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I chose to read the novel as well as view the
1932 movie staring Gary Cooper to review. As usual, the novel and movie are
different in the delivery of the story yet parallel most of the same aspects
Hemingway was trying to convey about love and war. The novel was much more in depth
than the movie and mostly, the novel focused more on the war than did the
movie. The novel
begins describing artillery weary troops marching through the rains of late
summer. The main character is an American named Frederic Henry. He is an
ambulance driver who is marching with the troops. The American is stationed
with the Italian Army, at the front during World War I. Basically, the first
few chapters begin when Frederic returns from winter leave in early spring. He
has a roommate named Rinaldi who is infatuated with a British nurse by the name
of Catherine Barkley. Rinaldi persuades Frederic to visit the hospital where
Catherine works. After meeting her, Frederic is attracted to Catherine. After a
couple days pass, Frederic re-visit’s the hospital and he and Catherine become
affectionate and share a kiss. Frederic
and Catharine become more of an item and their relationship becomes more
serious because Frederic begins to pay her regular visits. Catherine recognizes
that Frederic is lacking in his love depth and puts an end to the false
lovemaking imposed by the not so seriously loving Frederic. On the other issue
which of course is the war, the Italian offensive is about to resume. Frederic
is sent to the front to drive the wounded back to hospitals in the rear. At the
front, Frederic and his fellow ambulance drivers sit in a dugout. They were
eating pasta and cheese and waiting for the fighting to start. As they ate and
talked, artillery shells were exploding over their heads and then a mortar
shell blasted open their dugout. One of the other drivers, Passini, looses his
leg and he dies. Frederic takes injuries to both of his legs during the blast.
His injuries are that of a serious nature. Frederic
is taken to a field hospital. His first visitor is Rinaldi and then he is
visited by a Catholic Priest. Rinaldi jokes about getting medals for bravery
from the Italian army, and jokes about other developments. The priest is more
serious and explains to Henry about love and people who wage war and those who don’t.
After a few days at the field hospital, Henry is shipped to an American
hospital in Milan. Catherine is sent there as well as there is an excess of
nurses at the front. Frederic
is the very first patient sent to the American hospital and even the doctors
have yet to arrive. After a few days the doctor arrives and begins to remove
shrapnel from Frederic’s legs. Upon removal of the shrapnel, the doctor
discovers a piece of metal that is imbedded very deep and surgery is required.
Some doctors hold a meeting and try to determine when the operation should be
performed, but Frederic refuses their recommendation to wait six months. Dr.
Valentini later declares Frederic is ok to be operated upon the next morning
and the operation is then done successfully. At the
same time, Catherine has arrived at the hospital and at this time Frederic
states his love for her. Catherine begins to work the night shift and they
become very intimate on almost a nightly occasion. While he
waits for his leg to heal during the summer, Frederic is able to spend a vast
amount of time with Catherine. The couple does a lot together including going
to the horse races. Towards the end of summer, Frederic receives a letter from
the army saying that when he is discharged from the hospital, he will be given
three weeks leave before he must return. Catherine decides and declares that
she will find a way to leave the hospital at the same time as well. While at
the hospital and prior to his departure, Frederic has developed jaundice and has
been told he must stay for an additional two weeks. While he is staying his
extra two weeks, a lady by the name of Miss Van Campben finds several empty
bottles of alcohol in the armoire. She is determined that Frederic has drunk
himself sick to avoid going back to the front. She reports this and turns him
in. He subsequently losses his leave. Frederic and Catherine stay at a hotel
together on the night before he is to go back to the from. When
Frederic gets back to the fron, the war is not going so good and moral about
ending the war is low. Rinaldi is pretty depressed and finds only two things
interesting at this point: alcohol and sex. Even the priest has given up hoping
for victory, but still believes the war will end soon because all involved are
sick and tired of it. Frederic has a different oppinion that the Austrians are
winning and the war will continue. One Frederic returns to the front, he is
ordered to take over the ambulance cars in the mountains on the Bainsizza. They
are ordered to retreat after only a couple days of heavy rain and the Germans
and Austrians have broken through the line. Frederic
is in charge of a group of ambulance drivers in retreat. They are to moving
hospital equipment into Udine. They end up accidentally getting stuck in a
bunch of traffic including civilian vehicles and unable to move. He decides to
turn off the main road and they take cover off the side of the road. The
Austrians were bombing the main road and they could hear it. Not far outside
from Udine, the ambulances get stuck in the mud. Frederic he shoots a sergeant
who is running away with another because they’re afraid that the Austrians will
catch them. Continuing on foot, Henry and the three remaining drivers spot
German troops all over the road and realize Udine has been taken. At this
point, only Frederic and a man named Piani are left. They find a column of
retreating soldiers and continue on with them. He is noticed by the battle
police. They think he is a German hiding in an Italian uniform. As the police
are executing all officers they find separated from their troops, Frederic
manages to escape into a river and goes downstream. When he reaches a shore, he
jumps onto a train and hides under the canvas. When he
gets off of the train in Milan, he visits an Italian he befriended during his
stay at the hospital. The friend tells him that Catherine had left to Stresa.
After leaving the porter, Frederic visits Simmons, an opera singer and old
friend, who gives him some civilian clothes. Having changed, Frederic boards
the train for Stresa. He finally finds Catherine at a hotel and they spend a
couple days together. A hotel barman comes up to their room to warn Frederic
he's discovered that Italian officers are planning to arrest him the next
morning. Frederic and Catherine borrow a boat they can take to Switzerland.
They arrive in Switzerland just before dawn. They get arrested after breakfast,
but have the necessary documentation are sent to get visas. Frederic explains
to the officials that they are there to do winter sports. The officials do not
believe the story, but let them to stay because they have money to spend. Frederic
and Catherine live in the mountains of Switzerland during the winter enjoying
life together. They discover that Catherine is pregnant In the spring the
couple moved into a nearby town. Catherine experiences pain after a few weeks
and is admitted to the hospital. She is in labor for hours. The baby hay yet to
be born. The doctor tells them that he must perform a Caesarian. Unfortunately,
the baby dies during the operation. Also, Catherine died soon after the
operation because she had severe hemorrhaging. The novel ends with Frederic
walking through the rain back to the hotel. The main
character is Frederic Henry. The novel is loosely based on actual life events
Hemingway experienced. Frederic is an American ambulance driver Italian army.
He is also narrates the novel. The novel basically is focused around his love
with Catherine Barkley and the war. Frederic feels he has nothing to do with
the war initially and feels detached. When he falls in love with Catherine he
begins to realize the nature of the world. The one thing that can be taken by
the character is that no matter where you are taken in life, tragedy still
follows. Another
main character is Catherine Barkley. Catherine is an English nurse serving at
the Italian front. Catherine had a fiancй who had died prior the events of the
novel. She has an unparalleled love and devotion for Frederic which is
expressed in the novel. Frederic‘s
roommate is named Rinaldi. Rinaldi is a surgeon at the Italian front. Rinaldi
seeks immediate pleasures and sensual relationships. Rinaldi eventually comes
to realize the futility of the war and his own actions of sending patients back
to the front lines. In an attempt to deal with the war and everything that is
going on, Rinaldi resorts to sex as a scapegoat. The
Priest was a good friend of Frederic's. He is a young priest of the army
division who keeps the faith in God while war rages on. Where the priest is
concerned with higher values this contrasts vastly with Rinaldi and his way of
life and dealing with situations. The priest explains to Frederic the
difference between love and lust as well as the futility of the war. The priest
makes a conscious choice in faith rather than using it as a cruch. Although
called the Great War, World War I was very much undefined a war as such an
example of World War II was. There are was a incredible sequence of events
leading to the war as one thing led to another. Austria-Hungary
- declared was on Serbia 28 July 1914 after they were unsatisfied with Serbia's
response to their ultimatum Russia,
was bound by treaty to Serbia and therefore mobilized it’s vast army in the
defense of Serbia Germany
was an ally to Austria-Hungary by treaty. They viewed the Russian mobilisation
as an act of war against Austria-Hungary and declared war on Russia 1 August
1914. France
was bound by treaty to Russia and responded by declaring war against Germany
and on Austria-Hungary on 3 August 1914. Germany responded by invading Belgium
so they would be able to reach Paris by the shortest possible route. Britain
was allied to France by a loose worded treaty to defend France. They declared
war against Germany on 4 August 1914. The actual reason for entering the
conflict was based on an obligation to defend neutral Belgium by the terms of
75 year old treaty. Britain's
entry into the war had help from the British colonies and dominions abroad as
well. They offered military and financial assistance and they included:
Australia, Canada, India, New Zealand and the Union of South Africa. United
States President Woodrow Wilson declared the U.S. would be absolutely neutral
when in 1917 when Germany's policy of unrestricted submarine warfare seriously
threatened the U.S. commercial shipping forced the U.S. to enter the war on 6
April 1917. Japan had
a military agreement with Britain and therefore declared war against Germany on
23 August 1914. Two days later Austria-Hungary responded by declaring war on
Japan. Italy was
allied with both Germany and Austria-Hungary and was able was to initially
avoid war citing it‘s alliance with both countries. In May 1915, Italy finally
by siding with the Allies against her two former allies. One of
the most important outcomes of the war was the Treaty of Versailles signed on
28 June 1919. The following are terms of the treaty: The
treaty can be divided into a number of sections; territorial, military,
financial and general. Territorial
The
following land was taken away from Germany : Alsace-Lorraine
(given to France) Eupen and
Malmedy (given to Belgium) Northern
Schleswig (given to Denmark) Hultschin
(given to Czechoslovakia) West
Prussia, Posen and Upper Silesia (given to Poland). The Saar, Danzig and Memel
were put under the control of the League of Nations and the people of these
regions would be allowed to vote to stay in Germany or not in a future
referendum. The
League of Nations also took control of Germany's overseas colonies. Germany had
to return to Russia land taken in the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk. Some of this
land was made into new states : Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia. An enlarged
Poland also received some of this land. Military Germany’s
army was reduced to 100,000 men; the army was not allowed tanks and not allowed
an airforce. They were also allowed only 6 naval ships and no submarines The west
of the Rhineland and 50 kms east of the River Rhine was made into a
demilitarised zone. No German soldier or weapon was allowed into this zone. The
Allies were to keep an army of occupation on the west bank of the Rhine for 15
years. Financial
The loss
of vital industrial territory would be a severe blow to any attempts by Germany
to rebuild her economy. Coal from the Saar and Upper Silesia in particular was
a vital economic loss. Combined with the financial penalties linked to
reparations, it seemed clear to Germany that the Allies wanted nothing else but
to bankrupt her. Germany was also forbidden to unite with Austria to form one
superstate, in an attempt to keep her economic potential to a minimum. General There are
three vital clauses here: 1.
Germany had to admit full responsibility for starting the war. This was Clause
231 the "War Guilt Clause". 2.
Germany was therefore responsible for all the war damage caused by the World
War 1. Therefore, she had to pay reparations, the bulk of which would go to
France and Belgium to pay for the damage done to the infrastructure of both
countries by the war. Quite literally, reparations would be used to pay for the
damage to be repaired. Payment could be in kind or cash. The figure was not set
at Versailles it was to be determined later. The Germans were told to write a
blank cheque which the Allies would cash when it suited them. The figure was
set at 6,600 million well beyond Germany’s ability to pay. 3. A
League of Nations was set up to keep world peace. The Novel
of A Farewell to Arms touched on one mans experience during World War 1. There
seemed to be a wonderful blend of the aspects of love and relationships and the
cost of war both physically and mentally on ones phsyc. | |
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