The Hollow Men Explained

The Hollow Men
Author:T. S. Eliot
Written:1925
Country:England
Language:English
Publisher:Faber & Faber
Publication Date:1925
Lines:98
Child:yes
Labelstyle:width:23%
Label1:Quote
Data1:This is the way the world endsThis is the way the world endsThis is the way the world endsNot with a bang but a whimper.[1]

"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.[2] It was published two years before Eliot converted to Anglicanism.[3]

Divided into five parts, the poem is 98 lines long. Eliot's New York Times obituary in 1965 identified the final four as "probably the most quoted lines of any 20th-century poet writing in English".[4]

Theme and context

Eliot wrote that he produced the title "The Hollow Men" by combining the titles of the romance The Hollow Land by William Morris with the poem "The Broken Men" by Rudyard Kipling;[5] but it is possible that this is one of Eliot's many constructed allusions. The title could also be theorised to originate from Shakespeare's Julius Caesar or from the character Kurtz in Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness, who is referred to as a "hollow sham" and "hollow at the core". The latter is more likely since Kurtz is mentioned in one of the two epigraphs.

The two epigraphs to the poem, "Mistah Kurtz – he dead" and "A penny for the Old Guy", are allusions to Conrad's character and to Guy Fawkes. In the 1605 Gunpowder Plot, Fawkes attempted to blow up the English Parliament and his straw-man effigy (a 'Guy') is burned each year in the United Kingdom on Guy Fawkes Night (5 November).[6] Certain quotes from the poem such as "headpiece filled with straw" and "in our dry cellar" seem to be references to the Gunpowder Plot.

The Hollow Men follows the otherworldly journey of the spiritually dead. These "hollow men" have the realisation, humility, and acknowledgement of their guilt and their status as broken, lost souls. Their shame is seen in lines like "[...] eyes I dare not meet in dreams [...]" calling themselves "[...] sightless [...]" and that that "[...] [death is] the only hope of empty men [...]". The "hollow men" fail to transform their motions into actions, conception to creation, desire to fulfillment. This awareness of the split between thought and action coupled with their awareness of "death's various kingdoms" and acute diagnosis of their hollowness, makes it hard for them to go forward and break through their spiritual sterility. Eliot invokes imagery from the Inferno, specifically the third and fourth cantos of the Inferno which describes Limbo, the first circle of Hell – showing man in his inability to cross into Hell itself or to even beg redemption, unable to speak with God. He states that the hollow men "[...] grope together and avoid speech, gathered on this beach of the tumid river [...]", and Dante states that at the Gates of Hell, people who did neither good nor evil in their lives have to gather quietly by a river where Charon cannot ferry them across.[7] This is the punishment for those in Limbo according to Dante, people who "[...] lived without infamy or praise [...]" They did not put any good or evil into the world, making them out to be 'hollow' people who can only watch others move on into the afterlife. Eliot reprises this moment in his poem as the hollow men watch "[...] those who have crossed with direct eyes, to death's other kingdom [...]". Eliot describes how they wish to be seen "[...] not as lost/Violent souls, but only/As the hollow men/The stuffed men [...]".

As the poem enters section five, there is a complete breakdown of language. The Lord's Prayer and what appears to be a lyric change of "Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush" are written until this devolution of style ends with the final stanza, maybe the most quoted of Eliot's poetry:

When asked in 1958 if he would write these lines again, Eliot said he would not. According to Henry Hewes: "One reason is that while the association of the H-bomb is irrelevant to it, it would today come to everyone's mind. Another is that he is not sure the world will end with either. People whose houses were bombed have told him they don't remember hearing anything."[8]

Publication information

The poem was first published as now known on 23 November 1925, in Eliot's Poems: 1909–1925.[9] Eliot was known to collect poems and fragments of poems to produce new works. This is clear to see in his poems The Hollow Men and "Ash-Wednesday" where he incorporated previously published poems to become sections of a larger work. In the case of The Hollow Men four of the five sections of the poem were previously published:

Influence in culture

The Hollow Men has had a profound effect on the Anglo-American cultural lexicon. An obituary for Eliot stated that the last four lines of the poem are "probably the most quoted lines of any 20th-century poet writing in English."[4] [10]

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See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Eliot, T. S. (1927) [1925]. Poems 1909–1925. London: Faber & Faber, 128.
  2. See, for instance, the work of one of Eliot's editors and major critics, Ronald Schuchard.
  3. Swarbrick, Andrew (1988). Selected Poems of T. S. Eliot. Basingstoke and London: Macmillan, 45.
  4. News: T.S. Eliot, the Poet, is Dead in London at 76. 10 December 2013. The New York Times. 5 January 1965.
  5. Eliot, T. S. Inventions of the March Hare: Poems 1909–1917 (Harcourt, 1997) pp.395 Christopher Ricks, the editor, cited a letter dated 10 January 1935 to the Times Literary Supplement.
  6. Web site: Gunpowder Plot Definition, Summary, & Facts. 2021-03-20. Encyclopedia Britannica. en.
  7. Web site: Dante's Inferno. 2021-03-20. www.gutenberg.org.
  8. 'T. S. Eliot at Seventy, and an Interview with Eliot' in Saturday Review. Henry Hewes. 13 September 1958 in Grant p. 705.
  9. Book: Gallup, Donald Clifford. T. S. Eliot: a bibliography. 1969. London, Faber. Internet Archive. 978-0-571-08928-4.
  10. Book: Murphy, Russell Elliott. Critical companion to T.S. Eliot : a literary reference to his life and work. 2007. Facts On File. New York, NY. 978-0816061839. 257.
  11. News: Dargis. Manohla. 14 November 2007. Southland Tales. The New York Times.
  12. Not With a Bang But a Whimper: The Politics and Culture of Decline (US edition) (2008)
  13. Book: Lawrence, Louise . Children Of The Dust . 2013-01-30 . Penguin Random House Children's UK . 978-1-4464-3078-1 . en.
  14. Web site: MOMA.org. Chris Marker's short film: Owls At Noon, Prelude: The Hollow Men . 2005.
  15. News: Spector. Irwin. On Stage at K.U.. 10 December 2013. Lawrence Journal World. 14 May 1969.
  16. Web site: John Cooper Clarke – .
  17. Web site: Study for Life Kaija Saariaho . 2023-12-18 . www.wisemusicclassical.com . en.
  18. Web site: The Acacia Strain (Ft. Bruce LePage) – Nightman .