Wells’ description of the Eloi adds to the negative atmosphere that Wells builds up in the novel. The Eloi seem to have no problems whatsoever when we are first introduced to them, but even so, they are described as lazy and fragile creatures, with child-like minds. The use of phrases used to describe the Eloi, such as “indescribably frail” and “lack of intelligence” demonstrates this child-like quality that Wells gives to the Eloi. Furthermore, this presentation of humankind, in a way, criticizes Darwinism, that had been introduced 36 years before the book was published. Darwin believed that humankind would get better and evolve as time progressed, whereas Wells seems to believe in the theory of entropy, which believes that as time progresses humankind will hit its peak, and then regress.
Wells uses the relationship between the Morlocks and the Eloi to create a negative view of the future. In the novel, humankind has been split into two new species, the Eloi and the Morlocks, the Eloi seeming to be the higher of the two. However, as the Time Traveller discovers the Morlocks, he discovers their cannibalistic relationship with the Eloi, and describes it in Chapter Ten: “These Eloi were mere fatted cattle, which the ant-like Morlocks preyed upon, probably saw to the breeding of.” This flips the reader’s perception of the Eloi from higher than the Morlocks, to actually weaker than the Morlocks. These two races seem to be manifestations of humankind that have characteristics which are only harmful. The Eloi represents those who live off human