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Time is undeniably associated with notions of present and past, and it plays
a significant role in 'Rhapsody on a Windy Night', hereafter in this article
referred to as 'Rhapsody'. The modernist interest in time could be argued
to be partially determined by earlier scientific discoveries. The concept of
time itself had been in the throes of change since the sixteenth century.
However the plethora of scientific explorations and discoveries in the
nineteenth century seemed to herald a new age in science. While Eliot was
engaged in writing the Prufrock poems, advances in theoretical physics,
such as Einstein's formulation of the Special Theory of Relativity, were
transforming the understanding of time as a physical measure. However, in
regards to Eliot's own interests in time, it was the French philosopher Henri
Bergson who exerted the most immediate influence.
While he was still residing in America, a young Eliot made extensive visits to
Europe where he attended lectures given by Bergson. The philosopher's
theories on time and his attempts at defining the nature of past, present,
and future manifest themselves in several of the Prufrock poems, especially
'Rhapsody', which is usually regarded as reworking some of Bergson's
ideas; therefore an understanding of them is useful when evaluating Eliot's
own attitudes to the present. Most of Bergson is extremely difficult to
comprehend so it is beneficial to attempt a summary of his ideas before
analysing how they are represented in Eliot's poetry. In his Creative
Evolution (1907) and Matter and Memory (1896) - two works Eliot was
familiar with while composing the Prufrock poems - Bergson set out to
define the nature of time and consciousness as experienced by human
beings. He arrived at an idea he called 'le duree', meaning 'duration', a
metaphysical construct which considers evolution and consciousness to be
underlain by a constant flow of moments that cannot be measured by clock
time. In Creative Evolution, Bergson proposed the notion that an
individual's natural state is change, asserting that all feelings and ideas are
undergoing constant change.
The reader gathers that the protagonist of 'Rhapsody' has little to no control
over this incessant flow of resurfacing memories. Eliot illustrates this
unpredictably of memory in several lines but perhaps most notably in the
bizarre image of 'a madman shakes a dead geranium'. The geraniums
become a symbol for the involuntariness of the poet persona's memory in
the later lines 'The reminiscence comes / Of sunless dry geraniums'.
The street lamps the poet persona encounters play a key role in the poem.
They are personified - a device that contributes to the protagonist's
fragmented and dissociated nature - in the second stanza, with the lines
'The street-lamp sputtered / The street-lamp muttered / The street-lamp
said'. Eliot accomplishes this disjointed effect by having the poet persona's
perceptions depicted as observations from the street-lamps. For example,
in the second stanza the protagonist is instructed by the street lamp to
observe a woman, while in the fourth and fifth stanzas they are directed to
look at a cat, and then the moon, respectively. These urban sightings are
deliberately seedy and depressing: the woman is clearly a prostitute; the
cat is described as slipping out its tongue to devour 'a morsel of rancid
butter' - an act the reader assumes to be a subtle reflection on the
protagonist's own futile existence; while the moon is delineated in the most
unflattering, anti-romantic hue: 'A washed-out smallpox cracks her face'.
These images and those from the protagonist's memory are juxtaposed
with the inexorable march of clock time, illustrated by the stark fact that
most of the stanzas begin by informing the reader of the actual time.