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In his lifetime,
Ernest Hemingway published more than a dozen books, averaging
one
every couple of years from 1925 to 1952, a productive quarter
century for a writer who worked slowly and often complained
how hard it was to write. Many of his readers imagine his life
as a steady progression of accomplishment from youth to midlife
and into old age — a notion reinforced by the many compelling
photographs of the robust, white-haired, bearded Papa moving
to ever greater literary heights. His elevation to fame
coincided with America's growth as a superpower and the rise
of Time, Life, and other periodicals whose popularity
rested on photojournalism, topicality, and sensation. Hemingway
at the fiesta in Pamplona, the war correspondent raising money
for ambulances for Loyalist Spain, Papa divorcing one wife
for another and then another, the Old Man marlin fishing in
the Gulf Stream, the greatest American author big-game hunting
in Africa — he was never far out of the news. And as Hemingway
readied each book for publication, excerpts appeared in the
large-circulation magazines. He demanded and received record-breaking
sums from publishers and film studios. Reviewers and critics
could say what they liked — and they did — but so successful
was Hemingway's command of his audience that he could gloat, "If
the book is good, is about something you know, and is truly
written, and reading it over you see that this is so, you can
let the boys yip and the noise will have that pleasant sound
coyotes make on a very cold night when they are out in the
snow and you are in your cabin."
As an icon of mid-century American masculinity, Hemingway
lives on everywhere, reinforcing the perception of his
vitality and success: My local bookstore in San Francisco
is named A Clean Well-Lighted Place, after the famous
story. Mont Blanc offers a Hemingway pen. Travelers
can take the Tanzania Hemingway African Safari. Consumers
can order Hemingway photos from the J. Peterman catalogue
and Hemingway furniture from Thomasville. Branches of
one of Hemingway's favorite European hangouts, Harry's
Bar, proliferate in many cities. Two of his granddaughters
have been movie stars, and his novels continue to be
popular, handily outselling those of many well-known
contemporary writers.
In reality, however, the second half of Hemingway's life,
particularly the late period of his popular veneration,
was a startling foreclosure on the promise of his talents.
Emblematic as he was for his era, pervasive an icon as
he remains today, his literary importance is equivocal
— inspiring yet cautionary to anyone interested
in the filaments of reason and passion that connect a
life to
art. In July 1961, weeks short of his sixty-second birthday,
worn out by his efforts, his drinking, and the physical
bravado that had caused him many injuries and illnesses,
Hemingway put a double-barreled shotgun to his head and
took his own life, an act he had contemplated off and
on from his youth and preferred to a future in which
he could neither write nor summon the physical strength
that had always characterized him. His death, initially
reported by his wife as an accident, shocked the world.
He was the best known writer of the time, a Nobel laureate.
Why had he done it? As the news sunk in, his readers
were left with the mystery of his character and a desire
to know more of him.
Since then, from the thousands of pages of incomplete,
unpublished manuscripts Hemingway left behind, his heirs
and publishers have brought forth five book-length works,
beginning with A Moveable Feast (1964) and followed
by Islands in the Stream (1970), The Dangerous
Summer (1985), The Garden of Eden (1986),
which I edited, and currently True at First Light,
an uncertain blend of fiction and memoir, released to
coincide with the hundredth anniversary of the author's
birth in July.
Certain to be an international bestseller (publishers
in most European countries have paid record sums for
a posthumous Hemingway), True at First Light in
no way resembles anything like Hemingway's best work.
In fact, it can't be viewed as a book in the usual sense
but only as a published rough draft whose claim to our
attention lies not in its characters or story per se
but in an author whose failing effort at writing the
book presents an unfortunate self-portrait of the deterioration
behind the surface of his heroic image. A New York
Times article announcing the book's publication predictably
featured a four-column color photograph of Hemingway
and wife Mary looking glamorous on safari in Kenya in
1953. In the photo, as in the book, the players are the
characters: there is the famous author, Papa, set against
a picturesque background of native huts, stoutly drawing
himself to full height and gazing importantly into the
distance while his wife, Miss Mary, beams properly up
at him. Billed as "A Fictional Memoir of His Last
African Safari," True at First Light is intimately
narrated in the first person by a character named Papa
and titillates by inviting speculation on what is fact
and what is fiction, particularly with regard to Papa's
lust for a young African woman.
The events that inspired the book are colorful, if decadent
in a familiar Hemingway vein. In 1953-54, Hemingway attempted
to re-create the idyllic African safari he had taken
with his second wife, Pauline, whose uncle paid for the
trip and whose wealth was one of the attractions that
led Hemingway to abandon his first wife, Hadley. Twenty
years later, peripatetically independent and married
twice more, Hemingway paid for his safari with Mary by
agreeing to write a series of articles for Look,
which sent along a photographer. The Kenyan authorities,
eager to popularize big-game hunting and to dispel tourists'
anxieties over the recent Mau Mau uprisings, in which
armed freedom fighters from the Kikuyu tribe attacked
white landowners, granted Hemingway honorary game-warden
status, effectively setting him up as head man on his
own preserve, an irresistibly flattering position to
Hemingway, though he was well aware that he was being
used to glamorize a sport already ruined by its popularity.
As the safari proceeded, the ideal photo opportunity
failed to materialize, and finally the Look photographer
took a set-up shot of Hemingway, rifle in hand, on bent
knee beside a leopard someone else had killed. Hemingway
made the photographer promise not to run the picture
until he got a leopard of his own. Later, while Mary
was off Christmas shopping in Nairobi, Hemingway went
native, shaving his head, wearing Masai clothes, and
hunting with a spear. Ultimately, he speared a leopard,
followed it into heavy brush, and finished the job with
six blasts from a shotgun. In the celebration that followed,
a group of local women, including one whom Hemingway
wanted, caroused and cavorted with him in his tent, breaking
Mary's bed. One of the local men cautioned Hemingway
that things were becoming unseemly, and Hemingway sent
the women home, later tactfully replacing Mary's bed.
In letters written at the time, Hemingway extols the
virtues of "African girls" — their impudence,
cheerfulness, beauty, and ability to give him "a
hard-on." He boastfully refers to his African "fiancée" and
suggests a sexual liaison that Mary knows about and condones.
The letters are jocular, though not absolutely tongue
in cheek, and so the door is open for gossip. Scribner,
in publicizing the "fictional memoir," has
counted heavily on the whiff of safari sex to draw readers.
True at First Light opens with a prolonged movement
in which Papa and his retainers are long-suffering in
service of Miss Mary, who insists on killing a lion of
her own, though she's a poor shot and tends to flinch
from the kill. Papa will have to do it for her while
trying to give her credit and bearing her resentment.
When not busy looking after her, Papa has plenty of time
to play Bwana. He's the local arbiter of disputes, a
medicine man, and a quasimilitary leader charged with
defending the area in case of a Mau Mau attack. These
roles afford the old man plenty of opportunities to swagger
but yield trivial dramas, barely integrated as subplots
to the story of Miss Mary, Papa, and his African "fiancée." This
intrigue, in fact offers scant satisfaction to readers
looking for sensationalism, much less meaningful drama.
The seduction between Papa and his Wakamba "bride," Debba,
occurs in vague, mutely couched passages of Papa's self-serving
reflections and, too frequently, in solemn, unwittingly
risible bits showing Papa's gun as his penis and his
penis as his gun: "When we rode together in the
front seat she liked to feel the embossing on the old
leather holster of my pistol. It was a flowered design
and very old and worn and she would trace the design
very carefully with her fingers and then take her hand
away and press the pistol and its holster close against
her thigh." The attraction leads to a scene in which
they tryst on a riverbank while waiting for a troop of
marauding baboons Papa must kill. Debba and Papa caress,
and Papa declares his love: "I told her in Spanish
that I loved her very much and that I loved every thing
about her from her feet to her head and we counted all
the things that were loved and she was truly and very
happy and I was happy too and I did not think I lied
about any one of them nor about all of them." On
cue, the baboons arrive, Papa springs to action, and
in rapid fire kills three as the others run off. Debba
comes forward and asks to hold the rifle. "It was
so cold," she says. "Now it is so hot." A
local woman holding Bwana's gun is a breech of protocol,
and the villagers are troubled. Later, when Papa beds
Debba (in an amazingly convoluted, oblique passage that
has little of the characters in it), there is further
concern among the retainers that Bwana has forgotten
himself. Petulantly, Papa gives up the girl and reports, "This
was the beginning of the end of the day in my life which
offered the most chances of happiness." Whether
we're intended to take his assertion seriously or as
an exaggerated expression of disappointment is unclear,
but from that point on True at First Light pursues
a drawn-out conclusion in which Papa and Mary go on,
as if contentedly, with their marriage. Deleted from
the book is further manuscript material showing Papa
awake while Mary sleeps. *(See
footnote.) He
reflects uneasily on his life, then dreams that the "wife
I had loved first and best and who was the mother of
my oldest son was with me and we were sleeping close
together...." This clear reminiscence of Hemingway's
own wife,
Hadley, whom he never forgave himself for betraying and
whose memory he sentimentally
held as an image of his lost innocence, makes a similar
appearance at the end of A Moveable Feast and,
more than a repudiation of his subsequent three wives,
suggests misery and despair over the outcome of his life.
Hemingway's seventy-year-old son, Patrick, who agreed
to the publication of the African book on the condition
that he be the one to edit it, is the son of Hemingway's
second wife, Pauline, and has refrained from deleting
potentially unfavorable references to his mother as well
as apparent slurs on Hemingway's third wife, Martha Gellhorn,
and on Adriana Ivancich, a young Italian woman for whom
Hemingway unsuccessfully lusted during several years
preceding the Kenyan safari with Mary. Apparent in Papa's
lust for Debba and in his impatience with Mary is more
than a little transference from the failed seduction
of Adriana. Throughout True at First Light, Papa
is hard on women unless they are subservient and adoring;
among his criteria for a satisfactory woman are beauty,
docility, work, and discipline. In harsh passages that
Patrick cut from the published version of the book, Papa
recalls an early girlfriend: "Her greatest asset
was that she couldn't go out, not only in society but
at all." In a fit of distemper he reflects, "I
remembered that more than half my life had been spent,
at night, which should be the best time, with women who
could not come enough or who could come too easily and
who were always stubbing out cigarette butts and commencing
their sentences with the word, 'Darling. '" Patrick,
who was living in Africa at the time of the safari, believes
his father wanted to end the marriage with Mary, but
she was domineering enough to force him back into it.
Her primary drawback as Hemingway's wife, Patrick relates, "was
physiology. She kept him company drinking, and it killed
her." Hemingway was, by comparison, Patrick believes, "the
product of very heavy natural selection — a five bottle-a-day
man, like Churchill."
Patrick told me he was impressed by his father's total
recall of the backdrop of the story, but the amazing
thing is that Hemingway was writing the manuscript at
all, given that the safari ended in two plane crashes.
The first occurred when the Hemingways' plane clipped
an abandoned telegraph wire. In a forced landing, Hemingway
dislocated his right shoulder, but no one was seriously
hurt. Stranded overnight, they were reported in the press
as dead, then rescued and taken to Butiaba, where another
pilot was engaged to take them to Entebbe. On takeoff,
the plane faltered, bumped down, lifted again, then crashed
and burst into flames. Mary and the pilot escaped through
a window too small for Hemingway's bulk. The door frame
had buckled, and Hemingway, unable to push the door open
with his dislocated arm, used his head as a battering
ram and butted the door open. He emerged, bleeding from
the scalp and with first-degree bums on his face and
arms. After a long car trip to town and cursory medical
attention, celebration and drinking ensued. The next
morning, Hemingway found his pillow soaked with cranial
fluid.
During the following week, while meeting the press and
exulting over premature obituaries and congratulatory
cables from around the world, Hemingway struck a familiar
pose of invincibility, though he was seriously injured
— a suppurating wound in his skull; a collapsed intestine;
a ruptured liver, spleen, and kidney; crushed vertebrae;
a temporary loss of vision in one eye; dislocated bones;
and severe burns. In the years that followed, though
he continued to write and drink heavily and take foolish
physical risks, he was in pain and ailing. He had difficulty
keeping his weight and blood pressure down, and he grew
anemic. By November 1955, the manuscript of the African
book approached 700 pages, and Hemingway was bedridden
with nephritis and hepatitis. And, though there were
later intervals of relative well-being, he never fully
recovered. By 1957, he was struggling with depression,
and the African book had been put aside, first in favor
of a series of turgid short stories and then in favor
of "the Paris sketches," which appeared posthumously
as A Moveable Feast.
He never worked on the African book again. After 1957,
Hemingway's labor on the sketches was periodically interrupted
by other writing, including a 10,000 word article on
bullfighting for Life. The assignment took him
on a grueling tour of Spain in the summer of 1959, and,
after he had gone home and spent a year producing a bloated
manuscript of 120,000 words, he irrationally decided
he had to return to Spain for more material. He was in
no shape to go and suffered a collapse. He grew sleepless,
paranoid, delusional. His memory failed him. Back in
the States, he became suicidal and was hospitalized twice
and given electroshock treatments. Some of the most painful
images of Hemingway from this time are of him at his
desk day after day trying to arrange the Paris sketches
into a satisfactory sequence and, later, trying unsuccessfully
to write a single sentence for a presentation volume
of his work for President Kennedy. From the time of the
African plane crashes on, Hemingway, in spite of sheer
grit, produced nothing to rank with the work that came
before. The critical consensus is that his early work
— a number of short stories and two novels, A
Farewell to Arms and The Sun Also Rises, produced
in a five-year period from 1924 to 1929 — is his
best, though his stature survived the publications of
his middle
years and continued to grow.
Inevitably, the publication of a posthumous Hemingway
brings renewed attacks on the motives of Hemingway's
publishers and heirs. In the Washington Post,
Jonathan Yardley cholerically opined, "If Hemingway
had wanted any of this material published during his
lifetime, he could have arranged it in a trice.... But
something in Hemingway — literary judgment? dignity?
fear? — told him that this unpublished stuff ought
to stay that way...."
In The New Yorker, Joan Didion wrote more coolly
but with similar concern: "In the case of the 'African
novel' or True at First Light, eight hundred and
fifty [manuscript] pages reduced by half by someone other
than their author can go nowhere the author intended
them to go, but they can provide the occasion for a chat
show hook, a faux controversy over whether the part of
the manuscript in which the writer on safari takes a
Wakamba bride does or does not reflect a 'real' event.
The increasing inability of many readers to construe
fiction as anything other than roman à clef, or the raw
material of biography, is both indulged and encouraged...."
Charles Scribner III, grandson of Hemingway's original
publisher, is in charge of seeing True at First Light into
print. Braced for a critical onslaught, he's quick to
dispel the impropriety of posthumous publishing and likens
those who oppose it to "reactionaries who opposed
the cleaning of the Sistine ceiling because they were
used to seeing it dirty." Scribner also argues that
uncompleted works — Mozart's Requiem and
Michelangelo's dying slaves, for instance — have
always come to light
and that humankind is culturally richer, not poorer,
for their revelation. Unfortunately, the aptness of the
analogy between the dying slaves and the new Hemingway
book bears no scrutiny if the quality of the work is
a criterion.
The primary argument against posthumous publishing, apart
from its being a violation of the author's wishes (if,
in fact, they can be known, and in Hemingway's case there's
evidence on both sides of the question), is that the
release of unfinished or substandard work damages the
author's reputation and, by implication, all of literature.
In announcing True at First Light, Scribner enticingly
reported, "This is it; there are no more books." It
was an ambiguous statement in that, although there are
no more book-length, unpublished manuscripts, we can
still expect to see more posthumous Hemingway. There
remain a number of not-very-good unpublished short stories
as well as a thin novella-length beginning of a father/son
narrative reminiscent of the Nick Adams stories, and
there will undoubtedly be further Hemingway correspondence
to follow Carlos Baker's edition of the "Selected" but
not complete letters. It is unrealistic to think that
the extant work of a great writer will go unpublished
or that its relative merits can safely be assayed only
by specialists — scholars, biographers, other writers
— rather than by general readers, who are, after all,
the ones in whom the author chiefly lives. Readers who
enjoy Hemingway take him with his contradictions and
are satisfied to find good in the not-so-good. Hemingway's
own belief was that in a writer's lifetime his reputation
depended on the quantity and median of his work, but
that after his death he would be remembered only for
his best.
At the time I edited The Garden of Eden Charles
Scribner Jr., the current Scribner's father, related
that Hemingway had on more than one occasion boasted
that he had a box of manuscripts that would go on being
published long after his death. It is exactly the kind
of thing Hemingway would have bragged about, though he
would have had his doubts as well. He specifically asked
that his letters not be published, and after his death
they were published anyway. He left written indications
that he considered the Paris sketches publishable, in
spite of previous reservations about the harshness of
the book. Some of the murkiness and conjecture with regard
to his final wishes derive from his own extremes of overexposure
and intense privacy as well as from the vacillating hope
and despair of a man increasingly infirm.
My initial reluctance toward editing The Garden of
Eden (before reading it, I twice declined it, believing
that there was enough bad Hemingway in the world and
that my time would be better spent on contemporary writers)
was overcome when I finally read it. Substantial portions
were embarrassingly flimsy, but other parts had been
successfully revised by the author, and, in working on
the book, I had the advantageous prospects of a highly
developed, presentable story line as well as an awareness
that it contained significant, unrevealed aspects of
Hemingway that would fascinate readers and show him to
advantage, trying to transcend his previous work, his
celebrity, and his sometimes reckless habits. In particular,
Hemingway effectively dramatized his hero, David Bourne,
as androgynous and as rejecting the role of big-game
hunter characterized by his father. Much of the writing
was masterly, and I had but to follow Hemingway's inspiration
to bring the book into form. Patrick, in working from
the manuscript of the African book, had fewer advantages
and concedes that he did not use literary excellence
as a criterion in his edit. Yet it's unlikely that publication
of the African book will diminish Hemingway. In 1971
and 1972, Sports Illustrated published most of
the material now in True at First Light. Scholars
and many Hemingway fans have already read it. John Updike,
writing about The Garden of Eden in 1986, noted
that "Hemingway, after a semi-eclipse in the sixties,
when his fascination with violence and war seemed desperately
unworthy, now stands as a classic as surely as Hawthorne. And
in a critical volume on Hemingway published in 1996 by
Cambridge University Press, the editor of The Hemingway
Review, Susan Beegel, offered a study of Hemingway
scholarship, which concluded, "His critical reputation
today is stronger than at any time since his death."
Hemingway's character is manifest in everything he wrote,
yet for all his books, and for the hundreds of books
and thousands of articles written about him, he remains
somehow unrevealed, undiscovered. In the foremost biography,
Carlos Baker meticulously supplies the external facts
of the life to assess Hemingway on his own terms, with
a minimum of analysis, which is probably just as well,
given that Hemingway biographers and scholars often fall
into unsparing and tangled speculations on the writer's
hidden nature. There has long been a proliferation of
analyses of Hemingway's character disorders, said to
stem variously from his mother having dressed him as
a girl when he was a toddler, her domination of his father,
her moral rejection of his writing, post-traumatic stress
from his war wounds, his father's suicide, Hemingway's
insecurities about his masculinity, his need and fear
of women. The endless theorizing spun mostly by literary
academics operating as amateur psychologists fails to
satisfy, merely adds complexities rather than penetrates
them. Hemingway's own testimony and self-interpretations
were reluctant, conflicted, and intentionally murky.
He was determined not to be analyzed. He once commented
that after he died his life would be worth only as much
as his body, a statement that rings ironically given
all the industry now founded on that stout, bearded,
safari-clad hero, the man's man, the indomitable writer.
It can be said that in both his life and work Hemingway
never reached very far beyond his body. He was an intensely
physical individual and a writer of few ideas. By his
own admission, he was often unable to articulate what
he knew and too "stupid" to think life out.
The fact that writing was hard for him didn't stop him.
His stamina was legendary, and writing was like physical
exertion — he sweated a lot and produced reams of often
redundant prose, which he would hone thoroughly. Plotting,
which depends on thinking, was never his strong point.
His famous dicta for writing — write one true sentence
and then go on from there; never empty the well but always
stop when there is still something in the deep part of
the well and let it refill at night from the springs
that feed it; you can omit anything if you know what
you omit, and the omitted part will strengthen the story
and make people feel more than they understand — describe
his efforts but have none of the intellectual rigor and
brilliance of James Joyce's incursions on the fortress
of Aristotle's Poetics or the persistent expansion
of insight into the art of writing that one finds in
Henry James and Virginia Woolf. Nor did Hemingway ever
achieve the conscious development of expression Eudora
Welty went on to display in the course of her individuation
as a writer. There tend to be two types of writers: those
who are trapped inside their own stories and keep retelling
them (John P. Marquand was a famous example in Hemingway's
own time), and those who are able to encompass and transcend
their own stories and are thus free to take whatever
experiences come to them, from whatever quarter, and
use them on wholly invented story lines whose emotional
truths are not overdetermined by the writer's personality
(in this category I would place Zora Neale Hurston and
William Maxwell). Great work can be accomplished by either
type of writer, but whereas the former primarily conveys
the experience of life, the latter offers illumination,
an increased clarity and connection to the meanings of
life. The result is an enhancement of life's possibilities
that comes when the unrecognized (or only semi-recognized)
elements of experience are fully delivered in a revealing
dramatic pattern and through an authorial presence that
moves toward definitive interpretation. It is axiomatic
that when the characters in a story make accurate recognitions,
those connections are open to the reader, but when characters
mislead themselves and miss the turn in the road, the
reader's destination greatly depends on the author knowing
the way home. Life is full of experience, much of it
apparently random and confusing, and if we begin reading
a story for diversion and to find out what literally
happened, our pleasure is increased and sustained by
the perception of how and why it happened (the metaphysical
aspect of storytelling, in which life's paradoxes are
set in relief).
Experience was terrifically attractive to Hemingway.
His manner of being in the world was certainly through
his sensations, even more, if anything, than his legend
conveyed. His pursuit of hunting, fishing, boxing, bullfighting,
war, sex, eating, and drinking appeared again and again
in his fiction, and his gifts of perception and description
were sensory, as is the much admired opening of A
Farewell to Arms: "In the bed of the river there
were pebbles and boulders, dry and white in the sun,
and the water was clear and swiftly moving and blue in
the channels. Troops went by the house and down the road
and the dust they raised powdered the leaves of the trees.
The trunks of the trees too were dusty and the leaves
fell early that year and we saw the troops marching along
the road and the dust rising and leaves, stirred by the
breeze, falling and the soldiers marching and afterward
the road bare and white except for the leaves." The
surface of the writing is pure physical description as
it is experienced by someone with a genius for picking
up this kind of detail. But as keen as Hemingway's ability
to pick up sensations was, his primary genius lay in
his lyricism. He could, almost musically, convey the
sense of someone not only registering it all but evaluating,
according to a developed feeling, what he's experiencing.
It's this gift that underlies his words, giving them
their on-key integrity and power.
The basic range of evaluations in matters of feeling
is from good to bad, and these were the cardinal judgments
Hemingway applied to his own experience and that of his
characters. The words "good" and "bad" and
the phrase "truly good" have become hallmarks
of the numerous parodies and "Bad Hemingway" writing-contest
entries published each year. True to form, in his African
book, Hemingway divides his cast of characters into two
types, "the good ones" and "the bad ones." The
latter are adherents of a new religion Papa casually
leads, a religion ultimately and self-pityingly revealed
as that of the damned, for whom the underlying question
is: What can you believe in when there's nothing left
to believe in? In the African book, as in Hemingway's
other work, the response is nostalgia and narcissistic
remorse over the lost Edenic past.
Of all the writers who have sought to "explain" Hemingway
without undoing him, Reynolds Price came closest to the
truth in his 1972 essay "For Ernest Hemingway," which
proposes that Papa's lifelong subject was saintliness.
Price wondered if that theme wasn't "generally as
secret from him (a lapsing but never quite lost Christian)
as from his readers? And doesn't that refusal, or inability,
to identify and then attempt understanding of his central
concern constitute the forced end of his work and our
failure as his readers, collusive in his blindness? Hasn't
the enormous and repetitive critical literature devoted
to dissecting his obsession with codes and rituals, which
may permit brief happiness in a meaningless world, discovered
only a small (and unrealistic, intellectually jejune)
portion of his long search?" Price's argument suggests
that Hemingway's search was not for survival or techniques
of survival but for goodness, and thus what his own forefathers
would have called victory.
I believe Hemingway might have scoffed at Price's ideas
and still felt secretly tempted by them — the kind
of temptation he would have felt honor bound to resist.
Hemingway's attitude was not essentially religious, though
he sometimes arnbivalently held himself as if it were.
Rather, he reached for correlation in the world of values
he couldn't stop caring about, and religion offered an
approximation. Religion is the provider of images and
forms for the self in search of value. But religion can
also cause self-devaluation. Hemingway suffered because
he could not live up to the ideal of those images. He
repudiated interpretations that found Christian symbolism
(or any symbolism) in his work, especially in The
Old Man and the Sea, but his sense of martyrdom to
life accords with Price's assessment that he was nonetheless
in search of saintliness and willing to sacrifice himself
to find it. Hemingway's torment proceeded from a desire
for perfection (ideal feeling) combined with the knowledge
that what he desired most intimately could not be attained,
except perhaps briefly. His titles tell the story — To
Have and Have Not, Men Without Women, For
Whom the Bell Tolls, Winner Take Nothing —
the last of these ostensibly drawn from an old book on
gaming, though Hemingway had written the passage himself
in biblical imitation of seventeenth-century style: "...the
conditions are that the winner shall take nothing; neither
his ease, nor his pleasure, nor any notions of
glory; nor, if he win far enough, shall there be any
reward within himself."
His pleasures naturally led to hedonism and then to gluttony.
He countered his excesses with quasi-military disciplines
that were alternately self-punishing and self-indulgent.
Likewise, in the best of his work he offset his exaggerations
by deleting them and by a laconic style in which his
feeling found an expressive restraint. But in midlife
he found it increasingly difficult to bring proportion
and coherence into either the work or the life. He boasted
that he lived well, a debatable assertion given his divorces,
self-inflicted injuries, and early death, but certainly
he achieved a level of wealth that enabled him to do
whatever he wanted without much regard for anyone else.
He chose his friends for their admiration and loyalty
over their honesty or equality with him. His kindnesses
were generally reserved for his social inferiors or those
whose luster added to his own or served his advantage.
Hemingway's chief discovery, hardly an original one,
though he felt it more strongly than some, was pain and
lacrimae rerum — tears in the nature of things — to
which he responded not with sympathy toward himself or
others but with rage. His temper was violent, volcanic.
Throughout his life, he successfully portrayed himself
as a durable stoic whose esteem was the ultimate worth.
He lived in his own world and managed to bring readers
wholly into the darkness with him. That infantile darkness
is one of the greatest attractions/seductions of his
work. He appeals especially to the young, or to that
which remains adolescent in readers — the inchoate,
inarticulate confusion of feeling in a world indifferent
to feeling, and the spite that attends that recognition.
He faced the world with a grievance, and for all his
apparent enjoyments, and his fiesta concept of life,
his primary literary mode was world-weariness.
True at First Light candidly shows Papa at his
worst: self-conscious, self-pitying, self-indulgent,
self-aggrandizing. The book is so unformed, fragmentary,
digressive, and anecdotal that no one can say what Hemingway's
intention might eventually have been. There are numerous
themes he seems to have wanted to explore; however, it
seems clear that the existence of the book owes more
to a determined habit of writing than to any clarity
of purpose. I think it is reasonable to say that in drafting
the manuscript, Hemingway was, more or less, just writing.
There's little tension in the book except the knowledge
that it is Hemingway doing the writing, aimlessly, for
the most part, yet with hope — his occasional successes
must have tantalized him, as they do the reader, but
he's clearly very tired. Too much of the dialogue between
characters reads like the author talking to himself.
And here is the crux: for the most part, Hemingway had
only one character — himself. He had always worked directly
from life experience, modifying it as needed for the
sake of story. His dictum of not thinking about his work
when he wasn't doing it guarded his unconscious. Yet
without reflection there's little growth, certainly none
past one's own original character. Hemingway's dictum
of telling a story by leaving things out involved his
leaving out literal and often melodramatic elements as
well as aspects unfavorable to himself, a method reinforced
by his posthumous editors, who have carefully excised
the worst of his anti-Semitism, misogyny, homophobia,
and other unflattering traits. Hemingway tended, as well,
to leave out character development and the naming of
insights. Crucially, for those of us who came after him,
he has left out not what he knew (which was his claim)
but what he didn't know. In much of his early work, there
was an effective tension between the emotional impotence
of the Hemingway hero and the harsh attacks on others
(the beginning of The Sun Also Rises, for instance,
is notable for its extreme ugliness toward Robert Cohn). By
the time of the African book, Hemingway's Herculean ability
to sustain a hermetic world — a punishing one — was
gone, and out of the broken vessel leaked petulance,
sarcasm, fatuity, and puerile venom.
Among the book's many promising, though ultimately desultory,
themes — the problems of a primitive soul in a
modern age, for instance, or the paradoxes that world
religions
place on local cultures — the dominant one is marriage.
Papa's attitude toward Miss Mary is paternal, complicated
with a desire for the sort of grace a woman might bestow
on a child or a servant. And in his ambivalence there
is his hatred of being old, tied to Mary, and unable
to regain potency as reflected in his young African "fiancée."
It is painful to watch him pretend to himself to paint
Miss Mary with affection and respect while actually showing
her as an unsatisfiable, competitive bitch. "I wished
that I could make her happy," Papa says, but in
fact it's himself he wishes he could make happy. The
vulnerability that informed the young Hemingway voice
— need underlying the hard masculine pose — ultimately
found no accommodation in his characters' relations.
They end in failure and brutality or in sentimentality
but never in intimacy. Such vulnerability was too dangerous.
It has been proposed, by Charles Scribner III and others,
that the intent in the African book is comedic, or at
least ironic. As Patrick Hemingway puts it, "Tragedy
supposes characters of some consequence. People want
to believe themselves tragic, but really they're very
funny." In other words, Hemingway was intentionally
parodying himself. This interpretation stretches Hemingway's
capacity for irony. The book at times does attempt a
comic tone and, in its mix of genres — fiction, memoir,
and theatricality — takes abrupt turns along a gloomy
path. We see a fat old man disporting himself, and it
seems ridiculous, silly, fantastical, but not funny.
Hemingway was not gifted with humor. As a fictional memoir,
the book can be understood as neither fiction nor memoir
but as the record of an already ill and failing man's
attempt to keep his grip on the thing that was his life,
trying by any means and failing into mawkish, adolescent
efforts at humor. Moreover, it is impossible to tell
if he understood how unflattering the self-portrait was,
or, if he did understand, how he might have modified
it had he been able. The African book seems to show an
author aggressively, helplessly bent on participating
in his own undoing. It is an unpleasant read, painful
not so much in its particular failures of art but in
the raw exposure of deadness — the descent from religion
to nada, codes that fail, love that fails. And these
are not, as Hemingway frequently portrayed them, inevitabilities
but the result of life-long choices.
Ernest Hemingway's story is, essentially, that of an
exceptionally gifted and sensitive boy, very different
from his family and surroundings, who cut himself off
from them and staked his life on his wits and his writing
— a daring, resolute, and lonely act of self-invention.
In True at First Light, Miss Mary says of Papa, "My
husband is a delicate and sensitive man.... He hides
it carefully." She delivers this line with a good
deal of vindictive irony, but the truth of the assertion
remains, indicating what Hemingway's maturity might have
been had he not been caught, self-trapped, in a disintegrating
pose of manhood. Patrick Hemingway should perhaps be
commended for his courage in letting his father's confusion
show, or for loving his father sufficiently to find beauty
in the confusion. In any event, Patrick has not protected
Papa from himself, nor could the story of the African
safari have been brought out at more than slim novella
length if it had been diligently edited to protect Papa.
At best, his unpublished novels were partial attempts
to find a way out of the box he'd put himself in — his
public myth and artistic franchise — without, however,
relinquishing the box. If the business of life is to
know how to live with oneself, know how to live with
others, and know on what level to understand things,
Hemingway's work reflects the dilemma of an author/character
who prefers to remain a mystery because he is unable
to reveal his subject. Much of what he wrote demonstrates
a denial of love, or the fear of needing love, carried
all the way to complete self-destruction. As his heirs,
we're constantly challenged to reach more auspicious
conclusions.
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