The Full Wiki



More info on Portrait of a Lady (poem)

Portrait of a Lady (poem): Wikis

  

Note: Many of our articles have direct quotes from sources you can cite, within the Wikipedia article! This article doesn't yet, but we're working on it! See more info or our list of citable articles.

Encyclopedia

Updated live from Wikipedia, last check: May 23, 2013 10:24 UTC (49 seconds ago)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Portrait of a Lady is a poem by T. S. Eliot, first published in 1915 in Others magazine and then in his 1917 collection of poems, Prufrock and Other Observations.

The poem's title is widely seen to be derived from the novel by Henry James with the same title.[1] The poem employs as an epigraph the famous quotation from the play by Christopher Marlowe, The Jew of Malta, "...but that was in another country, / And besides, the wench is dead."

The poem is one of the two Boston poems written by Eliot, the other being The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock. It gives us an insight into upper class society of the time as something rather empty and forlorn. The main focus of the poem, however, is the speaker, who in his own depiction of this Lady who belongs to this upper class society as soulless and empty, reveals himself as the one who is truly callous and unfeeling.

Like many of Eliot's early poems, Portrait of a Lady shows heavy influence from Jules Laforgue [2]. For example [3] in 'Another Complaint of my Lord Pierrot', Laforgue has the lines:

Finally, if one evening she dies amid my books,
Quiet; feigning not yet to trust my sight
I'd try an 'Oh, that; we'd what it takes, it looks.
Then it was serious, all right?'

While Eliot has the lines:

Well! and what if she should die some afternoon,
Afternoon grey and smoky, evening yellow and rose;
Should die and leave me sitting pen in hand
With the smoke coming down above the housetops;
Doubtful, for a while
Not knowing what to feel or if I understand
Or whether wise or foolish, tardy or too soon...

References

  1. ^ Eliot, it can be noted, was not the only 20th-century poet to borrow James's title. William Carlos Williams also wrote a poem titled "Portrait of a Lady," while Ezra Pound wrote a poem he called "Portrait d'une Femme."
  2. ^ Dale, Peter, Poems of Jules Laforgue. Anvil Press, 1986.
  3. ^ Dale, Peter, Poems of Jules Laforgue. Anvil Press, 1986.







Got something to say? Make a comment.
Your name
Your email address
Message