Most poems about time protest that it passes too quickly (e.g., “To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time” by Robert Herrick), but Prufrock’s problem is that he appears to have plenty of time (in an empty life, there is nothing to do). The result is that he keeps putting things off until later. In Section four Prufrock obsesses about how to present himself to the woman he feels attracted to (loves?) and how to “drop” the question. The Section suggests that he is never going to get round to it. Explain how it does this.