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- A Farewell To Arms
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-
- (OCTOBER 14, 1929)
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- A Farewell to Arms--Ernest Hemingway. This story of
- Lieutenant Frederic Henry, U.S. ambulance officer on the Italian
- Front, of his campaigns and leaves of absence, of the swarming
- Caparetto retreat, of the Lieutenant's affair with Catharine
- Barkley, and English nurse who died in childbirth when he had
- deserted the wars and taken her to Switzerland, is infused with
- the chaotic sweep of armies and tenderly quiescent love. In its
- sustained, inexorable movement, its throbbing preoccupation with
- flesh and blood and nerves rather than the fanciful fabrics of
- intellect, it fulfills the prophecies that his most excited
- admirers have made about Ernest Hemingway. His mannered style,
- consciously bald, may still be annoying to some, but its pulsing
- innuendo cannot be denied.
-
- In its depiction of War, the novel bears comparison with its
- best predecessors. But it is in the hero's perhaps unethical
- quitting of the battle line to be with the woman whom he has
- gotten with child that it achieves its greatest significance.
- Love is more maligned in literature than any other emotion, by
- romantic distortion on the one hand, by carnal diminution on the
- other. But Author Hemingway knows it at its best to be a blend
- of desire, serenity, and wordless sympathy. His man and woman
- stand incoherently together against a shattered, dissolving
- world.
-
- The boredom and inertia so frequent in Author Hemingway's The
- Sun Also Rises never occur in A Farewell to Arms. He has gone
- to the cause of that weariness--the desolating conflict of
- nations. In that time bravery and rapture were gloriously
- commonplace, scarcely aware of the exhaustion which was to
- follow.
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