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Life & Wisdom Quote by Paul Eluard

"Elephants are contagious"

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“Elephants are contagious” lands like a Surrealist prank with a serious aftertaste. Eluard, writing from inside a movement that prized jolting juxtapositions over tidy sense, takes two words that don’t belong together and forces the mind to build a bridge anyway. The shock isn’t just randomness; it’s a technique. “Elephants” carry a lot of symbolic freight: memory, mass, the unignorable presence in the room. “Contagious” turns that mass into a social phenomenon, suggesting that what seems singular and immovable can spread, replicate, jump hosts.

The intent feels less like a zoological claim than a provocation about how ideas and anxieties travel. An “elephant in the room” isn’t merely noticed; it recruits attention, dictates the conversation’s gravity. Eluard’s line implies that once the unspeakable becomes speakable, it multiplies. That’s the subtext: denial is porous. The moment one person acknowledges the huge thing, it becomes harder for others to pretend it isn’t there. In political terms, it’s how dissent catches; in intimate terms, how grief or desire becomes shared weather.

Context matters because Eluard’s life straddled World War I’s psychic wreckage and the approach of another catastrophe, alongside Surrealism’s obsession with the unconscious. Contagion evokes the era’s collective vulnerability: propaganda, panic, mass movements, the way crowds can be infected by conviction. The line works because it refuses the reader an exit into “common sense.” It makes you feel meaning spreading in real time, the sentence itself behaving like its subject: large, odd, and impossible to ignore once it’s in your head.

Quote Details

TopicPoetry
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Elephants are contagious
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About the Author

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Paul Eluard (December 14, 1895 - November 18, 1952) was a Poet from France.

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