Why does weena love the time traveler
Wells unashamedly incorporated gender roles into his novel when he had no need to. And since he did make a point of having a female damsel, why not go so far to depict a fully-fledged romance? The way the content is organized and presented is seamlessly smooth, innovative, and comprehensive. Weena is an Eloi woman whom the Time Traveller saves from drowning. Though he does not expect gratitude or recognition in return for his bravery, Weena surprises and charms the Time Traveller by following him everywhere from then on and adorning him constantly with flowers as a sign of gratitude and affection.
The Time Traveller learns important things from Weena including that fear is, after all, a pervasive feeling among the Eloi , and it is through her companionship that he begins to feel that this strange future is his home. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:. Chapter 5 Quotes. Related Themes: Fear and Kindness. Page Number and Citation : 50 Cite this Quote.
Explanation and Analysis:. Chapter 8 Quotes. Related Themes: Technology and Progress. Page Number and Citation : 74 Cite this Quote. Epilogue Quotes. Page Number and Citation : Cite this Quote. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance. Chapter 5. Her name, he learns, is Weena , and she seems to him childlike but benevolent. He decides that he must be patient, and that it would be a good idea to get to know the creatures better. He learns more of their language and explores the area.
He pays more attention to the wells dotting the landscape, and notes that air seems to be sucked down into them. He can hear the dull sound of machines coming from below. He begins to reconsider his theory that the creatures come from a decadent, automated civilization, for he notices that there are only buildings, and that the clothes of the creatures must be made somewhere.
He also doesn't understand the strange wells, or how his time machine disappeared. Meanwhile, the Time Traveller rescues one of the creatures from drowning in the river, which has shifted a mile or so from the bed of the Thames. Her name is Weena, and she seems like an affectionate, precocious child to him. She greets him when he returns to the area of the white sphinx statue, making it feel like home. Like the other creatures, she is very afraid of the dark.
Her fellow creatures sleep in great clumps in the halls of the buildings, and she is very reluctant to let the narrator sleep elsewhere. One morning, the narrator wakes up at dawn and goes out on the porch of one of the buildings.
He imagines he sees white figures moving around in the dull pre-dawn light. On his fourth morning, he enters an old ruin and finds two big eyes staring back at him. It is a white, ape-like creature. When he arrives, to his surprise, the pedestal is open, and he sees his time machine inside. He smiles, guessing at the Morlocks' plan of action. He walks into the pedestal, and the panels slide shut behind him, just as he had suspected. He confidently begins to strike a match, but realizes he has nothing to strike it against.
The Morlocks pounce, and he desperately struggles onto the saddle of the machine, barely screwing in the forward lever. He pushes it forward, and escapes into the future.
With this chapter Wells finishes his tale of the year AD , Having sketched out the structure of that society and thus implicitly made his political points, he moves on to conclude the adventure story. Fire, which was originally a source of wonder to the Eloi, now becomes a dangerous weapon. It is a weapon that would not be powerful in contemporary times, but which seems like terrible magic in the future.
It is a common feature of time travel stories to allow the hero to escape from troubles with some kind of weapon or skill he brings from his own time. It is exciting; it communicates a certain loyalty to the time of the reader.
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