T. S Eliot Poetry Analysis

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The Contemporary Resonance of T. S. Eliot 's poetry
My critical analysis of T S Eliot’s iconic poetry reveals that its contemporary relevance is mainly a consequence of the hopelessness it embodies. By examining The Love Song of J Alfred Prufrock (1915) and Preludes (1911), I gained an insight into the futility conveyed by Eliot’s exploration of stagnation and industrialization. These ideas, which Eliot explores in his distinctive style, are still relevant within modern-day society and add to the everlasting value of his poetry.
Prufrock’s ongoing appeal is catalysed by Eliot’s unique exploration of emotional paralysis as a conveyor of futility. The poem’s epigraph, from Dante’s Inferno, foreshadows Prufrock’s mental stagnation and suggests …show more content…

In my opinion, although fragmentation is presaged by the poem’s four-part structure, each Prelude augurs the same image – urban degradation. The title of the poem, “Preludes” suggests that this dilapidation provides a vignette for society overall. Eliot utilises imagery such as “grimy scraps of withered leaves” to emphasize the deterioration of the surrounding environment. Academics believe this drabness to be further heightened by the sibilance and imagery of a “soul stretched tight across the skies”, implying how life in the “blackened” city has strained the working-class to near-breaking point. The frailty of humanity is further extended through the portrayal of “an infinitely gentle” thing which “infinitely” suffers. The repetition of “infinitely” within this phrase followed by a simile likening the world to “ancient women gathering fuel in vacant lots” quickly eradicates hope for the salvation of society. Personally, it also conjures a troubling image of an everlasting cycle, suggesting that this societal decay still lingers within modern-day civilization. Hence, despite shifts in time and person, the 4 parts of the poem create a framework of images to connote the same banality and disrepair of society. I believe it is the flow of this idea of stagnation throughout the poem, juxtaposed with the poem’s fragmented structure, …show more content…

While the Romantics dwelled on the beauty of the natural world, Eliot adopted the French Symbolist style to highlight the unpleasant, yet real, aspects of rapid industrialization. Eliot’s zoomorphism of the yellow smog, conflicts with the Romantics’ focus on the natural world. Scholars suggest that, through this comparison, Eliot attributes the stealth and adeptness of a cat to the city smog. Eliot evokes hopelessness through his diction of “lingering” to describe the “yellow fog” as he emphasizes how the pollution created by industrialization is hard to evict. He further dismantles optimistic views towards society by subverting traditional poetic styles to satirize the superficiality of Romanticism. Through the use of simile, Eliot twists the positive image of an “evening spread out against the sky” by comparing it to a “patient etherized upon a table”. I believe that by showing industrialization in this light, Eliot hones the desolate atmosphere of urban life. Furthermore, his frequent use of repetition suggests his adherence to certain poetic norms. However, Eliot’s deliberate alteration of the repeated phrase, for example in “that is not what I meant at all/that is not it at all”, showcases his defiance from traditional styles. Personally, it is this subversion of the Romantic style that allows him to challenge the audience’s perceptions and

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