H.G.Wells' "The Time Machine" features the Eloi and Morlocks .
The Morlocks are Troglodyte-like creatures who live mostly underground .
The cannibalistic beasts in HG Wells' book "The Time Machine" are called Morlocks. They are a species that evolved underground in the distant future and prey on the Eloi, another species that lives above ground.
The time machine
Whew! Talk about missing the point of a good story! H.G. Wells never gave a specific number for the population of the Morlocks in his book "The Time Machine". Who cares anyway? That's sorta like asking the number of Santa's helpers at the North Pole! The number of Morlocks or Enoi really would have no meaning in the book or to the "moral" of the story. The drift of the story was that in the future the human race would devolve into two subspecies roughly based on the notion of an "elite" class and a "working" class, that was a pervasive idea in Victorian society of Wells' time. But if you're so totally anal that you absolutely must have an exact quantity for the number Morlocks, then the number of the Morlocks is exactly equal to the number of the Enoi!
Morlocks have dull gray skin and red eyes. They are smaller and weaker than humans.
morlocks
The Time Machine By H.G.Wells
Eloi and Morlocks appear in H.G. Wells' novel "The Time Machine." The Eloi are a peaceful, childlike people who live above ground, while the Morlocks are underground-dwelling, subterranean creatures who prey on the Eloi. The novel explores themes of class division and evolution.
they meet.
The Time Traveller initially assumes that the Eloi, who live above ground in luxury, are a higher evolved species and the Morlocks, who live underground, are a primitive working class sub-species. He believes there is a symbiotic relationship between them where the Morlocks provide for the Eloi's needs.
Yes, Weena dies in "The Time Machine" by H.G. Wells. She is killed by the Morlocks, who are the antagonistic race living in the underworld in the year 802,701 where the novel is set. Weena's death serves as a tragic event that highlights the dark and brutal nature of the future society depicted in the book.
A book club is what people are a part of when they read the same book and then later meet to discuss their feelings about it.