The Hollow Men by T. S. Elliot again presses the seclusion people feel in the world. The poem begins with the statement “We are the hollow men” In this world we see people for what we truly are, mere shells of ourselves, a people who have lived past our time, and in this world even though we are all living long after the end of our time, we are not living together; we are trapped within ourselves.
Those who 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
The stuffed men.
In this world we burnt ourselves out through violence and ask those who have passed on not to remember us for the acts we committed but as the shells we are. Its as though we are ashamed of what we have done.
In the second passage we fear death we hide “In a field, Behaving as the wind behaves” avoiding “death’s dream kingdom,” the place we all will go once our damnation is over: true damnation in hell. We seek to push back the clock trying to remain away from “that final meeting In the twilight kingdom”
And yet our damnation persists, we chain ourselves to these shells and hide from death, and find ourselves thinking back to the days of our youth, when we should be realizing the truth: our world is going out in “a whimper” rather than a bang because we no longer communicate. we fear those we have wronged and rather than face the consequences of our actions, which may very well be our own deaths as a coherent whole, we run from each other, as we attempt to run from our fate. In a very every-man-for-himself manner we attempt to hide from death, and in the process alienate our neighbors, making our own hells within ourselves
This fear comes about from a loss of hope in that world, and is the way they face it. The loss of hope leads to a total collapse in societies cheery disposition, leaving it with a world void of happiness, or laughter, or anything except for people locked in there own personal hells because they are to afraid of retribution for the sins they have committed the hope for some form of salvation is gone, and in its wake is only the will to survive.

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3 March 2008 at 5:18 am
meemsies
Morrow, I would like to point out that I also agree that T.S. Eliot tried to explore this loss of hope in that world in which the hollow men walked, but that the damnation that persists also opens a gate through which salvation can be achieved. If damnation is possible, wouldn’t salvation be an option too, even if it were only a glimpse of hope for salvation.. it would still be possible wouldn’t it?
3 March 2008 at 5:35 pm
Ms. Baz
Andrew, your insight here is astute, but are you able to tie a little more of this to the text itself? In other words, draw a brighter connecting line between “The Hollow Men” and your ideas.
Also, proofread–you’ve got some funky caps and punctuation in here.
6 March 2008 at 2:20 am
nicole47
I like how you wrote about the real person and their shell; how we try to avoid consequences for our actions and even pretend they never happened to live longer and make it to heaven. People even avoid the thought of this, which is interesting to point out. I couldn’t come up with nearly this much out of the Hollow Men… great job.
7 March 2008 at 4:19 am
meemsies
AGREED. I already told you that you needed some improving on your punctuation and spelling, but NOOOOOOOOOOO don’t listen to me, LISTEN TO MS. BAZ!!! or not, you know…
10 March 2008 at 4:44 pm
jt105l
Andrew stop with the WE. It is not always about you Morrow. I really don’t know what you are trying to say in this blog. From what I see it looks like all you talk about is the loss of hope. You keep talking about what it says and not really stating your point about what it has to do with your attribute.