Professor sir, we don't want you to explain it that way. Please explain it line by line. Do consider it from competition point of view. Thank you and I hope you will take care.
This guy like most intellectuals or professors who tried to break apart this poem simply do not understand what TS Eliot was talking about if anything 1 couldn't prove this world as it is and it's disgusted with it with the vapid trident people and jokes in a serious but funny manner about the silliness of the chasing after women and the skirts that drill along the floor and so much more it's more people is in a miserable failed guy
Excellent explanation of symbols, outstanding! You forgot the lone sexual reference, the peach, which is a reference to the female labia and vagina... "Do I dare to eat a peach?" I love your explanation of the car and colour yellow...
Come on, use your imagination. I've known the arms already - known them ALL. The mermaids singing. WOMEN come and go. It's about memory of loves won, lost and remembered. It's about longing, lust, desire, images of love and REGRET. Haven't you ever looked at a woman and her image, her mystery, the curves of her body drawn you in, made you quake with longing and appreciation of beauty and a desire to unite flesh and soul? If not, reread this after you have loved and lost.
@@surabhigupta7488 , Prufrock is in love with the girl who lays on the floor with him but he is incapable of eating a peach... "Do I dare to eat a peach?" The peach is a reference to the female labia and vaginal opening. Slice a peach in half, remove pit to see the physical resemblance.