Autobiographical elements in A Farewell to Arms
Introduction
Some, literature
can be satisfactorily read and discussed taking the author into account. Other
literature seems inseparable from the person who created it. To an
extraordinary degree Hemingway and what he has written exist in a synergetic
relationship, reinforcing and fulfilling each other; he has created a personal
legend which serves as an ambience in which we read him.
Autobiographical
Touches
The novel A
Farewell to Arms autobiographical elements. The love-affair between Fredric and
Barkley, the hero’s injury in the battlefield, his despair and frustration, the
hero’s separate peace with life are some of the characteristics of Hemingway’s
life. Hemingway himself had received the injury caused by the mortar-shell at
Fossalta, and he was admitted into the Milan hospital for
recuperation in the late summer and autumn of 1918. He fell in love with the
nurse in the Milan hospital. Carlos Baker has thrown light on this fact. In A Farewell
to Arms Hemingway was dealing imaginatively with his own first adult love
affair which had taken place in Milan at the base hospital during his recuperation there in the late
summer and autumn of 1918.
Harold Lock alludes to it in The Way It Was, New York , 1959,
stating, erroneously that the girl was English. She was in fact Agnes Von
Kurowsky, an American of Polish ancestry working as Red Cross nurse. It was she
who voluntarily ended the association by letter after Hemingway’s return to the
United States early in 1919. I am indebted for materials documenting the episode
to Mr. J. C. Buck. The Portrait of Catherine Barkley appears to have been
influenced by Hemingway’s recollection of his first wife, Hadley Richardson. It
is not only the love affair which is connected with the life of the author. The
frustration, defeation, and despair and disgust with the war were also
experienced by Hemingway when he had fallen a victim to it. He wished to drown
his miseries in fishing in his native land. He was like a wounded animal and
had hallucinations of the war.
There are
similarities between the hero-narrator and the creator. Both of them are
Americans. Both drive ambulances. Both are wounded in the war. When the bomb
fell, “there was a flash as when a blast furnace door is swung open, and a door
that started white and when red.”
Hemingway’s
Love-Affair
Hemingway’s
second experience was a love-affair with an American Red cross nurse in Milan . Her name was
Agnes Von Kurowsky. She was experienced, young, beautiful and energetic.
Hemingway fell in love with her in the hospital. It was his first adult
love-affair. When Hemingway sailed for New York in
January 1919, he planned to get a job in a newspaper, save money, and bring
back his girl to the United
States . But his
plans were smashed. After second thoughts Agnes came to the conclusion that it
would be wrong to live with peace with a war hero. She was also undecided over
the issue whether she should give up her job or not. Her decision came as a
heavy blow to Hemingway. He married, but he could not forget Agnes.
Caporetto
Retreat
The Caporetto
retreat narrated in the novel came of before Hemingway’s joining the Italian
army. Hemingway had read accounts of this retreat in the newspapers. During the
war working as a correspondent in Star Weekly, he could be a witness to the
retreat of the Greek army following the attack by the Turkish forces. This
experience of the retreat, had been incorporated in the novel. In the novel In
Our Time he described the retreat thus:
Minarets struck
up in the rain out of Adrianpole across the mud flats. The carts were jammed
for thirty miles along the Karagatch road. Water buffaloes and cattle were
hauling carts through the mud. There was no end and no beginning. Just carts
loaded with everything they owned. The old men and women, soaked through,
walked along keeping the battle vobbing along through them, Greek cavalry
herded along the profession. The women and children were in the carts, crouched
with mattresses; mirrors, sewing machines, bundles. There was a woman-having a
baby with a young girl holding a blanket over her and crying. Scared sick
looking at it. It rained all through the evacuation.
Changes in the
Novel
In 1928,
Hemingway revised the manuscript of A Farewell to Arms for publication. When he
was in the final chapters, his second wife, Pauline, lay in hospital with
labour pains on June 27, 1928 . Her labour pains
were terminated by Caesarian section on June 28. The new-born child was
healthy. This event forms the climax of the novel. While in the novel the mother,
Catherine Barkley dies along with the child in Caesarian section, in real life
they survive. It is difficult to give reasons behind this change.
Three Elements
Thus three
elements in Hemingway’s life shaped many of his attitudes, and indeed shaped
much of his work; The fact that in World War I, he suffered a painful and
terrible mortar wound; which made him conscious of the dread possibilities of
the loss of manhood; The fact that his father committed suicide; and the fact
of his growing old………and the fears created by old age itself. Similar to Fredric
Henry in ‘A Farewell’, Jake Barnes in The Sun Also Rises and Santiago in The Old
Man and the Sea. Hemingway was afflicted with the fear of letting go and fear
of thinking. The nightmare of chaos, of passively, loss of will, loss of
initiative, loss of masculine role—was a terrible nightmare and one to be’
avoided at all costs.
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