T. s. eliot begins "the love song of j. alfred prufrock" with a translated quotation from dante’s inferno.if i thought my reply were to someone who could ever return to the world, this flame would waver no more. but since, i’m told, nobody ever escapes from this pit, i’ll tell you without fear of ill fame.what is the best explanation for prefacing the poem with this quotation?

Respuesta :

I am referring to a question that has choice options. The answer would be, in this case, C: "The narrator will tell the story in the poem because he believes that his fate is set and he has nothing to lose."

The narrator will tell the story in the poem because he believes that his fate is set and he has nothing to lose.

Inaction or detachment is the primary subject of the sonnet. All through the sonnet, we find a speaker who has wants and dreams, yet neglects to follow up on them since he considers himself sub-par, shameful and a bombed individual.

The staggering inquiry in The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock  is uncertain. On one level, Prufrock contemplates whether he ought to propose union with his cherished, yet on a more profound level, the inquiry is whether he ought to have placed his everything into his life and craftsmanship.

Prufrock isn't only some stalker. He genuinely accepts his cherished has conveyed him messages that she loves him, yet he is concerned that he may be misjudging her signs. Prufrock can just experience love through others, at second-and third-hand.

Prufrock is a minor departure from the sensational talk, a sort of sonnet well known with Eliot's archetypes. Sensational talks are like speeches in plays. In its emphasis on character and its sensational reasonableness, Prufrock expects Eliot's later, emotional works.

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