Wednesday, April 15, 2020

Earnest Hemingway Essays - A Clean, Well-Lighted Place,

Earnest Hemingway In ?A Clean Well-Lighted Place?, Earnest Hemingway focuses on the pain of old age suffered by a man that we meet in a caf? late one night. Through the use of dialogue, Hemingway creates three characters that symbolize the stages of life: birth, living, and death. Additionally, the tone of the story is created in three ways. First, he contrasts light and dark to show the difference between the difference between this man and the young people around him. Secondly, he uses the old man's deafness as an image of his separation from the rest of the world. Lastly, Hemingway uses the image of ?nada? or nothing. Hemingway's tone and choice of language leaves the reader feeling that they too cannot escape from the doldrums of the ?dead? years of their own life. Through the language of dialogue, three characters emerge creating a symbolic illustration of the progression of life. The young waiter states, ? I have confidence, I am all confidence?(258). He displays his eagerness to conquer the world. When we are young, we live for today, for ourselves, without regard for what the future may hold. Tomorrow is a dream; tomorrow is something left to the old. However, in all his confidence he lacks patience and understanding, which can only come with the experience of life. Because of this lack of experience, he is not capable of compassion for the old man ?You have youth confidence and a job? the older waiter replies (258). The older waiter symbolizes the ?living? stage of life. He is filled with despair, but not yet completely devoid of hope. He is uncertain of what the rest of his life may bring, but a modicum of hope still exists. The old waiter has the omniscient view of the three progressions of life. He has lived beyond his ?birth? stage, is teetering in the ?living? stage, and through the unfolding life of the old man, is painfully aware of the future. Is it fear of growing old, the loneliness, or despair, which delivers the old waiter into his dark, unclean world of nothing? His mockery of the ?Our Father? is the cumulative answer to the question. He has lost his own meaning of life. When hope has waned, despair overwhelms and we see the transition from the living to the time of dying. The old man has journeyed through all the progressions of life. The old man's death wish is further played out through the metaphor of insomnia, an ailment that he apparently shares with the older waiter. Along with the development of three characters, Hemingway creates the overall tone of the story by first contrasting between light and dark. The most obvious image is the caf?, ? A Clean, Well-Lighted Place?. It is a refuge from the darkness of the night outside. Darkness is a symbol of fear and loneliness. The light symbolizes comfort and the company of others. There is hopelessness in the dark, while the light calms the nerves. Unfortunately for the old man, the light is an artificial one, and its peace is both temporary and incomplete. the tables were empty except where the old man sat in the shadow of the leaves of the tree that moved slightly in the wind?(256). Possibly, the old man hides in the shadows of the leaves because he recognizes the shortcomings of his refuge. Perhaps he is drawn to the shadows so that the darkness of his own age will not be so visible. Unlike the young waiter who is not frighten by the darkness because of his companion that waits for him in the dark, the old man has lost his wife. Even his ears bring him a sort of darkness as they hold out the sounds of the world. The old man's deafness is also a powerful image that contributes to the tone of the story. ? ?the old man liked to sit late because he was deaf and now at night it was quiet and he could feel the difference?(256). Deafness ostracizes the old man form the rest of the world. In the day, everything must be a reminder to him of his disconnection from the world. In the caf? so late

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