Chapter 8 Wasted land war When young people were involved in the fight, the weapons of youth seriously damaged the creepy embarrassment. Then the sword was blocked and the spear was struck aside and the way the skull, thorns and limbs blocked them in the first wave of crazy monsters jumped into the air with fresh sand and bone burst. Soon more, more bodies began to challenge them, and their eyes were shining from angry anger with intense fight. But within a few seconds they were separated from the body part by ribs and destroyed by the young partner 's weapons.
T. S. Elliott's T.S. Wilderness Elliott's most famous poem "The Waste Land", the desolated scene of the London civilization after the war. Residents of the wasted land of Elliot live in a society of moral bankruptcy and spiritual loss. Through a decent story, Elliott recalls the story of lost love, disarray of desire, abandonment of spirituality, waste pilgrimage and "life that died". Why they think that they want to do it though they do not stop thinking about what they want, but they may not be what they want.
In the years after World War I, the United States has transformed into a post apocalyptic environment often called "wasteland". World War I and the subsequent tragedy of the nuclear power dramatically reduced the country and caused a wide range of property failures due to negligence. In addition, almost all food and water are exposed, and most life forms are mutated due to high level radiation and mutagenicity from different sources. Despite massive damage, some areas are lucky to survive, relatively unscratched, there are unirradiated water, animals and plants. However, these fields are very rare. Most of the country's infrastructure is ruined, so there are few basic necessities. Barter is a common replacement method, caps provide a more traditional form of currency. Small temporary communities are dispersed around the wilderness because most towns are vacant, looted or abandoned.
& Lt; Tab / & gt; This T. S. written in the 1920's. Eliot's poetry depicts the modern world as a wasteland after the First World War. Literally, "wasteland" is a French battlefield, French army and British army fought with Germans and became a muddy tomb. Frankly, Elliott caught a clear emotional and spiritual despair in Europe, but it was strengthened by the deaths associated with World War I. For many people it is unbelievable that the Merciful God will allow such a massacre, and more and more Europeans are beginning to lose faith in Christianity. In addition to this spiritual crisis, many European lifestyles and relationships are also penetrated by meaninglessness and alienation. In the inscription of "wasteland" Elliott is lucky to be Sybil, eternity but shows his pessimism about contemporary culture by quoting a sacred woman cursed by the elderly. & LT; tag / & gt;