Respuesta :

He confesses to the crime of living a life without passion and without risk. Prufrock clearly considers his crimes to be such that he is the useless of the earth.

What is the message in the poem of J. Alfred Prufrock?

  • This one was finished in 1910 or 1911 but wasn't released until 1915.
  • It explores the troubled of the stereotypical modern man—over educated, verbose, neurotic, and emotionally stilted—and examines his overabundance of traits.
  • The poem's speaker, Prufrock, appears to be speaking to a potential partner with whom he hopes to "push the situation to its crisis" by finally getting together.
  • Prufrock, however, is too experienced in life to "dare" to approach the woman: He hears in his head what other people are saying about how inadequate he is, and he berates himself for even "presuming" that emotional engagement could be possible. The poem transitions between a number of physically concrete (for Eliot) locales, including a cityscape (the well-known "patient etherized upon a table").

To learn more about J. Alfred Prufrock, refer to

https://brainly.in/question/3207374

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