, wept and prayed,

Though I have seen my head [grown slightly bald] brought in upon a platter,

I am no prophet—and here’s no great matter;

Prufrock doesn’t want to be confused with a prophet. (We want to tell him: "Don’t worry, no danger of
that!") Even though he weeps, fasts, and prays like a prophet, he isn’t one. Even though, um, he has
seen his head on a platter – what’s that about?

In the Bible, the prophet John the Baptist, who baptized Jesus, dies after the stepdaughter of a powerful
king asks for his head on a platter.
We’re not sure what Prufrock is trying to say – he may just be feeling sorry for himself.

He doesn’t want us to think he feels sorry for himself, though – he says it’s "no great matter." But if we
lost our head, we would probably beg to differ.

Lines 84-86

I have seen the moment of my greatness flicker,

And I have seen the eternal Footman hold my coat, and snicker,

And in short, I was afraid.

He continues to mope around and feel sorry for himself. He already feels as if his best days are behind
him, like a candle that flickers and goes out.

In the old days (even older than Eliot’s poem), a "footman" was like a butler who would help rich people
do things. One of the things a footman would do is to hold your coat as you got in a carriage or entered
a house.

But this footman isn’t so friendly. He’s the eternal Footman – "death" – and if he’s holding your coat, it
means you are probably about to enter some place that you won’t come out of again.

Prufrock has another rare moment of honesty when he admits to being afraid. It’s pretty uncommon for
him to say anything "in short" like that.

Stanza XIII

Lines 87-93

And would it have been worth it, after all,

After the cups, the marmalade, the tea,

Among the porcelain, among some talk of you and me,

Would it have been worth while,

To have bitten off the matter with a smile,

To have squeezed the universe into a ball

To roll it toward some overwhelming question,


Time in the poem continues to play tricks on us. Now Prufrock talks as if he has already passed up on his
opportunity to do that important thing.

He starts this big long thought about whether "it would have been worth it," which he won’t finish until
the end of the stanza, so just keep this thought in mind.

It seems that even more eating and drinking have been going on, as well as "some talk of you and me,"
which suggests that "we" have been having tea with our dear Prufrock.

He talks about "biting off the matter," as if it were something he could eat, like his precious marmalade
(a kind of jam). "The matter," we assume, is the important thing that he meant to discuss so many lines
ago.

He compares the effort it would required to take on "some overwhelming question" to squeezing the
entire universe into a ball. Sounds pretty hard, but do we believe him?

Lines 94-95

To say: "I am Lazarus, come from the dead,

Come back to tell you all, I shall tell you all"–

Prufrock compares his task of asking the question to Lazarus coming back from the dead. Really, now,
this is a bit much. It shouldn’t take a resurrection to tell someone how you feel.

But there’s more to the story. In the Bible, a rich man named Dives dies and gets sent to Hell. Around
the same time, a poor man named Lazarus dies and gets sent to Heaven. Dives asks the prophet
Abraham to please send Lazarus back to earth to warn his brothers to mend their ways or they’ll end up
in Hell. Abraham is like, "No way, man. If your brothers didn’t get the message already, what with all the
prophets and such who have been running around, one dead guy coming back to life isn’t going to save
them."

Now, ahem: (Pointing our finger, Batman-style) to the Epigraph! The epigraph comes from a poem
about another guy who, unlike Dives, did make it back from Hell to tell warn people about sin. His name
was Dante Alighieri, the poet.

But Prufrock is no Lazarus, nor is he a Dante. He’s more like Dives, the guy who never escapes from his
terrible situation.

Lines 96-98

If one, settling a pillow by her head,


Should say: "That is not what I meant at all.

That is not it, at all."

Now he finally completes the sentence, "Would it have been worth it, after all," from the beginning of
the stanza. The sentence goes, "Would it have been worth it, after all, if one, settling a pillow by her
head, should say: ‘That is not what I meant at all. That is not it, at all.’"

Clearly Prufrock thinks that, no, it would not have been worth it. So, he thinks, it’s a good thing he never
tried or risked anything.

Prufrock is imagining his worst-case scenario: he has asked her his big question – though we still don’t
know what it is – and she replies that she has been misunderstood.

But why would the woman with the pillow think she has been misunderstood?

Maybe his question is something like, "I’m really into you, and when you did such-and-such thing, it
made me think you were into me, too. Do you want to kick it with me?" But that’s just a wild guess.

At any rate, he never asked the question, because he was too afraid of getting rejected. So he’ll never
know if that’s what she "meant."

Stanza XIV

Lines 99-104

And would it have been worth it, after all,

Would it have been worth while,

After the sunsets and the dooryards and the sprinkled streets,

After the novels, after the teacups, after the skirts that trail along the floor –

And this, and so much more? –

It is impossible to say just what I mean!

He’s still thinking in worst-case-scenario mode. He wonders if it would have been worth it if after him
and his love have experienced all of these nice but trivial pleasures of everyday, middle-class life,
including "sunsets," "novels," and "teacups" – but he can’t finish his thought.
If we had to guess, we might say that he’s afraid that if his big question didn’t go over well, it would
throw a wrench in his tidy, polite, inoffensive life. It’s the most bogus excuse in the book, like when you
ask someone on a date and they say, "No, I don’t want to ruin our friendship."

But Prufrock is right about one thing: he’s totally incapable of saying what he means.

Lines 105-110

But as if a magic lantern threw the nerves in patterns on a screen:

Would it have been worth while

If one, settling a pillow or throwing off a shawl,

And turning toward the window, should say:

"That is not it at all,

That is not what I meant, at all."

Ah, now he comes up with the right words to say what he means. It’s as if the words locked in his
"nerves" were being projected by a "magic lantern" onto a screen for him to read.

But, in typical Prufrock-fashion, even the right words are disappointing. It’s just another image of a
woman sitting on a couch or a bed and saying she has been misunderstood.

Once again, it is implied that he doesn’t think asking her would have been worth the risk of rejection.

But, once again, he’ll never know, will he.

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Stanza XV

Lines 111-119

No! I am not Prince Hamlet, nor was meant to be;

Am an attendant lord, one that will do

To swell a progress, start a scene or two,

Advise the prince; no doubt, an easy tool,

Deferential, glad to be of use,

Politic, cautious, and meticulous;

Full of high sentence, but a bit obtuse;

At times, indeed, almost ridiculous –

Almost, at times, the Fool.

Aside from Dante, the poet whom Eliot loved most was Shakespeare. So here’s a Shakespeare reference.

In Hamlet, the title character is an indecisive chap, much like Prufrock has been for most of the poem.
Hamlet can’t decide whether or not to kill his uncle, even though his uncle has committed some really
awful crimes. Like Prufrock, Hamlet can seem like a coward who talks too much. But now Prufrock says
he’s not like Hamlet, after all.

And if you like puns, the end of line 111 has a good one. In the play, Hamlet begins his most famous
speech: "To be or not to be, that is the question." You might even say it’s an "overwhelming question."
But Prufrock has already made a decision on that question: he was not "meant to be."

Prufrock compares himself to a minor character in the play, one of the "attendants" who serve the king.
We think he’s talking about Polonius.

In Hamlet, Polonius is the father of Ophelia, the heroine, and everyone respects him because he always
takes the cautious route and acts like "an easy tool." Even Shakespeare uses him to "start a scene or
two" in the play, then kills him off around the midway point.

Polonius talks a good game – he uses fancy words ("high sentence") and proverbs – but in the end, he’s
kind of a dunce. As Prufrock so cautiously puts it, he’s "almost ridiculous" and almost like "the Fool."
With this recognition, Prufrock has finally arrived at a pretty honest assessment of himself. It’s a bit late,
however, to do anything about it. It’s never good to just say, "Yeah I’m a tool, but, oh, well."

Stanza XVI

Lines 120-121

I grow old … I grow old …

I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled.

Ah, yes. We love these lines because they bring some silliness back into the poem. Trousers. Ha!

Though Prufrock has done a pretty good job so far at disguising the passage of time, he can no longer
hide the fact that he’s getting older and older. He blew his chance to ask the question, and now he’s like
the guy who stays at a party too long, except that the party is his own poem.

Because he already failed to make one big decision, he’s going to pretend he’s an assertive, confident
guy by making a bunch of comically minor decisions. Thus, the infamous rolled trousers bit. A true
classic.

Hey, at least his pant-legs won’t get wet if he steps in a puddle. Always thinking ahead, that Prufrock.

Stanza XVII

Lines 122-123

Shall I part my hair behind? Do I dare to eat a peach?

I shall wear white flannel trousers, and walk upon the beach.

As one of the annotated guides to Eliot’s poems put it, parting your hair behind was considered
"daringly bohemian" at the time.

Prufrock is still trying to make all kinds of tiny decisions, now that he has missed his big chance. As
always, he’s interested in the small pleasures of food and fashion, like the peach and the white flannel
trousers.
He’s also going to check out the ocean – maybe he’ll talk about how he wants to be a crab again.

Line 124

I have heard the mermaids singing, each to each.

OK, so no crabs. Instead, he sees some mermaids.

Wait, that’s actually pretty exciting. But this is Prufrock, who can’t keep track of what time it is, so he
says he has "heard" the mermaids singing to each other, as if this event were already in the past.

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Stanza XVIII

Line 125

I do not think that they will sing to me.

Even the mermaids won’t sing to him. Where’s your self-confidence, man!

Stanza XIX

Lines 126-128

I have seen them riding seaward on the waves

Combing the white hair of the waves blown back


When the wind blows the water white and black.

Of all the things Prufrock claims to have seen, the mermaids are definitely the coolest.

But do we believe him? He has tricked us before.

These mermaids look like they’re surfing on the waves with their tails. The only troubling sign is that the
waves have "white hair," which makes us think of old people.

Stanza XX

Lines 129-131

We have lingered in the chambers of the sea

By sea-girls wreathed with seaweed red and brown

Till human voices wake us, and we drown.

This is kind of an "it was all a dream" ending, but even weirder.

Prufrock brings "us" back into the picture, saying that we have been hanging out in the ocean with him.

The word "chambers" has two meaning here: it can refer to small cramped spaces, or it can refer to
rooms, especially bedrooms.

Remember that Prufrock has spent significant amounts of time lurking outside of rooms and imagining
women who are wrapped in shawls and laying on pillows. We don’t know who the "sea-girls" are, but
they don’t seem quite as majestic as the mermaids.

The "human voices" may remind us of the "voices with a dying fall" from line 52.

Oh, and by the way, we’re dead. We drowned with Prufrock. No!

Seriously, though, we can’t help you much with this ending. It could signal that Prufrock has truly grown
insane, or that his "true self" is really more crab-like that human, or that, yes, he has been dreaming the
whole time. (We don’t really buy the dream story, but if that’s your thing, go for it.)

One thing is clear: Prufrock’s story does not turn out well. It does not turn out well, at all.

https://www.shmoop.com/study-guides/poetry/love-song-alfred-prufrock/summary#stanza-3-summary
Whispers of Immortality

BY T. S. ELIOT

Webster was much possessed by death

And saw the skull beneath the skin;

And breastless creatures under ground

Leaned backward with a lipless grin.

Daffodil bulbs instead of balls

Stared from the sockets of the eyes!

He knew that thought clings round dead limbs

Tightening its lusts and luxuries.

Donne, I suppose, was such another

Who found no substitute for sense,

To seize and clutch and penetrate;

Expert beyond experience,

He knew the anguish of the marrow

The ague of the skeleton;

No contact possible to flesh

Allayed the fever of the bone.

. . . . .

Grishkin is nice: her Russian eye


Is underlined for emphasis;

Uncorseted, her friendly bust

Gives promise of pneumatic bliss.

The couched Brazilian jaguar

Compels the scampering marmoset

With subtle effluence of cat;

Grishkin has a maisonnette;

The sleek Brazilian jaguar

Does not in its arboreal gloom

Distil so rank a feline smell

As Grishkin in a drawing-room.

And even the Abstract Entities

Circumambulate her charm;

But our lot crawls between dry ribs

To keep our metaphysics warm.

https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/52563/whispers-of-immortality

T.S. EliotWhispers of Immortality by T.S. Eliot

‘Whispers of Immortality’ by T.S. Eliot is an eight stanza poem that was written between 1915 and 1918 .
It was first published the September issue of Little Review then was later included in Eliot’s volume,
Poems, in 1919. Of the many quatrain poems written by Eliot ‘Whispers of Immortality’ is one of the
most popular. Upon an initial reading it clear that the poem is divided into two distinct sections, each
containing four stanzas. The first contains philosophizing statement in regards to death and the second
sex and love.

In addition to its formatting within sets four lines, the poem is also structured with a casual rhyme
scheme of abcb. There are a number of moments in which the rhymes are not precise though. These are
known as half or slant rhymes. A perfect example of this occurring is in stanza four with the end rhymes
“skeleton” and “bone.” There are similar consonant sounds in these words but only to an extent. In
regards to meter, the poem is mostly contained within iambic tetrameter. This means that each line
contains four sets of two beats. The first of these is unstressed and the second stressed.

T.S. EliotWhispers of Immortality by T.S. Eliot

‘Whispers of Immortality’ by T.S. Eliot is an eight stanza poem that was written between 1915 and 1918 .
It was first published the September issue of Little Review then was later included in Eliot’s volume,
Poems, in 1919. Of the many quatrain poems written by Eliot ‘Whispers of Immortality’ is one of the
most popular. Upon an initial reading it clear that the poem is divided into two distinct sections, each
containing four stanzas. The first contains philosophizing statement in regards to death and the second
sex and love.

In addition to its formatting within sets four lines, the poem is also structured with a casual rhyme
scheme of abcb. There are a number of moments in which the rhymes are not precise though. These are
known as half or slant rhymes. A perfect example of this occurring is in stanza four with the end rhymes
“skeleton” and “bone.” There are similar consonant sounds in these words but only to an extent. In
regards to meter, the poem is mostly contained within iambic tetrameter. This means that each line
contains four sets of two beats. The first of these is unstressed and the second stressed.

Summary of Whispers of Immortality

‘Whispers of Immortality’ by T.S. Eliot describes the connection between life, death, love and sex and
how ultimately death becomes the most important thing in life.
The poem begins with the speaker describing how John Webster, a dramatist, thought about life and
death. He, as well as other writers such as John Donne, saw the truth of death beneath life. They were
able to use their own knowledge to investigate deeper and discover its presence within the everyone’s
bones.

The second half of the poem introduces sex into life. There is one character of note, Grishkin, who is
used as a representative of life and passion. She is a sexual person but even when one enters into her
breast they will find cold bones and eventual death. The poem ends with the speaker describing how the
study of the presence of death will become all consuming.

Analysis of Whispers of Immortality

Stanza One

Webster was much possessed by death

And saw the skull beneath the skin;

And breastless creatures under ground

Leaned backward with a lipless grin.

In the first two stanzas the speaker discusses the beliefs and works of John Webster. He is best-known
today as a dramatist, and author of ‘The Duchess of Malfi. He was a contemporary of Shakespeare’s and
appealed to Eliot in how he got to the truth of a situation. The first line makes this clear as the speaker
states that Webster was “possessed by death.” It was all he could think about, it consumed his thoughts.
He was able to look past the masks set out over the world and down to the “skull beneath the skin.”

The speaker goes on to use another metaphor to describe Webster’s way of thinking. He could look
“under ground” at the strange and “breastless creatures.” These creatures are without hearts or human
(or humane) intentions. This is a dark image, made more macabre by the image of a creature, which is
actually an exposed human being, leaning back “with a lipless grin.”
Stanza Two

Daffodil bulbs instead of balls

Stared from the sockets of the eyes!

He knew that thought clings round dead limbs

Tightening its lusts and luxuries.

In the second stanza the speaker expands on the sight of a skinless person. This same creature which is
lacking the outward appearance of humanity has “Daffodil bulbs instead of…eyes.” This is another
terrifying sight and is related directly to a play by Webster titled, The White Devil. Towards the end of
that particular work a ghost brings in a flower pot in which a skull is placed.

T.S. EliotWhispers of Immortality by T.S. Eliot

‘Whispers of Immortality’ by T.S. Eliot is an eight stanza poem that was written between 1915 and 1918 .
It was first published the September issue of Little Review then was later included in Eliot’s volume,
Poems, in 1919. Of the many quatrain poems written by Eliot ‘Whispers of Immortality’ is one of the
most popular. Upon an initial reading it clear that the poem is divided into two distinct sections, each
containing four stanzas. The first contains philosophizing statement in regards to death and the second
sex and love.

In addition to its formatting within sets four lines, the poem is also structured with a casual rhyme
scheme of abcb. There are a number of moments in which the rhymes are not precise though. These are
known as half or slant rhymes. A perfect example of this occurring is in stanza four with the end rhymes
“skeleton” and “bone.” There are similar consonant sounds in these words but only to an extent. In
regards to meter, the poem is mostly contained within iambic tetrameter. This means that each line
contains four sets of two beats. The first of these is unstressed and the second stressed.
Summary of Whispers of Immortality

‘Whispers of Immortality’ by T.S. Eliot describes the connection between life, death, love and sex and
how ultimately death becomes the most important thing in life.

The poem begins with the speaker describing how John Webster, a dramatist, thought about life and
death. He, as well as other writers such as John Donne, saw the truth of death beneath life. They were
able to use their own knowledge to investigate deeper and discover its presence within the everyone’s
bones.

The second half of the poem introduces sex into life. There is one character of note, Grishkin, who is
used as a representative of life and passion. She is a sexual person but even when one enters into her
breast they will find cold bones and eventual death. The poem ends with the speaker describing how the
study of the presence of death will become all consuming.

Analysis of Whispers of Immortality

Stanza One

Webster was much possessed by death

And saw the skull beneath the skin;

And breastless creatures under ground

Leaned backward with a lipless grin.


In the first two stanzas the speaker discusses the beliefs and works of John Webster. He is best-known
today as a dramatist, and author of ‘The Duchess of Malfi. He was a contemporary of Shakespeare’s and
appealed to Eliot in how he got to the truth of a situation. The first line makes this clear as the speaker
states that Webster was “possessed by death.” It was all he could think about, it consumed his thoughts.
He was able to look past the masks set out over the world and down to the “skull beneath the skin.”

The speaker goes on to use another metaphor to describe Webster’s way of thinking. He could look
“under ground” at the strange and “breastless creatures.” These creatures are without hearts or human
(or humane) intentions. This is a dark image, made more macabre by the image of a creature, which is
actually an exposed human being, leaning back “with a lipless grin.”

Stanza Two

Daffodil bulbs instead of balls

Stared from the sockets of the eyes!

He knew that thought clings round dead limbs

Tightening its lusts and luxuries.

In the second stanza the speaker expands on the sight of a skinless person. This same creature which is
lacking the outward appearance of humanity has “Daffodil bulbs instead of…eyes.” This is another
terrifying sight and is related directly to a play by Webster titled, The White Devil. Towards the end of
that particular work a ghost brings in a flower pot in which a skull is placed.
The next two lines are even stranger than those which came before them. The speaker describes how
“He” the one without eyes, relates death and thought, together with lust. It seems to him that sexual
love is intimately connected to death. So much so it “clings” to the dead.

T.S. EliotWhispers of Immortality by T.S. Eliot

‘Whispers of Immortality’ by T.S. Eliot is an eight stanza poem that was written between 1915 and 1918 .
It was first published the September issue of Little Review then was later included in Eliot’s volume,
Poems, in 1919. Of the many quatrain poems written by Eliot ‘Whispers of Immortality’ is one of the
most popular. Upon an initial reading it clear that the poem is divided into two distinct sections, each
containing four stanzas. The first contains philosophizing statement in regards to death and the second
sex and love.

In addition to its formatting within sets four lines, the poem is also structured with a casual rhyme
scheme of abcb. There are a number of moments in which the rhymes are not precise though. These are
known as half or slant rhymes. A perfect example of this occurring is in stanza four with the end rhymes
“skeleton” and “bone.” There are similar consonant sounds in these words but only to an extent. In
regards to meter, the poem is mostly contained within iambic tetrameter. This means that each line
contains four sets of two beats. The first of these is unstressed and the second stressed.

Summary of Whispers of Immortality

‘Whispers of Immortality’ by T.S. Eliot describes the connection between life, death, love and sex and
how ultimately death becomes the most important thing in life.
The poem begins with the speaker describing how John Webster, a dramatist, thought about life and
death. He, as well as other writers such as John Donne, saw the truth of death beneath life. They were
able to use their own knowledge to investigate deeper and discover its presence within the everyone’s
bones.

The second half of the poem introduces sex into life. There is one character of note, Grishkin, who is
used as a representative of life and passion. She is a sexual person but even when one enters into her
breast they will find cold bones and eventual death. The poem ends with the speaker describing how the
study of the presence of death will become all consuming.

Analysis of Whispers of Immortality

Stanza One

Webster was much possessed by death

And saw the skull beneath the skin;

And breastless creatures under ground

Leaned backward with a lipless grin.

In the first two stanzas the speaker discusses the beliefs and works of John Webster. He is best-known
today as a dramatist, and author of ‘The Duchess of Malfi. He was a contemporary of Shakespeare’s and
appealed to Eliot in how he got to the truth of a situation. The first line makes this clear as the speaker
states that Webster was “possessed by death.” It was all he could think about, it consumed his thoughts.
He was able to look past the masks set out over the world and down to the “skull beneath the skin.”
The speaker goes on to use another metaphor to describe Webster’s way of thinking. He could look
“under ground” at the strange and “breastless creatures.” These creatures are without hearts or human
(or humane) intentions. This is a dark image, made more macabre by the image of a creature, which is
actually an exposed human being, leaning back “with a lipless grin.”

Stanza Two

Daffodil bulbs instead of balls

Stared from the sockets of the eyes!

He knew that thought clings round dead limbs

Tightening its lusts and luxuries.

In the second stanza the speaker expands on the sight of a skinless person. This same creature which is
lacking the outward appearance of humanity has “Daffodil bulbs instead of…eyes.” This is another
terrifying sight and is related directly to a play by Webster titled, The White Devil. Towards the end of
that particular work a ghost brings in a flower pot in which a skull is placed.

The next two lines are even stranger than those which came before them. The speaker describes how
“He” the one without eyes, relates death and thought, together with lust. It seems to him that sexual
love is intimately connected to death. So much so it “clings” to the dead.
Stanza Three

Donne, I suppose, was such another

Who found no substitute for sense,

To seize and clutch and penetrate;

Expert beyond experience,

In the next four lines the speaker turns away from Webster to discuss English poet John Donne. The
speaker states that Donne was “such another” like Webster who prioritized his senses. He was deeply
engaged with his world and sought out all experience. Through his thoughts, Donne came to know the
world and more importantly, realize the ever present nature of death. He was an “Expert” in emotion
and wrote penetratingly about the things he learned.

Stanza Four

He knew the anguish of the marrow

The ague of the skeleton;

No contact possible to flesh

Allayed the fever of the bone.

The fourth stanza makes clear that Donne had a good understanding of what death is and how
important it is to one’s life. He understood the “anguish” that is part of one’s bones. It is an “ague,” or
illness, deep within the body. So integral is humanity’s path towards death that it lives within one’s
physical frame.
The next two lines explain that even though sex is tied to death, nothing can relieve, or allay, the terror
of its coming. Eliot once more uses physical contact to illustrate his meaning. Stanza Five

Grishkin is nice: her Russian eye

Is underlined for emphasis;

Uncorseted, her friendly bust

Gives promise of pneumatic bliss.

When Eliot gets to the fifth stanza the poem changes. In its original form the two sections were
separated by five dots, denoting a change in the current topic, but not the larger themes.

He immediately refers to “Grishkin.” This person is not well-known like Webster and Donne before her.
It has been speculated that she was a Russian woman who was a “friendly” and sexual woman. In the
poem she uses her “eye” to emphasize what she’s saying and what she wants. The speaker also
describes how when she is “Uncorseted,” or her corset is taken off, her “bust” gives out “promise.” The
bliss that she experiences, and that which she gives is “pneumatic” or pressurized, as if powered by a
machine. This phrase, “pneumatic bliss’ was coined by Eliot and has since been used to refer to a
woman’s breasts.

T.S. EliotWhispers of Immortality by T.S. Eliot

‘Whispers of Immortality’ by T.S. Eliot is an eight stanza poem that was written between 1915 and 1918 .
It was first published the September issue of Little Review then was later included in Eliot’s volume,
Poems, in 1919. Of the many quatrain poems written by Eliot ‘Whispers of Immortality’ is one of the
most popular. Upon an initial reading it clear that the poem is divided into two distinct sections, each
containing four stanzas. The first contains philosophizing statement in regards to death and the second
sex and love.
In addition to its formatting within sets four lines, the poem is also structured with a casual rhyme
scheme of abcb. There are a number of moments in which the rhymes are not precise though. These are
known as half or slant rhymes. A perfect example of this occurring is in stanza four with the end rhymes
“skeleton” and “bone.” There are similar consonant sounds in these words but only to an extent. In
regards to meter, the poem is mostly contained within iambic tetrameter. This means that each line
contains four sets of two beats. The first of these is unstressed and the second stressed.

Summary of Whispers of Immortality

‘Whispers of Immortality’ by T.S. Eliot describes the connection between life, death, love and sex and
how ultimately death becomes the most important thing in life.

The poem begins with the speaker describing how John Webster, a dramatist, thought about life and
death. He, as well as other writers such as John Donne, saw the truth of death beneath life. They were
able to use their own knowledge to investigate deeper and discover its presence within the everyone’s
bones.

The second half of the poem introduces sex into life. There is one character of note, Grishkin, who is
used as a representative of life and passion. She is a sexual person but even when one enters into her
breast they will find cold bones and eventual death. The poem ends with the speaker describing how the
study of the presence of death will become all consuming.

Analysis of Whispers of Immortality

Stanza One
Webster was much possessed by death

And saw the skull beneath the skin;

And breastless creatures under ground

Leaned backward with a lipless grin.

In the first two stanzas the speaker discusses the beliefs and works of John Webster. He is best-known
today as a dramatist, and author of ‘The Duchess of Malfi. He was a contemporary of Shakespeare’s and
appealed to Eliot in how he got to the truth of a situation. The first line makes this clear as the speaker
states that Webster was “possessed by death.” It was all he could think about, it consumed his thoughts.
He was able to look past the masks set out over the world and down to the “skull beneath the skin.”

The speaker goes on to use another metaphor to describe Webster’s way of thinking. He could look
“under ground” at the strange and “breastless creatures.” These creatures are without hearts or human
(or humane) intentions. This is a dark image, made more macabre by the image of a creature, which is
actually an exposed human being, leaning back “with a lipless grin.”

Stanza Two

Daffodil bulbs instead of balls

Stared from the sockets of the eyes!

He knew that thought clings round dead limbs


Tightening its lusts and luxuries.

In the second stanza the speaker expands on the sight of a skinless person. This same creature which is
lacking the outward appearance of humanity has “Daffodil bulbs instead of…eyes.” This is another
terrifying sight and is related directly to a play by Webster titled, The White Devil. Towards the end of
that particular work a ghost brings in a flower pot in which a skull is placed.

The next two lines are even stranger than those which came before them. The speaker describes how
“He” the one without eyes, relates death and thought, together with lust. It seems to him that sexual
love is intimately connected to death. So much so it “clings” to the dead.

Stanza Three

Donne, I suppose, was such another

Who found no substitute for sense,

To seize and clutch and penetrate;

Expert beyond experience,

In the next four lines the speaker turns away from Webster to discuss English poet John Donne. The
speaker states that Donne was “such another” like Webster who prioritized his senses. He was deeply
engaged with his world and sought out all experience. Through his thoughts, Donne came to know the
world and more importantly, realize the ever present nature of death. He was an “Expert” in emotion
and wrote penetratingly about the things he learned.

Read more: La Figlia Che Piange by T.S. Eliot

Stanza Four

He knew the anguish of the marrow

The ague of the skeleton;

No contact possible to flesh

Allayed the fever of the bone.

The fourth stanza makes clear that Donne had a good understanding of what death is and how
important it is to one’s life. He understood the “anguish” that is part of one’s bones. It is an “ague,” or
illness, deep within the body. So integral is humanity’s path towards death that it lives within one’s
physical frame.

The next two lines explain that even though sex is tied to death, nothing can relieve, or allay, the terror
of its coming. Eliot once more uses physical contact to illustrate his meaning.
Stanza Five

Grishkin is nice: her Russian eye

Is underlined for emphasis;

Uncorseted, her friendly bust

Gives promise of pneumatic bliss.

When Eliot gets to the fifth stanza the poem changes. In its original form the two sections were
separated by five dots, denoting a change in the current topic, but not the larger themes.

He immediately refers to “Grishkin.” This person is not well-known like Webster and Donne before her.
It has been speculated that she was a Russian woman who was a “friendly” and sexual woman. In the
poem she uses her “eye” to emphasize what she’s saying and what she wants. The speaker also
describes how when she is “Uncorseted,” or her corset is taken off, her “bust” gives out “promise.” The
bliss that she experiences, and that which she gives is “pneumatic” or pressurized, as if powered by a
machine. This phrase, “pneumatic bliss’ was coined by Eliot and has since been used to refer to a
woman’s breasts.

Stanza Six

The couched Brazilian jaguar

Compels the scampering marmoset


With subtle effluence of cat;

Grishkin has a maisonnette;

In the sixth stanza the speaker introduces another image, that of a “Brazilian jaguar.” He compares the
cat to Grishkin and describes how she is about to “scamper” after a “marmoset.” The two are contrasted
in their power. The marmoset is helpless at the hands of the jaguar. She moves with the “effluence of
cat.”

The final line states that Grishkin has a small apartment or a “maisonnette.” The conspicuous placement
of this line after the focus on sex, suggests the apartment is dedicated to sexual escapades.

Stanza Seven

The sleek Brazilian jaguar

Does not in its arboreal gloom

Distil so rank a feline smell

As Grishkin in a drawing-room.

Although Grishkin was favourably compared with the jaguar in the sixth stanza, in the seventh she
overtakes it. Both, when they are in their native homes, whether in a “drawing-room” or the ”arboreal
gloom” of the forest, smell distinctively. Grishkin obviously smells more favourably, in this case,
“rank[er],” than the jaguar does. Its smell is less obvious, more “subtle.”

Stanza Eight
And even the Abstract Entities

Circumambulate her charm;

But our lot crawls between dry ribs

To keep our metaphysics warm.

The eighth stanza ends the poem with a strange yet clever conclusion. The speaker states that the
“Abstract Entities” or the essence of the world, circles around Grishkin. This philosophical language
relates back to the earlier stanzas in which the speaker refers to “pneumonic bliss.” He states that “our
lot,” meaning all human beings from the speaker himself to John Donne and the reader, are doomed to
“crawl between dry ribs.”

T.S. EliotWhispers of Immortality by T.S. Eliot

‘Whispers of Immortality’ by T.S. Eliot is an eight stanza poem that was written between 1915 and 1918 .
It was first published the September issue of Little Review then was later included in Eliot’s volume,
Poems, in 1919. Of the many quatrain poems written by Eliot ‘Whispers of Immortality’ is one of the
most popular. Upon an initial reading it clear that the poem is divided into two distinct sections, each
containing four stanzas. The first contains philosophizing statement in regards to death and the second
sex and love.

In addition to its formatting within sets four lines, the poem is also structured with a casual rhyme
scheme of abcb. There are a number of moments in which the rhymes are not precise though. These are
known as half or slant rhymes. A perfect example of this occurring is in stanza four with the end rhymes
“skeleton” and “bone.” There are similar consonant sounds in these words but only to an extent. In
regards to meter, the poem is mostly contained within iambic tetrameter. This means that each line
contains four sets of two beats. The first of these is unstressed and the second stressed.
Summary of Whispers of Immortality

‘Whispers of Immortality’ by T.S. Eliot describes the connection between life, death, love and sex and
how ultimately death becomes the most important thing in life.

The poem begins with the speaker describing how John Webster, a dramatist, thought about life and
death. He, as well as other writers such as John Donne, saw the truth of death beneath life. They were
able to use their own knowledge to investigate deeper and discover its presence within the everyone’s
bones.

The second half of the poem introduces sex into life. There is one character of note, Grishkin, who is
used as a representative of life and passion. She is a sexual person but even when one enters into her
breast they will find cold bones and eventual death. The poem ends with the speaker describing how the
study of the presence of death will become all consuming.

Analysis of Whispers of Immortality

Stanza One

Webster was much possessed by death

And saw the skull beneath the skin;

And breastless creatures under ground


Leaned backward with a lipless grin.

In the first two stanzas the speaker discusses the beliefs and works of John Webster. He is best-known
today as a dramatist, and author of ‘The Duchess of Malfi. He was a contemporary of Shakespeare’s and
appealed to Eliot in how he got to the truth of a situation. The first line makes this clear as the speaker
states that Webster was “possessed by death.” It was all he could think about, it consumed his thoughts.
He was able to look past the masks set out over the world and down to the “skull beneath the skin.”

The speaker goes on to use another metaphor to describe Webster’s way of thinking. He could look
“under ground” at the strange and “breastless creatures.” These creatures are without hearts or human
(or humane) intentions. This is a dark image, made more macabre by the image of a creature, which is
actually an exposed human being, leaning back “with a lipless grin.”

Stanza Two

Daffodil bulbs instead of balls

Stared from the sockets of the eyes!

He knew that thought clings round dead limbs

Tightening its lusts and luxuries.

In the second stanza the speaker expands on the sight of a skinless person. This same creature which is
lacking the outward appearance of humanity has “Daffodil bulbs instead of…eyes.” This is another
terrifying sight and is related directly to a play by Webster titled, The White Devil. Towards the end of
that particular work a ghost brings in a flower pot in which a skull is placed.
The next two lines are even stranger than those which came before them. The speaker describes how
“He” the one without eyes, relates death and thought, together with lust. It seems to him that sexual
love is intimately connected to death. So much so it “clings” to the dead.

Stanza Three

Donne, I suppose, was such another

Who found no substitute for sense,

To seize and clutch and penetrate;

Expert beyond experience,

In the next four lines the speaker turns away from Webster to discuss English poet John Donne. The
speaker states that Donne was “such another” like Webster who prioritized his senses. He was deeply
engaged with his world and sought out all experience. Through his thoughts, Donne came to know the
world and more importantly, realize the ever present nature of death. He was an “Expert” in emotion
and wrote penetratingly about the things he learned.

Read more: La Figlia Che Piange by T.S. Eliot


Stanza Four

He knew the anguish of the marrow

The ague of the skeleton;

No contact possible to flesh

Allayed the fever of the bone.

The fourth stanza makes clear that Donne had a good understanding of what death is and how
important it is to one’s life. He understood the “anguish” that is part of one’s bones. It is an “ague,” or
illness, deep within the body. So integral is humanity’s path towards death that it lives within one’s
physical frame.

The next two lines explain that even though sex is tied to death, nothing can relieve, or allay, the terror
of its coming. Eliot once more uses physical contact to illustrate his meaning.

Stanza Five

Grishkin is nice: her Russian eye

Is underlined for emphasis;

Uncorseted, her friendly bust

Gives promise of pneumatic bliss.


When Eliot gets to the fifth stanza the poem changes. In its original form the two sections were
separated by five dots, denoting a change in the current topic, but not the larger themes.

He immediately refers to “Grishkin.” This person is not well-known like Webster and Donne before her.
It has been speculated that she was a Russian woman who was a “friendly” and sexual woman. In the
poem she uses her “eye” to emphasize what she’s saying and what she wants. The speaker also
describes how when she is “Uncorseted,” or her corset is taken off, her “bust” gives out “promise.” The
bliss that she experiences, and that which she gives is “pneumatic” or pressurized, as if powered by a
machine. This phrase, “pneumatic bliss’ was coined by Eliot and has since been used to refer to a
woman’s breasts.

Stanza Six

The couched Brazilian jaguar

Compels the scampering marmoset

With subtle effluence of cat;

Grishkin has a maisonnette;

In the sixth stanza the speaker introduces another image, that of a “Brazilian jaguar.” He compares the
cat to Grishkin and describes how she is about to “scamper” after a “marmoset.” The two are contrasted
in their power. The marmoset is helpless at the hands of the jaguar. She moves with the “effluence of
cat.”
The final line states that Grishkin has a small apartment or a “maisonnette.” The conspicuous placement
of this line after the focus on sex, suggests the apartment is dedicated to sexual escapades.

Stanza Seven

The sleek Brazilian jaguar

Does not in its arboreal gloom

Distil so rank a feline smell

As Grishkin in a drawing-room.

Although Grishkin was favourably compared with the jaguar in the sixth stanza, in the seventh she
overtakes it. Both, when they are in their native homes, whether in a “drawing-room” or the ”arboreal
gloom” of the forest, smell distinctively. Grishkin obviously smells more favourably, in this case,
“rank[er],” than the jaguar does. Its smell is less obvious, more “subtle.”

Stanza Eight

And even the Abstract Entities

Circumambulate her charm;


But our lot crawls between dry ribs

To keep our metaphysics warm.

The eighth stanza ends the poem with a strange yet clever conclusion. The speaker states that the
“Abstract Entities” or the essence of the world, circles around Grishkin. This philosophical language
relates back to the earlier stanzas in which the speaker refers to “pneumonic bliss.” He states that “our
lot,” meaning all human beings from the speaker himself to John Donne and the reader, are doomed to
“crawl between dry ribs.”

While there, searching for love, sex, passion, or a combination of all three, one is only able to find
“metaphysics.” Metaphysics is defined as the study of the first principles of things. These principles
include the concept of essences, as well as time, space and knowledge itself. The truth of life’s closeness
to death is all that will end up mattering. Everyone who follows this path will eventually dedicate their
lives to the philosophizing Eliot has been engaging in for the last eight stanzas.

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Other

This poem is divided into eight stanzas, and each stanza is a quatrain. The rhyme scheme of each
quatrain is ABCB, so only the pralines rhyme and they do so in assonance; this is also known as a heroic
stanza. In addition, every line in the poem has an iambic pentameter structure. This piece includes
words with a double sense that have sexual connotations such as lust and luxuries (8) or penetrate (11).
Eliot also uses archaic words like ague (14) and circumambulate (30). The poem is also split after the
fourth stanza and the speaker begins to narrate in the present tense. The first four stanzas are written in
past tense to represent how metaphysical poets in the past used to act, and what they used to believe
in. These writers were known as "proper writers." The present tense, which starts being used in the fifth
stanza, is meant to represent present poets that allow physical temptation to draw them away from the
metaphysical style, and from great literature. These poets have a dissonance, or sometimes a
disconnection, between their thoughts and their feelings. Today's poets allow their emotions to cloud
their sense and judgment.

The first two stanzas the speaker illustrates a terrifying world in which the dead come to life, the
“creatures” are buried underground (3) and still grinning (4). In line one, the speaker presents the first
character whose name is Webster; a man that “…was much possessed by death, and saw the skull
beneath the skin, and breastless creatures under ground leaned backward with a lipless grin.” (1-4).
Webster seems to be alive in a dead world. "He knew that thought clings round dead limbs tightening its
lust and luxuries." (7-8). These two lines create an image that allows the readers to understand that
someone's thoughts can be immortal. In this case, our speaker is saying that John Webster's thoughts
because they were written as a great piece of literature, are immortal. Webster knew that thoughts can
overcome time, and he believed it to be far more important than getting side tracked by lusts and
luxuries (8). Webster can escape death, through his writing, but he cannot escape time, which is why he
is depicted in a sort of underworld with dead creatures.

The next two stanzas introduce Donne, whom the speaker describes as “…such another who found no
substitute for sense…” (9-10). Donne is another great writer that, much like Webster, knew that thought
is far more important than physical temptation. However, the difference between Donne and Webster is
that Donne is ill, and therefore, he has no other choice but to choose thought over lust. "He knew the
anguish of the marrow, the ague of the skeleton; no contact possible to flesh allayed the fever of the
bone." (13-16). This makes Donne much more aware of his mortality, both physical and artistic.

The last four stanzas bring in a new character, Grishkin, and a change in verb usage. When the speaker
begins the fifth stanza they shift from speaking in past tense with Webster and Donne to speaking in
present tense with Grishkin. “Grishkin is nice: her Russian eye is underlined for emphasis; uncorseted,
her friendly bust gives promise of pneumatic bliss.” (17-20). Grishkin is a sexual symbol, she represents
physical temptation and sexual impulse that writers so easily fall into today; “Compels the scampering
marmoset with subtle effluence of cat…” (22-23). She is described as a “Brazilian jaguar” (21 and 25)
meaning that she is a dangerous threat to present writers, she tempts them with her female and
“feline” (23 and27) skills. Towards the end the reader is told that those that fall into temptation and
drift from thought and good writing will find their end, and they will not be immortalized by their
writing; “And even the Abstract Entities circumambulate her charm…” (29-30). Finally, the speaker has a
hint of hope in his voice and says, “...but our lot crawls between dry ribs to keep our metaphysics
warm.” (31-32). There are still poets that crawl, or create a name for themselves, between amazing past
writers, such as Webster and Donne, that hope to keep great literature alive and in production.
In conclusion, Eliot’s Whisper of Immortality is a representation of the lack of connection that modern
poets have, and how it will lead them to be utterly mortal and forgotten. He alludes to popular
metaphysical poets, John Webster, and John Donne, to pose and support his argument that thoughts
and not emotions are what makes writing unforgettable, and ultimately, immortal. Finally, Eliot creates
a third character, Grishkin, to illustrate the dangers of relying on physicality and reality for writers.

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Morning at the Window

T. S. Eliot - 1888-1965

They are rattling breakfast plates in basement kitchens,

And along the trampled edges of the street

I am aware of the damp souls of housemaids

Sprouting despondently at area gates.

The brown waves of fog toss up to me

Twisted faces from the bottom of the street,

And tear from a passer-by with muddy skirts

An aimless smile that hovers in the air

And vanishes along the level of the roofs.

https://poets.org/poem/morning-window
T. S. Eliot was sceptical of the notion of ‘free verse’, sometimes called vers libre after the French term
for the same thing. For Eliot, ‘free’ verse is not entirely free, since that word implies unrestraint and a
lack of control on the part of the poet, and in good poetry the poet must always be in control of his
metre and language. In a 1917 essay, ‘Reflections on Vers Libre’, Eliot outlined his view on free verse,
arguing that in English poetry so-called ‘free’ verse is always based, to some extent, on the iambic
pentameter verse line – that is, the ten-syllable line used in much English verse, perhaps most famously
by Shakespeare in his plays. And even if a poem is unrhymed, analysis of its line endings may reveal
other structural patterns and echoes that are used in place of conventional rhyme – here, for instance,
Eliot chooses to end two lines with ‘street’, and many of the lines end with a noun (kitchens, street,
housemaids, gates, roofs, and so on).

https://interestingliterature.com/2016/09/a-short-analysis-of-t-s-eliots-morning-at-the-window/

Morning at the Window Analysis

First Stanza

They are rattling breakfast plates in basement kitchens,

(…)

Sprouting despondently at area gates.

The first stanza sets the scene and the setting of the poem. The lyrical voice starts talking about a
“They”. Thus, the lyrical voice appears to be an observer who looks at this scene with distant sight
(“They are rattling breakfast plates in basement kitchens”). The images that the lyrical voice describes
are object correlatives, meaning that the objects and situations depicted correspond to certain ideas
and emotions in the lyrical voice’s and the reader’s mind. Then, the lyrical voice will state that he/she is
in the street and aware of what goes on around him/her: “And along the trample edges of the street/ I
am aware of the damp souls of housemaids/Sprouting despondently at area gates”. The lyrical voice
shows images of poverty in modern London and describes them as everyday scenes, without describing
individualities or moralizing his/her surroundings. This first stanza presents a very human, but distant
picture; everyday life is narrated but not in individual depth. The lyrical voice chooses to narrate what
he/she observes, and focuses on his point of view.
Second Stanza

The brown waves of fog toss up to me

(…)

And vanishes along the level of the roofs.

The second stanza furthers on the characteristics and occupants of the modern city. The lyrical voice
describes the air and its pollution (“The brown waves of fog toss up to me”), being a consequence of the
industrial and modern city. Just like the air comes to him in a particular way, he/she sees people in the
streets accordingly. Notice how they are described: “Twisted faces from the bottom of the street,/ And
tear from a passer-by with muddy skirts”. People appear to be sad and dirty; nothing in this portrait of
modern London seems to be cheerful or positive, as poverty reigns in the streets. Furthermore, the
lyrical voice describes a possible attempt to revert the picture in the city, but it is useless (“An aimless
smile that hovers in the air/And vanishes along the level of the roofs”). This stanza, and the entire poem,
present a distinctly modern view of a city, most probably London, by focusing on the small details of
everyday life and elevating them to “quasi-transcendent qualities”.

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Terms in this set (8)

In line 5, the "waves" are

(A) so big they reach the speaker's window

(B) a metaphor for the fog that carries the images of faces down below up

to the speaker at his window

(C) part of the poem's bigger conceit that compares the scene below to

an ocean

(D) part of a hypothetical situation thought up by the speaker

(E) a hallucination that characterizes the speaker as depressed and

delusional
(B) a metaphor for the fog that carries the images of faces down below up

to the speaker at his window

The subject to which the word "tear" (7) refers is

(A) a passer-by

(B) the speaker

(C) the brown waves

(D) an aimless smile

(E) damp souls

(C) the brown waves

The words "fog . . . faces from" (5-6) are an example of

(A) consonance

(B) repetition

(C) anaphora

(D) assonance

(E) alliteration

(E) alliteration

The poem's assonance

(A) is found in the words "muddy skirts" (7) and emphasizes the ugliness

of the scene being described

(B) is found in the words "faces from" (6) and creates a soothing sound

to ease the speaker's discomfort

(C) is found in the words "fog toss" (5) and creates a feeling of upward
movement to complement the movement of the waves

(D) is found in the words "brown waves" (5) and emphasizes the disparity

between ugliness and beauty

(E) is found in the word "rattling" (1) and allows the reader to hear what

the speaker hears

(C) is found in the words "fog toss" (5) and creates a feeling of upward

movement to complement the movement of the waves

Regarding the scene he is describing, the speaker is

(A) removed and observant

(B) obsessed and upset

(C) optimistic

(D) fatalistic

(E) apathetic

(A) removed and observant

The people described in the poem are characterized mostly as

(A) ghostlike

(B) penurious

(C) starving

(D) pathetic

(E) grotesque

(A) ghostlike

The speaker is differentiated from the people he describes by


I. his wealth

II. his location

III. his actions

(A) I only

(B) I and II only

(C) II only

(D) II and III only

(E) III only

(D) II and III only

The tone of the poem is developed through

I. diction

II. imagery

III. metaphor

(A) I only

(B) I and II only

(C) II and III only

(D) III only

(E) I, II, and III

(E) I, II, and III

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Ghostly diction also adds to the tone as smiles "hover in the air" and "vanish along the level of roofs"
giving a sign of joy a deathl

Morning at the Window by T. S. Eliot: Summary and Critical Analysis

'Morning at the Window' is an imagist poem that presents an image of poverty. The picture is that of a
slum where people lead miserable lives. The speaker is at the window. He may be a visitor of a certain
house in the area where poor people live. The images that come to his eyes are 'object correlatives' or
objects corresponding certain ideas and emotions in the poet's and the reader's mind.

T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)

T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)

The images in the poem correlate with the idea of poverty and feelings of sympathy. But the poem only
presents them just the objective image, rather than romantically expressing his feelings and emotions.
There is also a balance between feelings and ideas in the sense that the image arouses not only feelings
in the reader but also provokes thoughts and ideas.

The poem is a set of striking images of poverty; the poet says nothing but shows them. The poor people
are rattling (making a sound) breakfast plates early in the morning. It is an obligation for poor people to
go to work early and work till late. Sun or shower, frost or fog, they have to set out early. The image
brings to mind similar images of poverty. The speaker says that he is aware of the condition of the
households' minds and souls, or their psychology. He doesn't describe that. Such housemaids are
appearing one after another at the city gate. Maybe they come from villages. They have no identity,
dignity and meaningful life. They are 'despondent', or extremely sad.

The speaker seems to go along, or else look further away waves of "brown" fog which come up to him.
This is perhaps because the city air is so polluted. Twisted faces of depressed people pass by. A passerby
has tears in the eyes. The speaker takes another glance and sees her dirty skirt. Another person comes
up and tries to smile, but fails. The smile vanishes among the city roofs. All these disjointed images can
be put together to build up a general picture of the poor people's plight. The focus is on poor servant
girls whose souls themselves are "damp" (moist and dirt). The poet evokes our emotion without telling
his emotions. He arouses pity without telling his pity for the people.

Eliot asserted that poetry must present 'objective correlatives' or objects and events that will
correspond to certain emotions in the reader's experience. The poet need not express his personal
emotion. This idea of poetry is anti-romantic. For instance, when we encounter objective images of
poverty, we understand it. The image of a child on top of a burning house would need no explanation!
Eliot also strongly suggested that poetry must balance intellect, (thought) and emotion (feeling). The
feelings of the individual poet must become a matter of thought for everyone in the poem. This balance
is called 'unified sensibility'. The present poem presents only objective correlatives of poverty; the poet
doesn't describe his feelings put presents objects that correlate or correspond to sympathy towards the
poor. He balances the underlying feelings of pathos (pity) with a thoughtful mind and serous art. Eliot
shows how personal emotion can be transformed into a universal thought-provoking image. Eliot also
presents things as his impressions recorded them. The twisted face, the aimless smile, the eyes with
tears, the muddy skirts are fragments of his impressions. The poet presents in the same way that these
things made the impression on him. In this sense, the poem is impressionistic.

We can also call the whole set of images in the poem a symbol. The imagery is familiar and vivid. It can
be said to symbolize poverty. The objective presentation of images makes the poem an Imagist poem.
Its symbolic meaning and impressionistic viewpoint are also other important features of the poem. In
short, such a presentation is unique, that makes the poem memorable and unique though the subject
matter of poverty is very common.

The theme of the poem "Morning at the Window" is poverty. The poem presents a very human picture
of poor people in the city slum. The poem presents a set of typical images that suggest poverty,
depression, misery and squalor in the slums (poor and dirty areas of the cities) where the poor live. The
poet also mentions the state of the souls of the housemaids. So the poem thematically includes the
issues of poverty, depression and squalor in the lives of poor people in the city.

Perhaps more terrible than poverty is the problem of depression and distress with which the poor
people in the pace live their lives. The damp souls of housemaids, the twisted face of a passerby, the
tears in the eyes of a girl who is also wearing a muddy skirt, and the aimless smile of a person who tries
and fails to smile are all indicators of sadness and frustration as well as poverty. Poor people can
sometimes be happy, as in tribal villages. But here the problem of unhappiness seems to be even more
terrible.

The people rattling breakfast plates early in the morning suggest the poverty of the people who have to
go to work early. They are also living in the basements of houses for they cannot afford to live in better
apartments. The very roads in those streets are trampled or torn. The speaker feels that the housemaids
are down hearted and miserable. But for the city dwellers, the poor girls sprout out of nowhere at the
gates of the city. The speaker then notices a set of several other images of poverty and dejection. He
sees twisted faces of people who certainly have pain and distress. He sees a girl with tears in her eyes
and a muddy skirt on her. Then someone passes by with an aimless smile. All these images are objective
correlatives of poverty, which is the main theme of the poem.

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window.html#.XiLoLP4zbZY

Introduction

Analysis of the poem "Morning at the Window" The title "Morning at the Window" may be viewed as
paradoxical because the title evokes a joyful awakening, although the poem is not joyful as closer
analysis reveals. I believe the person who is speaking in the poem to be Eliot. However, it could be a
character Eliot has created, a person of higher social status; we know this because the person has a
window and therefore does not live in a basement. The window may be symbolic of a wall, much like
the "Iron Curtain" in Germany, separating reality from fantasy, social classes. I believe this to be the first
time this person has looked out the window and is clearly observing society because of the deep sorrow
and pity he is expressing towards the "housemaids" with "damp souls". The poem is empirical.
Immediately, we know that the speaker has excluded himself from the first line saying "They", meaning
the majority. ...read more.

Middle

"Damp souls" is an extremely negative phrase, clearly saying that these people are deeply unhappy. An
example of the working class, is used, "housemaids". The person whom is looking out of the window is
expressing deep sorrow and pity for these "housemaids" with "damp souls" In line four, the poet uses a
verb, "sprouting", the word sprouting gives me the an image of housemaids appearing out of nowhere .
The word "despondently" clearly evokes to the reader that these people are immensely depressed with
their life and the feeling of being trapped in their situations, seeing no escape from their repetitive and
unfulfilling lifestyles. This stanza has dramatic powerful imagery of melancholic people appearing on the
street preparing for another miserable and lifeless day. At the start of the second stanza, Eliot says,
"brown waves", giving a sense of unhygienic and polluted air, because we associate the colour "brown"
as a dirty, dull colour. "Fog" is symbolic of confusion; Eliot has personified the "fog" by using the verb
"toss", therefore giving it human-like qualities and actions. ...read more.

Conclusion
The "aimless smile" then "hovers in the air" and "vanishes along the level of the roofs", meaning the
smile is exposed to the society and then reaches above the roof tops and disappears into nothingness.
There is alliteration in the poem, "breakfast" and "basements", "am" and "aware", "souls" and
"sprouting". Eliot uses many poetic devices in this poem, the connotations of the morning and the
basement, onomatopoeia is used when referring to the "rattling", Eliot has also used a metaphor of the
working classes, the "housemaids". Also using symbolic words, such as "fog" and the "window". The
alliteration is used to help the rhythm flow when real aloud. I like the poem because Eliot is not
criticizing society; he is just merely observing society. I sense a revolutionary aura in the poem. Although
Eliot has not given a solution for these people in his poem, he has attempted the first step to any
solution, he has observed society. Eliot has produced a successful poem effectively using poetry devices;
creating thoughts, feelings and numerous word paintings

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window.html

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