Themes
Life as Nothingness
In “A Clean, Well-Lighted
Place,” Hemingway suggests that life has no meaning, and that man is an
insignificant speck in a great sea of nothingness. The older waiter makes this
idea as clear as he can when he says, “It was all a nothing and man was a
nothing too.” When he substitutes the Spanish word nada (nothing)
into the prayers he recites, he indicates that religion, to which many people turn
to find meaning and purpose, is also just nothingness. Rather than pray with
the actual words, “Our Father who art in heaven,” the older waiter says, “Our
nada who art in nada”—effectively wiping out both God and the idea of heaven in
one breath. Not everyone is aware of the nothingness, however. For example, the
younger waiter hurtles through his life hastily and happily, unaware of any
reason why he should lament. For the old man, the older waiter, and the other
people who need late-night cafés, however, the idea of nothingness is
overwhelming and leads to despair.
The Struggle to Deal with Despair
The old man
and older waiter in “A Clean, Well-Lighted Place” struggle to find a way to
deal with their despair, but even their best method simply subdues the despair
rather than cures it. The old man has tried to stave off despair in several
unsuccessful ways. We learn that he has money, but money has not helped. We
learn that he was once married, but he no longer has a wife. We also learn that
he has unsuccessfully tried to commit suicide in a desperate attempt to quell
the despair for good. The only way the old man can deal with his despair now is
to sit for hours in a clean, well-lit café. Deaf, he can feel the quietness of
the nighttime and the café, and although he is essentially in his own private
world, sitting by himself in the café is not the same as being alone.
The older waiter, in his mocking prayers filled with the word nada, shows that religion is not a viable method of
dealing with despair, and his solution is the same as the old man’s: he waits
out the nighttime in cafés. He is particular about the type of café he likes:
the café must be well lit and clean. Bars and bodegas, although many are open
all night, do not lessen despair because they are not clean, and patrons often
must stand at the bar rather than sit at a table. The old man and the older
waiter also glean solace from routine. The ritualistic café-sitting and
drinking help them deal with despair because it makes life predictable. Routine
is something they can control and manage, unlike the vast nothingness that
surrounds them.
Courtesy: www.sparknotes.com
No comments:
Post a Comment