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Diction In The Hollow Men

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TS Eliot’s poem, “The Hollow Men,” uses diction and structure to find a lack of purpose in life. A dejected tone in the diction adds to the lack of purpose for life throughout the poem. For example, in the thirteenth stanza, it states, “Of death’s twilight kingdom” (67), which displays a pessimistic outlook on the end of your life. Later in the poem, it repeatedly says, “Falls the Shadow” (78), which exemplifies the darkness that falls upon a life with no purpose. Additionally, the structure of the stanzas adds to the little to no purpose in the narrator's life. Towards the end of the poem, the stanzas would contain at least five lines of morose ideas and the last line revolves around a positive idea that the narrator can not reach. For
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