Women In The Love Song By Prufrock

1506 Words4 Pages

Although Eliot portrays woman as subjects of physical abuse in the Wasteland, he idealizes women as unattainable to the common man in The Love Song. The disparity between man and woman is so great that the protagonist Prufrock enters a state of mental paralysis. In lines 13-14, “the women come and go / Talking of Michelangelo”. The action of talking about a well-known figure may indicate the educated status of the women, one of the reasons he cannot approach them. The women appear to have a continually moving presence that Eliot is never capable of reaching. The women do not come into contact with Prufrock, let alone serve him. In the final stanza, Eliot compares women to mermaids, the epitome of female perfection. Prufrock admires the woman’s …show more content…

He feels conflicted as he fails to meet the expectations of what it means to be a man: to have power, courage, and strength. Exposing certain accepted gender characteristics allows him to maintain his identity and keep women on the other side of the binary. Throughout the poem, Prufrock feels at odds with his own sex. In lines 15-22, Eliot references a cat, timid creatures who tend to keep to themselves. This metaphor is fitting; Prufrock spends the entire poem lingering outside a room unable to muster the confidence to talk to a girl. He is self-conscious that his “arms and legs are thin”. Eliot even suggests the superiority of women in certain instances. He frequently references hair throughout the poem, a trait associated with masculinity. While Prufrock’s hair disappears as he ages, the women have “arms (downed with light brown hair)” and live in “the white hair of the waves”. Trapped within his own limitations, Prufrock feels powerless in the face of sexual opportunity. As a result, he resorts to tearing up a woman’s body into parts as a means to maintain a sense of what it means to be a

Open Document