Sunday, August 4, 2019
Bishop Orders His Tomb at Saint Praxeds Church and The Love Song of Al
Bishop Orders His Tomb at Saint Praxed's Church and The Love Song of Alfred  J. Prufrock     à     à   The span of time from the Victorian age of  Literature to the Modernism of the 20th century wrought many changes in poetry  style and literary thinking. While both eras contained elements of  self-scrutiny, the various forms and reasoning behind such thinking were vastly  different. The Victorian age, with it's new industrialization of society,  brought to poetry and literature the fictional character, seeing the world from  another's eyes.à   It was also a time in which "Victorian authors and  intellectuals found a way to reassert religious ideas" (Longman, p. 1790).  Society was questioning the ideals of religion, yet people wanted to  believe.     à       à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   In contrast, the 20th century found no such  religious fervor in its literature. "They [writers] saw their times as marked by  accelerating social and technological change" (Longman, p. 2165).à   Modern  writers were skeptics, questioning every aspect of social unity, politics, and  religion. "In the modern period the quest for certainty associated with the  Victorian exploration of values has vanished" (Longman, p. 2167).     à       à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   Yet many elements of literature remained  throughout the changes in historical literature. Dramatic monologue were still  used, as evidenced in Browning's "The Bishop Orders His Tomb at Saint Praxed's  Church" and Eliot's "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock".à   Both contained  this style of dramatic monologue, seeing a worldview through the eyes of a  fictitious character. Browning's poem lies in the voice of a Bishop, giving  instructions for the burial and tomb construction as he lays dieing.à    Eliot's poem, sees the world through Alfred J. Pr...              ...yric in expression" (Longman, p. 1958) while Eliot's poem is "chaotic,  irregular and fragmentary" (Longman. p. 2416).à   Both poems deal with  loneliness, isolation and internal alienation, yet Browning's Bishop seems to be  isolated from without, from the world, and Eliot's Prufrock is isolated from  within, creating his own alienation from the world. These concepts, while not  new, were carried over time, expressed in both the Victorian era and in the new  Modernism, yet this theme, from these two poems, takes on a completely different  viewpoint relative to the differing ideologies of the era's in which they  represent.     à       Longman citationsà   refer to page numbers of Eng 103 course text, Spring  2001:     Damrosch, David, et al., ed.à   The Longman Anthology of British  Literature:      à  Ã  Ã   Vol. B.à   Compact ed.à   New York: Longman -  Addison Wesley Longman, 2000.                      
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