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Showing posts with label Aspects of Narrative. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aspects of Narrative. Show all posts

Sunday, December 29, 2013

The Kite Runner: Sample Essay on Character Analysis


Character Analysis: Rahim Khan

In The Kite Runner, Rahim Khan is the moral centre and guiding light throughout. He is the voice of reason, someone who stands out in the entire novel for his undying loyalty and honesty to Baba and his family.

We get our first glimpse of Rahim Khan when he calls Amir in Chapter One and says, “There is a way to be good again.” This gently hints at what is to happen ahead in the story, yet not giving everything away, supplying the reader with adequate suspense at the start of the novel itself. He is a man who has stood up for the right cause and is portrayed as a no-nonsense man. There also is a fatherly-aura about him, the main reason why Amir is attached to him more than his own father.

Between Rahim Khan and Amir, the former literally fills in as a second parent to the latter. When Baba ignores or fails to understand Amir, Rahim Khan is right behind with an understanding word or encouragement, so as to keep the child going. We can see this clearly when Hosseini writes, “As always, it was Rahim Khan who rescued me.”

Rahim Khan was always the one to try and bring literature to Amir’s interest, something which Amir takes up as a hobby, and eventually ends up to be his passion. Also, Amir lands up learning more about his dead mother from Khan, rather than his own father. We could also attribute the understanding of Amir’s sense of religion and ethnicity to Rahim Khan’s casual story-telling, where he drops small hints of his own dislike towards racial discrimination in Afghanistan. He once tells Amir a story of how he had fallen in love with a Hazara woman, and his family reacted strongly, even threatening him with death lest he should marry her. This fact shows that Rahim Khan had a just mind and that he looked upon Hazaras as complete equals. It complements Amir’s feelings towards Hassan, and that someone he admires shares the same views.

Rahim Khan’s character certainly does not pop up much in the middle of the story, but we feel he is present due to Amir’s rare reminiscences. Such memories keep him going in the tough life of America. Even though Rahim Khan is not related to Baba by blood, there is a certain level of comfort and understanding that they both share, and the absence of this very companion in America reflects on Baba, where for the first time in the novel, we see him place his son Amir in control of all affairs and himself takes a backseat.

Towards the end of the book, we see Rahim Khan feature in one of the most important scenes in the entire novel. He calls Amir to Pakistan, revealing very little through the telephone, yet too much. His few words are enough for Amir to understand that the time for him to confess his sins had come at last. The events of this scene largely recount what happened after Amir and Baba left Pakistan for America. Several elements like the pain of guilt, racial prejudice, striving loyalty, discord between a father-son relationship and closely-kept secrets are revealed, throwing the reader into a completely unpredicted situation.

Rahim Khan lives up to his character in this last scene of his, where he bares all to Amir and confesses that Hassan is his half-brother and that he knew of all that happened in the alley. He emotionally reveals how tough it had been for him and Amir’s dead father to keep the secret hidden away, almost lock it in a cupboard forever and throw the keys away. He admits he is ashamed, and we see how hard it is for Rahim Khan to break Baba’s trust and loyalty for one last time in his life. He is literally ready to sacrifice everything for the sake of Hassan’s son, and to prove to Amir how strong the bond of blood can be. His one last request brings out his true character and we see what a wonderful person Hosseini has brought into the novel.

Although Rahim Khan is not a character who is present throughout the story, he is one who binds everything together when the reader needs it most. He is the person who finally reveals what brotherhood really means and conveys the basic theme of love and forgiveness in the story. Even though his role in the novel is small, it remains incomplete without him.

The Kite Runner: Sample Essay


How does Hosseini tell the story in Chapter 17?

The whole of Chapter 17 is narrated by the protagonist of the story, Amir. We see that he has travelled all the way from America to meet his old friend, Rahim Khan at his current residence in Pakistan. Rahim Khan has aged and the fact that his posture seems uncomfortable for him shows the kind of physical pain he is going through. The conversation between Rahim Khan and Amir takes place in the evening, and it has been specified that “the sun was beginning to set, glittering red through the cracks of the ramshackle buildings.”It can be interpreted that the setting of the sun implies the end of a major burden in Amir’s life or how Afghanistan as a country has turned to ruins or has “cracked” at the mercy of the Taliban.

Amir again goes into flashback mode, and thinks of what he had done and what was under his control in the winter of 1975. As Rahim Khan speaks, Amir almost relives his childhood as he remembers all the people who once meant the world to him. He hears names of people he himself hasn’t uttered for years together – Hosseini says, “Time can be a greedy thing.”  Immediately, we see the regret in Amir’s eyes and how he repents the many things he could have done when he had the time, but alas, it is too late.

It is soon understood that Rahim Khan has called Amir to speak about Hassan. When he hands Amir the envelope, there is a certain desperation with which he tears it opens and stares at its contents for a whole minute. It goes to show how much Hassan means to Amir, even though he may not display his affection for him – infact, there are times when he behaves like Hassan does not exist.

Suddenly, the entire narration shifts to Hassan as Hosseini cleverly introduces a letter handwritten in Farsi. The childlike handwriting conveys the innocence filled in Hassan and how he truly is the epitome of lifelong friendship and endows forgiveness upon Amir. The Afghanistan we see through Hassan’s eyes is horrifying and crude. The letter reads, “Always the killings.” This one sentence makes the reader reflect how brave Hassan is, to have kept watch over Baba’s palatial house in the absence of Rahim Khan, when he knows the Taliban could punish him over charges of trespassing. This makes Amir look cowardly and insecure; Baba’s foreshadowing is true, that Amir has never stood up for himself, and perhaps he never will. Hassan describes his dutiful son and the health of Rahim Khan to Amir in a way that makes one feel that absolutely no time has passed since they last met. There seems to be a magical connection between Amir and Hassan, almost like brotherhood. In short, Hassan has pumped into the letter all the years of vacuum that Amir has spent in the US. At the end, Hassan says he expects Amir to visit Kabul one day – this goes to show how the theme of hope is so prevalent in the entire story, and how much depth it gives to the Amir-Hassan relationship.

The narration shifts back to Amir once the letter ends, and we see that Amir enquires about Hassan and his family. Rahim Khan says that the Taliban accused Hassan and his family to be trespassers in Baba’s house and that “he was a liar and a thief like all other Hazaras.” This one line brings back to us the rigidity that lay in the Afghani caste system and how nothing, be it wars or mayhem could change the one fact that Hazaras were an inferior caste, the irony being that Hazaras were in actuality much more courageous in comparison to Pashtuns, like Amir. Unabashedly Rahim Khan gets to the point and amidst Amir’s cries, announces that Hassan is dead. This completely unexpected twist in the story opens new arenas and dips the novel as a whole into uncertainty. Khan goes on to add how they killed Hassan’s wife Soraya on the claim of ‘self-defence’.

Later the topic of Sohrab pops up and we see how he is being cared for in an orphanage in Karteh-Seh. Rahim Khan requests Amir to go rescue Sohrab from the orphanage and bring him to a old American pair living in Peshawar, stating they had clean accommodation and that he didn’t want Sohrab to turn into just another Afghani orphan. The fact that Amir believes this to be impossible shows how his nature of selfishness has not changed and the insecurity of leaving behind his great life and budding career in the US is a sharp contrast to the late Hassan.

Amir touches a nerve when he says he is ready to pay for someone to go bring Sohrab safely to Peshawar. The instinctive man Khan is, he exclaims how material benefits have never been his interest and how it is essential that only Amir do the deed. “What I’m asking from you is to grant an old man his dying wish.” The line speaks volumes of how Rahim Khan has fought for people’s rights and the ‘right cause’ – and even death cannot stop him.

It is apparent Rahim Khan is literally pleading Amir to go save Sohrab from treacherous Afghanistan. The fact that being the writer in the room, Amir is speechless shows the fear gripped inside and his being unsure as to whether he will be able to pull off this one task.

In an attempt to convince Amir to take up this challenge, Rahim Khan bares all; Ali’s sterility and Baba’s past come thrashing down at Amir. A completely unprecedented twist and fact is brought up to the forefront. It all comes tumbling back, the realisation of how Baba had wanted Hassan’s harelip operated upon, the constant feeling of Hassan’s absence back in the US and last of all, the shame at what he had done in the winter of 1975 – he hadn’t betrayed just another Hazara boy: he had betrayed his half-brother.

Naturally, Amir’s blood boils at the fact that none of the people who knew of this secret had revealed to Hassan his true identity. Physically, Hassan died a miserable Hazara’s death, while psychologically Amir is dying the death of an ashamed brother and betrayer.

Clearly, society has played an important role in these characters lives. Hassan is denied his true identity out of fear of what others would say and the consequences have been irrepressible. Baba has actually committed the biggest sin in his own eyes – the sin of theft.

Now that the cat is out of the bag and Amir is in complete disbelief as to his life being “one big lie”, the reader wonders whether Amir will take up Rahim Khan’s challenge with a vengeance, considering Sohrab isn’t just a Hazara servant’s son; he is his own nephew.

 

The Kite Runner: Sample Essay

What is the significance of structure in 'The Kite Runner'?


‘The Kite Runner’ is a novel which stands out for its uniqueness in structure and the variation with which it uses events and other happenings to keep the reader interested until the very end. The structure follows a conventional scheme with exception of a few instances where there are time-shifts and the use of letters makes us feel we have gone back in time.

Hosseini has used a chronological time-scheme throughout the book, and jumps time only in highly significant parts of the novel. The first chapter is set in December 2001, which is the ‘present’ throughout the story. It ends at the same time, somewhere around December 2001 – this is what makes the structure of narrative in ‘The Kite Runner’ quite unusual. We then go back in time and learn of Amir, the narrator’s past and how he spent his childhood back in Kabul, Afghanistan.

As the story progresses, we reach the first dramatic climax of Hassan’s rape. For quite some time, the story concentrates on the hardships Amir and Hassan go through after that period. Later, the narrative drifts away from Afghanistan and shifts to America, where Baba and Amir gain political asylum – Ali and Hassan leave the house much earlier out of misunderstanding between Hassan and Amir. Momentarily, the plot seems to revolve around a young man’s hardship in a new land, and vaguely comes across as an immigrant story.

Much later, a call from Rahim Khan, Baba’s best friend, changes the entire plot. He requests Amir to go see him in Pakistan, as a dying man’s plea. After this, the pace picks up to such a rate that the novel almost turns into a thriller and the dramatic events do not disappoint the reader. Amir gets a chance to make up for his ‘unatoned sins’ – as Rahim Khan says, “There is a way to be good again.” The moral issues that had earlier taken a setback come back in double measure, and it is gratifying to see Amir fight the battle for redemption.

Small events such as Baba’s love for Amir and Hassan can be seen again in the form of Amir’s love for Sohrab. Hosseini has consciously crafted these events so as to make the story satisfying as a whole. Similarly, we see Hassan’s threat of turning Assef one-eyed come true when Sohrab instinctively aims for Assef’s eye with his slingshot; it almost is prophetic. The recurrence of the hare-lip; first in Hassan and then in Amir brings out the theme of suffering. ‘Smiling’ also has a large significance in this story – Hassan’s smile always conveyed joy and faith, and we see his son Sohrab smiling at the end of the story, hinting to the reader that everything after that turned out to be eventful.

Overall, the structure in ‘The Kite Runner’ has proved to be an extremely vital part of the book. Hosseini has used this to his advantage so as to make the plot more interesting and to give it the required depth at relevant points in the novel. All of this adds up to make one of the classics of its time.

 

The Great Gatsby: Sample Essay

I have been receiving requests to upload sample essays for 'The Great Gatsby' and 'The Kite Runner', so I decided to look through the remainder of my notes in the hope that I find something. Interestingly enough, I found a few essays that I hope will be helpful to you!

These are just for guidance, so please do double-check for yourself before you use these in your exam answers! These were written long ago, and I don't want to mislead anyone in case some of the information or references/quotes are wrong! :)


How does Fitzgerald tell the story in Chapter 2 of The Great Gatsby?

Fitzgerald has used a whole host of techniques have been used in the narrative of Chapter 2, such as symbolism, use of metaphors, the theme of difference in society and the introduction of new characters to the story. Also, the chapter explores the adept way in which Nick, the narrator goes about explaining Tom Buchanan and his physically driven behaviour, and how this affects his mistress at the end of the chapter.

Fitzgerald uses various metaphors at the very start of the chapter to portray the narrator’s mood and emotions at the time, such as ‘grey land’, ‘bleak dust’, ‘dimmed’, ‘paintless days’, ‘small foul river’ and ‘dismal scene’. Fitzgerald possibly uses this to reflect Nick’s mood in having to have lunch with Tom Buchanan. It portrays to the reader his dislike towards this character, or even indicating to the reader the unwanted meeting with Tom’s mistress, Myrtle Wilson. Fitzgerald perhaps uses this to interest the reader into questioning the reference to the weather and the setting at the start of the chapter in relation to Nick’s emotions and asks why does Nick feel so ‘grey’, ‘bleak’ and just generally pessimistic and negative towards this event as an introduction to Chapter 2, giving indication to the reader of the plot further on in the chapter.

Fitzgerald has once again attributed much importance to the difference in society in this chapter. The ‘Valley of Ashes’ comes across as a poor American settlement, sandwiched between New York and the two Eggs. Nick goes on to say, “Ashes take the form of houses and chimneys and rising smoke,” – this gives a picture of the real America to the reader. The pathetic state of George Wilson’s garage and his appearance convey the poverty in which the inhabitants of the Valley of Ashes lived in. Also, poor though they may be, their aspirations and desires are no less than that of an East or West Egger; given a chance, they can enjoy the life the rich are exposed to, as we see with Mrs Wilson. Her desperation to “fit in” and be one of the elite crowd reflects upon her actual life back in the garage.

Symbolism plays a major part in Chapter 2 of the story. The character of Doctor T.J. Eckleburg has been used by Fitzgerald as a medium to induce the feeling of being “watched upon” – almost as an authoritative person would do. “The eyes of Doctor T.J. Eckleburg are blue and gigantic; their retinas are one yard high. They look out of no face, but, instead, from a pair of enormous yellow spectacles which pass over a non-existent nose.” His presence may not seem obvious at first, but he plays an extremely important role – he symbolises God, who is always looking upon his mortals and what they were doing.

Another matter of significance is how Fitzgerald tells the event of Tom Buchanan hitting Myrtle. It generates shock and surprise to the reader, as such behaviour from men is considering completely inacceptable on any occasion, let alone at a well-attended party. Nick narrates, ‘Making a short deft movement, Tom Buchanan broke her nose with his open hand.’ The sentence structure is short and more like a statement rather than a long explanative description. This adds effect to the narrative, as the length of the sentence matches the sudden and unprecedented impact it has on Myrtle. Fitzgerald manipulates the surprising action by making impact on the sharpness of the short description of this, contrasting to Fitzgerald’s other descriptions to events and settings which he tells to the reader in great amounts of detail with poetic and romantic language rather than this quite simple sentence, in order to contribute in creating a great impact of horror felt by the reader of this event.

A different technique the author uses to tell the story in this chapter is that Fitzgerald matches the events with the narration. With increase in the number of drinks Nick helps himself to; his narration ceases to make sense and turns confusing in his drunken stupor. ‘I was standing beside his bed and he was sitting up between the sheets clad in his underwear, with a great portfolio in his hands. ‘Beauty and the Beast...Loneliness...Old Grocery Horse...Brook ’n Bridge...’ Then I was lying half asleep in the cold lower level of the Pennsylvania Station, staring at the morning Tribune, and waiting for the four o’clock train’ this description is quite a unique way of narrating the story, it adds to the realism of Fitzgerald’s writing and Nick’s capability of reliable narration. The reader can clearly imagine Nick’s night in their head with the sleek and thought out technique of writing.

Saturday, June 2, 2012

Aspects of Narrative in The Great Gatsby


THE GREAT GATSBY – F. Scott Fitzgerald



Setting:

The Great Gatsby suggests rather than develops the era of the twenties, it does evoke a haunting mood of a glamorous, wild time that seemingly will never come again. The loss of an ideal, the disillusionment that comes with the failure to compromise, the efforts of runaway prosperity and wild parties, the fear of the intangibility of that moment, the built-in resentment against the new immigration, the fear of a new radical element, the latent racism behind half-baked historical theories, the effect of Prohibition, the rise of a powerful underworld, the effect of the automobile and professional sports on post-war America – these and a dozen equally important events became the subject of The Great Gatsby, a novel that evokes both the romance and the sadness of that strange and fascinating era we call the twenties.

The Great Gatsby is a novel that is set against the ending of the war. Both Nick and Gatsby have participated in the war, although like much of the historical background in the novel, these events are more implied than developed. When Nick first meets Gatsby, Gatsby asks, “Your face is familiar... Weren’t you in the Third Division during the war?” Nick tells him, “Yes... The ninth machine-gun battalion,” to which Gatsby responds, “I was in the Seventh Infantry until June nineteen eighteen.”

Imagery:

Fitzgerald has described events such as European immigrants bringing with them socialist ideas, or the growing resentment of “foreigners” among Americans in The Great Gatsby. He speaks of the streets of New York filling up with people with “the tragic eyes and short upper lips of South-Eastern Europe,” an illusion that gets picked up with Meyer Wolfsheim and his “gonnegtions”.  Fitzgerald also described blacks coming from the South to cities like Chicago and New York. As Gatsby and Nick enter the city over the Queensboro Bridge, they see a panorama of ethnic faces outlined against the skyline of the new city, itself one of the unstated forces at work in the novel. The Tom Buchanans control the legal institutions of this city, and the Meyer Wolfsheims control the underworld.

Imagery and Foreshadowing:



-          The owl-eyed man steps from a car “violently shorn of one wheel” – next chapter, we find out that Tom Buchanan was involved in an automobile accident outside of Santa Barbara where he “ripped a front wheel off his car.” – Myrtle Wilson killed by an automobile

-          Rain falls on the reunion of Daisy and Gatsby – Rain falls on Gatsby’s funeral

-          Daisy and Jordan sit on a couch that seems to float to the ceiling – in Chapter 7 they sit on the same couch oppressed of the heat, as if the airiness of their being has finally come down to earth

-          The carnival gaiety of Gatsby’s parties disintegrates under Daisy’s disapproving eye

-          The city that Nick sees in its “wild promise of all the mystery and the beauty in the world,” gives way to the reality of death in chapter 4 where, “A dead man passed us in a hearse heaped with blooms.”

-          The copy of Clay’s “Economics” that Gatsby reads while waiting for Daisy is apt for a woman whose voice is “full of money”

-          The “out-of-date timetable” that Nick uses to write down the names of Gatsby’s guests proves the obsolescence of Gatsby’s dream

-          The words that Myrtle speaks when she first meets Tom, “You can’t live forever, you can’t live forever,” reverberate with irony

Themes:

A thematic subcurrent of The Great Gatsby involves a sense of a new, urban public manipulated by power brokers, and Nick’s sudden awareness that a World Series can be fixed gives him insight into the corruptibility of this vast world.

Fitzgerald was working within terms of several broad themes in this novel. One involves the theme of America, the initial sense of promise of the New World as it was played out by the Frontier and transformed by the new megalopolis. A second involves the theme of love and romance, embodied in Daisy Fay and played out and transformed in her five years of marriage with Tom Buchanan. A third, of course, involves Gatsby himself, his internalising these themes - first, by modelling himself on Dan Cody and second, by making his reunion with Daisy inseparable from the idea of self.

When one lost the sense of life or promise, which Fitzgerald characteristically predicated on youth – then life lost its sense of wonder, its splendour, and its romantic promise. To desire was, ironically, more important than to have. The man who had great wealth, Tom Buchanan, or the man who was beaten by life, George Wilson, lacked the intensity of experience of a Gatsby who was a “son of God” and who “sprang from the Platonic conception of himself,” as the novel tells us. To lose the romantic conception of oneself is to move to hellish world, which in the novel is embodied by the valley of ashes and incarnated by George Wilson, who appropriately becomes the agent of Gatsby’s death when Gatsby loses his sense of wonder and “romantic readiness”, when his world becomes “material without being real” and a rose becomes “grotesque.”

Theme of Lost Past:

-          Over wound clock

-          Declining seasons of the year: Novel begins in late spring and ends in late autumn

                                                     

Theme of romantic exhaustion and lost promises:

-          Intensified by ash heaps and dust imagery

-          “Mingled her dark thick blood with the dust” – language infuses both religious and romantic meaning.

-          Tom’s remark, Gatsby “threw dust into your eyes,” not only picks up the dust/ashes imagery but connects it with the theory of seeing/misseeing.

-          The custodian of the Valley of Ashes, an “ashen and fantastic figure,” George Wilson murders the green dreamer, Gatsby is ironic

-          Violence of Myrtle’s death is attached to the many references to bad driving and moral carelessness

-          ‘Green light’ at the dock suggests Gatsby’s fertile dreams and money



Absence of God:

-          Except for Gatsby’s godlike sense of the potentiality of self, God has withdrawn from this world and is replaced by the commercial billboard with the blind eyes of T.J. Eckleburg, and embodied by the equally blind eyes of the owl-eyed man who appears at Gatsby’s party and reappears at his funeral, bridging the connection between the two, just as the end product of Gatsby’s parties are embodied in the orange pulps and lemon rinds and by that other symbol of romantic waste and emotional exhaustion – the valley of ashes. This is a blind world because there is no source of moral vision.

Symbolism:

Gatsby and Moon Symbolism:

-          The ‘moon’ that bathes Gatsby’s house at the start of the novel

-          Same moon shines on Gatsby when he waves goodbye at the party

-          Stands vigil at Daisy’s house after the fatal accident

Gatsby and God Symbolism:

-          “She blossomed for him like a flower and the incarnation was complete.” Note the word ‘incarnation’.

-          Called a “son of God.”





Structure of the Novel:



Both structurally and chronologically, The Great Gatsby builds towards Chapter 5, the scene in which Gatsby again meets Daisy after their long separation. In a nine-chapter novel, this is the exact halfway point; the first four chapters build toward this moment, while the last four chapters lead away from it.

Chapter 5 is the static centre of the novel. Here, past and present fuse; the dream comes as close to “incarnation” as it is possible for it to come. Fitzgerald infuses this section with time images and references.



Jay Gatsby:

What Fitzgerald did in The Great Gatsby was to raise his central character to a mythic level, to reveal a man whose intensity of dream partook a state of mind that embodied America itself. Gatsby is the last of the romantic heroes, whose energy and sense of commitment take him in search of his personal grail.

Gatsby brought his Western intensity East and found a “frontier” equivalent in the New York underworld, the world of professional gamblers, bootleggers, financial schemers and a new breed of exploiters that the East bred differently from the West. Such a man will stand out in “respectable” company because he will lack social credentials.

The romantic intensity that the pioneers brought to a new world, Gatsby now brings to a beautiful, but also rather superficial, self-involved, self-protecting, morally empty young woman. The power of this novel ultimately comes from the structured relationships between these narrative elements. We have two kinds of seeing in this novel: a visionary whose vision has been emptied and a moral observer who is initially unsympathetic to what he sees in the visionary. “Gatsby... represented everything for which I have an unaffected scorn,” but who is eventually won over by what is compelling and poignant in Gatsby’s story. Nick comes to see that Gatsby’s fate cannot be separated from his own or from the destiny of America.

Gatsby’s Father Figure – Meyer Wolfsheim:

Meyer Wolfsheim becomes Gatsby’s second father figure and introduces him to the New York underworld. It is thus with money that comes from bootlegging, gambling and bucket shops that Gatsby makes the fortune that allows him to buy his mansion on West Egg. When Nick confronts Wolfsheim after Gatsby’s death, he asks him if he had started Gatsby in business. “Start him! I made him!” “I raised him out of nothing, right out of the gutter.”

To Gatsby, money is money, and he never understands the difference between East Egg or West Egg. That is why Daisy is “appalled by West Egg.”

Gatsby - “Son of God”:



In one of the biographical recollections that Nick Carraway gives, he tells us that Gatsby “was a son of God” and that “he must be about His Father’s business.” The “Father’s business” turns out to be the pursuit of a vast, vulgar, and meretricious beauty.” Gatsby’s resolve comes at the moment he invents himself – “so he invented just the sort of Jay Gatsby that a seventeen year old boy would be likely to invent.” – And this moment comes simultaneously with Gatsby’s meeting Dan Cody. Once this equation is in place, Dan Cody takes on godlike proportions, and his business – the exploitation of America – becomes Gatsby’s business as well, even to the extent that Gatsby creates the kind of self necessary for such a pursuit.

Wilson goes out and kills the wrong man. Not only is God blind, but Wilson, his agent, is blind as well, and Wilson becomes an incarnate inversion of Gatsby. Pale of face, with yellow strawlike hair, he seems to leave a trail of ashes behind him, a possibility of death, the death of a godlike vision.



George Wilson:

The function of the exhausted apostles is taken over by George Wilson, who also sits in front of his garage – between the railroad and the road, watching the traffic go by. He is described as “one of those worn-out men” who “sat on a chair in the doorway and stared at the people and the cars that passed along the road.” Wilson and his wife live in “a small block of yellow brick,” surrounded by a “waste land” which locates them among the middle class. Their failed sense of wonder and disbelief in God makes their world an equivalent of hell, which is like the “impenetrable cloud” of dust that is prevalent in the Valley of Ashes.