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For Whom the Bell Tolls
This paper analyzes Ernest Hemingway's classic novel "For Whom the Bell Tolls" and explores the themes of death and dignity as it relates to each of the characters in the book. -- 2,154 words; MLA

"For Whom the Bell Tolls"
A literary review of "For Whom the Bell Tolls" by Ernest Hemingway. -- 650 words;

“For Whom The Bell Tolls”
An analysis of the themes of idealism and courage in the novel about the Spanish Civil War, “For Whom The Bell Tolls”, by Ernest Hemingway. -- 1,469 words; MLA

'For Whom the Bell Tolls' by Ernest Hemingway
A thematic analysis of Ernest Hemingway 'For Whom the Bell Tolls' including: loyalty, bravery, and gender roles. -- 1,535 words; MLA

Hemingway and “For Whom the Bell Tolls”
A review of the life and works of Ernest "Papa" Hemingway, with a focus on his work "For Whom the Bell Tolls". -- 1,453 words; MLA

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FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS

For Whom the Bell Tolls is a novel loosely based on Ernest Hemingway's own experiences in
the Spanish Civil War in the 1930's. Before I delve into the book itself, I thought it
would be best to give some background information on Ernest Hemingway and on the Spanish
Civil war and the circumstances surrounding it.
Hemingway was born July 21, 1899 in Oak Park, Illinois, and the second of six children.
His father, Clarence Hemingway, was a physician and his mother was a devoutly religious
woman with a talent for music. When he was young, Ernest acquired the nickname champ,
which he relished and felt it showed his rowdy, hard-nosed outdoor sense of adventure. He
had garnered his father's passion for hunting and fishing in the north woods of Michigan,
a period of his childhood which left important impressions later reflected in several of
his short stories such as Up in Michigan and Big Two Hearted River. 
In high school, Ernest edited the school newspaper, excelled in football and boxing, and
ran away from home twice. Upon his graduation, seventeen year old Hemingway headed to
Kansas City to enlist in World War I, in outright defiance of his parents objections.
However the army rejected Hemingway, despite his repeated efforts, due to permanent eye
damage incurred from his years of boxing. Yielding finally to the army's rejections, he
added a year to his age and was hired as a reporter for the Kansas City Star, a national
newspaper. While working at the Star, Hemingway continued his efforts to participate in
the war, and finally succeeded when he joined a volunteer Red Cross ambulance unit as a
driver. In 1918 he was very seriously injured at Fossalta on the Piave River. Hemingway
received twelve operations on his knee, an aluminum kneecap and two Italian Decorations.
After a long period of painful recuperation in Milan, Ernest Hemingway joined the Italian
infantry to fight again. 
These vivid experiences provided the base for Hemingway's lifelong fascination with war.
Surviving World War I, he later covered the Greek-Turkish War in 1920, World War II and
the Spanish Civil War in 1937, the setting for For Whom the Bell Tolls. In 1928,
Hemingway's father committed suicide. He did not reflect on this event in his writing
until the thoughts of Robert Jordan, the main character in For Whom the Bell Tolls, in
1940. 
The Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) followed the failure of a military rebellion to
overthrow Spain's democratically elected government. The war divided Spain both
geographically and ideologically and it brought to power General Francisco Franco who
ruled Spain from the end of the war until his death in 1975. 
Following the Spanish American War (1898), Spain lost the remainder of its once great
empire. This defeat greatly increased dissatisfaction and the demands for change grew.
People disagreed on the changes needed, however and Spanish politics became dominated by
factions. In 1936 the Republic was in power in Spain. A rebellion led by Francisco Franco
and the Second Republic began and they received tremendous amounts of support from the
people of Spain. They were known as the rebels. Robert Jordan fights on the side of the
Loyalists in this novel, as did many Americans and other foreign volunteers, known as the
International Brigades. As well as support from the people, the Second Republic had
support from Germany and Italy. In the end these forces proved too much to handle for the
weary Loyalists, and the war was lost to the Second Republic.
For Whom the Bell Tolls is the story of Robert Jordan, an American college Spanish
professor, fighting for the cause with the loyalists as an expert in demolition. It is
written in startlingly crisp, concise prose (something which Hemingway was know for), and
is meant to show the horrors and cruelty of war and the endurance which it requires. It
is also a love story.
The novel opens with a flashback of a conversation between Robert Jordan and General
Golz, A Russian officer who is directing the forthcoming attack. We learn that Jordan is
carrying explosives and that his mission is to blow up a bridge. Golz is interested in
the offensive mainly as a military maneuver and he needs Jordan to blow up a bridge to
hinder rebel reinforcements. He knows that Jordan will have to enlist the help of an
antifascist guerrilla unit in the mountains and he is cynical because he feels that the
Spaniards will only interfere. 
Ironically, this same cynicism is expressed when Jordan arrives at the guerrilla's
hideout in the mountains. Pablo, the guerrilla leader, resents the fact that a foreigner
has come to run the show for awhile. It puts Pablo in an inferior position where he is no
longer the spokesman of the group. Irony is a major theme in this novel and is
illustrated frequently in the thoughts and actions of its characters. Pablo is interested
only in the safety of himself and his band and Jordan's military plans are of little
importance to him.
Anselmo is also introduced in the first chapter. Anselmo is an important character in
that he is one of the few people that Robert Jordan trusts. He is an elderly man, but
totally committed to the cause. He in turn places his trust in Jordan.
Robert Jordan has here-to-fore been shown as an excellent soldier. He is skilled in his
work, dedicated, determined to carry out his orders, and he is willing to sacrifice
himself and others for the good of the cause. However, in chapter 3, we see a glimmering
of resentment come over his character when he comes to terms with the fact that the
manner in which his mission is to be carried out is very unorthodox and so is highly
dangerous. He begins to feel that perhaps a cause isn't always worth sacrificing people
for but he brushes the idea aside, not wanting to think such thoughts (p. 41). 
In Chapter four, there is a confrontation between Jordan and Pablo and in it, Pablo
announces that he doesn't want to blow up the bridge. Pilar, Pablo's wife and one of the
only others that Jordan feels he can trust, sides with Jordan. Subsequently, the rest of
the band side with her, feeling that Pablo has gone bad (p. 56). Pablo is homesick, tired
of the war and scared of getting killed, by his own men and at the battle of the bridge.
Jordan wrestles with the idea of whether or not he should have killed Pablo in the
confrontation but is reassured by Pilar that he was right not to.
In spite of all attempts to maintain a coldly professional attitude toward his work and
to remain detached from any emotional involvement, Robert Jordan finds himself falling in
love with Maria. Jordan's Battle within himself has now passed the beginning stage. He
talks to Pilar about his sense of duty but he acknowledges the fact that he cares very
much for Maria. It begins to become obvious to all the characters that their enemy is
better organized, has more support, is better equipped, and really cannot be defeated. It
is becoming less obvious to them that the cause is worth all of their lives and the lives
of others like them.
Chapter 10 was the most impressive narration I have ever read. It serves the purpose of
displaying how, in war, the good guys can be just as cruel as the bad guys. Hemingway, in
masterful style, recounts the executions of several members of the Second Republic. 
There were more than twenty (fascists). But none was shot
What was done?
Pablo had them all beaten to death with flails and thrown from the top of the cliff into
the river.
...in all my life never do I wish to see a scene such as the flailing to death in the
plaza on the top of the cliff above the river. The fascists were all held in the
Ayuntamiento, the city hall...
There was a great crowd outside and there was some levity outside and some shouting of
obscenities, but most of the people were very serious and respectful.
... most had flails... and those who did not have flails had heavy herdsman's clubs, and
some had wooden pitchforks... Some had sickles and reaping hooks but these Pablo placed
at far end where the lines reached the edge of the cliff. 
(p.103-104)
Pilar went on to describe the gruesome way in which the fascists were forced to run the
gauntlet to the edge of the cliff, where they were then thrown off. Some of the men went
screaming and crying, begging for mercy, some had to be dragged, near paralyzed with
terror. It was absolutely the most heartbreaking, gut-wrenching thing I have ever read. I
was as close to tears as I had ever been. The sympathy one feels for the fascists at this
point is short lived though when, in chapter 11, the reader learns of the slaughter of
Joaquin's (part of Pablo's band of guerrillas) family. It serves to acquaint the reader
with the cruel practices of the fascists. 
In chapter 13 Jordan's battle within himself has swollen massively. He wants to live out
a normal life with Maria as his wife and he does not want to die for a cause. He argues
bitterly with himself and he becomes disgusted with the politics of both sides. He admits
to himself for the first time that he is in love with Maria, and his love has made him
see things clearly. Here is another example of the theme of irony: he has finally met
someone he truly loves and in less than four days he must blow up this bridge and
probably die. The urgency of his desire for Maria shows his fear that they have little
time left. That fear is shown again when Jordan wakes up one night and holds her tightly
as if he were afraid of losing her. 
It soon comes to Robert Jordan's attention that the plans for the attack have been leaked
to the fascists. He sends a message to General Golz asking to call off the attack.
Jordan's longing to stay alive grows and, aware of this, he tries to make sure that the
message he sends to Golz doesn't sound like he wishes the attack to be called off for
personal reasons. He entertains the idea that the offensive could be merely a
diversionary tactic to draw enemy troops away from another front. If that were the case,
then he had little hope that the attack would be canceled, for fascist knowledge of the
attack would mean little to Golz. 
In chapter 30 we learn that Jordan's father committed suicide- a shameful and cowardly
act in Jordan's mind. It is the first time Ernest Hemingway ever reflected on the suicide
of his father in his writing. 
We learn that Maria's father was the mayor of her town and that her mother was not a
Republican, but was loyal to her husband. Both were killed by a Falangist firing squad.
We know also that Maria was a captive of a vicious group of fascists before she was
rescued by Pablo's band, and that she was raped repeatedly by her captors. 
The battle at the bridge has grown more and more hopeless up to this point (it has even
snowed so that the fascists will be able to follow their tracks). Robert Jordan's
daydreams of taking Maria to vacation in Madrid are indicative of his little hope of
surviving.
Jordan awakes from his daydreams to Pilar shaking him. Quickly he returns to reality when
he learns that Pablo has vanished, taking many of the explosives, and their means of
escape, with him. He is terribly discouraged but assures Pilar that he can find another
way to set of the explosives at the bridge. Jordan is furious with himself for forgetting
that Pablo would only be friendly in order to betray him. He becomes furious with Spain
and with both sides of the fight. He decides that they will be able to blow the bridge,
but that they will die doing it, as Pablo and his horses were their only source of
escape. Robert Jordan lay sleeping that night next to Maria: He lay there holding her
very lightly, feeling her breathe and feeling her heart beat, and keeping track of the
time on his wrist watch.
Chapter 37 shows Jordan and Maria's last intimate moments together. He feels as if he has
spent his whole life at this cave, that the guerrillas are his brothers, and that Maria
is his wife. 
The scene in the cave before the fight is one of nervous despair. The men are riddled
with angst and are snapping at each other. Jordan's plan which he had thought up the
night before doesn't seem like such a great one now that morning is near. The situation
has become progressively worse. He doesn't have enough men to overcome the enemy guard
posts, and he has lost the equipment necessary to blow the bridge correctly. Suddenly,
Pablo reappears, with additional men and horses in tow. Immediately things begin to look
better and the task at hand doesn't look quite so impossible.
Organized confusion, (p 404) describes the pre-battle preparations. Jordan repeats
several times that no one is to do anything until they hear the offensive begin. The time
of the battle finally arrives. It is a bloody and complicated battle where the importance
the individual is reintroduced. First, when Jordan looks at the sentry he must kill and
sees him as a human being- a fact which makes him decide not to look at the man again
until he has to. Then, when Anselmo cries over the fact that he just killed a sentry.
Finally comes the ultimate irony of the novel. Robert Jordan has done everything he
should have done and his mission has actually been successful. He is in the process of
escaping with Maria and everyone else who is left alive, but he will die, not for the
cause, but for the protection of Maria, for true love.

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