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  1. Analysis (ai): "The Hollow Men" reflects the despair, apathy, and spiritual emptiness of a post-World War I society. Eliot uses imagery of decay and lifelessness to portray the hollow existence of these individuals, who lack purpose, emotion, and connection.

  2. Context. Resources. “The Hollow Men” is a poem by the American modernist poet T.S. Eliot, first published in 1925. Uncanny and dream-like, “The Hollow Men” describes a desolate world, populated by empty, defeated people. Though the speaker describes these people as “dead” and the world they inhabit as the underworld (“death’s ...

  3. "The Hollow Men" (1925) is a poem by the modernist writer T. S. Eliot. Like much of his work, its themes are overlapping and fragmentary, concerned with post–World War I Europe under the Treaty of Versailles, hopelessness, religious conversion, redemption and, some critics argue, his failing marriage with Vivienne Haigh-Wood Eliot.

    • T. S. Eliot
    • 1925
  4. T.S. Eliot. 96. 'The Hollow Men' depicts men in a desolate world, symbolizing their barren existence through imagery of broken columns, glass, and stones. The poem, evoking images of heaven and a shadowy presence, is narrated by a collective speaker.

    • Female
    • October 9, 1995
    • Poetry Analyst And Editor
  5. 2 contributors. ‘The Hollow Men’ is a major poem written by Eliot between The Waste Land in 1922 and his conversion to Christianity in 1927. The ‘Hollow Men’ are trapped in a limbo...

  6. Nov 29, 2021 · The Hollow Men by T. S. Eliot. # A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z NEW. Rate: 3.7 / 3 votes. Get the Mug. The Hollow Men. T. S. Eliot 1888 (St. Louis, Missouri, United States) – 1965 (Kensington) Death. Friendship. Life. Love. Nature. Free verse. I. We are the hollow men. We are the stuffed men. Leaning together.

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  8. Eliot employs two similes in describing the “dried voices” of the men as they “whisper together.” He compares them first to the sound of “wind in dry grass” and then to the sound of “rats’ feet” running “over broken glass” in a “dry cellar.”

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