Hollow Men Poem

PAGES
2
WORDS
711
Cite

¶ … Hollow Men by T.S. Eliot was first published in Poems: 1909-1925 and contains many overlapping themes that were also seen in many of his other works. Moreover, "The Hollow Men" is reflective of the overarching themes that were seen in World War I poetry and may also provide an introspective look into Eliot's emotional and psychological state at the time. In "The Hollow Men," Eliot uses allusions, imagery, and an overall theme of despair and isolation. "The Hollow Men" makes references to at least two outside works or events, Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness and the Gunpowder Plot of 1605. In addition to being referenced in the five parts of Eliot's poem, these two allusions are also referenced in the poem's epigraph as Eliot writes "Mistah Kurtz -- he dead" and "A penny for the Old Guy" (lines-epigraph). In Heart of Darkness, Kurtz realized, upon his deathbed, the extent of humanity's horrific nature a concept that is reflected in "The Hollow Men." Moreover, Eliot's poem appears to depict a more horrific aspect of death as it progresses....

...

For example, the first part of the poem introduces "the hollow men" that are the main topic of the poem. It is not clear if these "hollow men" are alive or dead as the only distinction that is drawn arises when the unnamed, and presumably hollow narrator, states "Those that have crossed/With direct eyes, to death's other Kingdom/Remember us -- if at all -- not as lost/Violent souls, but only as the hollow men" (lines 13-17). The second section appears to define the narrator's expectations of "death's Kingdom" and how it not as he had expected; whereas the narrator expected to encounter "Eyes I dare not meet in dreams/in death's dream kingdom" he instead finds that "the eyes are/Sunlight on a broken column" (lines 19-23).
The second section of "The Hollow Men" uses imagery to describe what the narrator saw and heard while in "death's kingdom," as well as his desire to wear "deliberate disguises" (line 32). In addition to the "sunlight on a broken column," the narrator also sees "a tree swinging" an implication that there is…

Sources Used in Documents:

Works Cited

Eliot, T.S. "The Hollow Men." Web. 6 December 2011.


Cite this Document:

"Hollow Men" (2011, December 06) Retrieved April 23, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/hollow-men-115820

"Hollow Men" 06 December 2011. Web.23 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/hollow-men-115820>

"Hollow Men", 06 December 2011, Accessed.23 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/hollow-men-115820

Related Documents

We see the stone images raised again to indicate soulless worshipping. It is used to highlight the impurity and insincerity of worshippers: At the hour when we are Trembling with tenderness Lips that would kiss Form prayers to broken stone. The fourth section is actually that twilight zone that hollow men dreaded. The fear of meeting the eyes had already been overcome. It is their absence which is disturbing now: As the perpetual star Multifoliate

Legend of Sleepy Hollow
PAGES 4 WORDS 1474

Legend of Sleepy Hollow, by Washington Irving [...] why Sleepy Hollow is such a quaint and yet haunted place. Is Sleepy Hollow the perfect setting for this story? Why? Sleepy Hollow seems far too bucolic to house fantastic legends like the Headless Horseman, and yet, it is such a perfectly serene setting, why wouldn't a ghost want to spend eternity there? The Legend of Sleepy Hollow Sleepy Hollow sounds like the

As the two protagonists battle wits, a subplot becomes evident: choices must be made between the old order and the new order. The sturdy Brom Bones, with his practical, quaint Dutch upbringing, is a cog in a hole (or the whole, that is the village). Brom fits Tarry Town, and his rowdy mischievous nature functions as a pleasant diversion in the quiet little village. Brom represents the virtues of the

Legend of Sleepy Hollow
PAGES 2 WORDS 580

Sleepy Hollow Washington Irving's "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" begins as a lot of stories do from the 1800s. There is a quiet and peaceful small town with a wealthy family and all the activities of the townsfolk surround them. The town, according to the narrator is noted for being calm and serene, that is how the little village got the name Sleepy Hollow. The only thing that upsets this personality

Dead Man's Walk In the stories of the Wild West, there is always a white man in a white hat who serves as the hero of the story. The villain is always the other white man in the black hat. Symbolically, the villain becomes a racial other because of the color of his hat. When a black hat cannot be found, the other villain of a western will be the Native

Good Man Is Hartd to
PAGES 5 WORDS 1970

Both have in their own way gone against the norm. When Babli, embittered by the men in her life, and after losing hope of ever having the man she loves decides to have a baby alone, she breaks her fathers will. For in a traditional Hindu family the girl accepts the match set up by the father, but here, we read how she chooses her mate, loses him and