T.S. Eliot is a great writer and the style he uses sets the mood and tone for the stories. “Death by water” has a lot of pairing, and the words are joined by “and” or “or”, illustrating the waves in the ocean and how they flow up and down. Not only does this pairing set the scene, but all pairs are different or contrary things that mean nothing when it comes to death. In other words, none of it matters in the end. For example, “profit and loss” suggests life and death. Other examples would be “rose and fell”, “age and youth”, “Gentile or Jew”.
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This may be a bit dark, but your revelation has me thinking. Perhaps because Phlebas has been drifting in the ocean for so long, all he now knows is the constant beating pattern of the waves. Because of this, his speech and thought processes now resemble the same waves that killed him.