Week 12, Fitzgerald and Hemingway
F. Scott Fitzgerald and Ernest Hemingway. Fitzgerald’s “Winter Dreams” and “Babylon Revisited” (1641-72). Hemingway’s “The Snows of Kilimanjaro” (1846-64).
General Notes on Fitzgerald’s “Winter Dreams” (1641-58).
Dexter Green is middle class in genteel Dillard, and his wise, practical way with money makes him very rich while he’s still in his twenties. He holds to the Protestant Work Ethic and isn’t a speculator in stocks like many of his Ivy League classmates. Still, he is a hopeless speculator in romance, having become hooked on Judy Jones when he was fourteen and she was eleven. She embodies Dexter’s “winter dream,” and seems to speak to what is most dynamic and vital in him. But as it turns out, the Siren has nothing to say. Judy is described as pure body and “direct personality,” more or less the promise of limitless beauty and sexuality. She is premature in her perfection, and burns out young, becoming hollow and domesticated. So Dexter’s dream is shattered, and his worldly success brings him only disillusionment. He returns to his home town, but the American Dream he has achieved rings hollow. Fitzgerald deals with both class and romance, but the two don’t go together easily. He’s interested in fundamental conflicts in the American character, if one may use such terms: a main conflict here is between the material, practical side of Americans and the spiritual, romantic side. It seems the Dexter projects romantic qualities onto Judy that she really doesn’t have. Judy is attractive because of her air of pure promise, her beautiful exterior that turns out to be hollow inside. Dexter is able to infuse this hollow or empty center with whatever content he likes.
Dexter associates with what we might call “the leisure class” of
General Notes on Fitzgerald’s “Babylon Revisited” (1658-72).
On the whole, the story casts materialism as a species of forgetfulness or oblivion-seeking, so Charlie’s actions during the Roaring Twenties were like a drug he was taking to forget his problems with his wife. Well, the new reality for him is a downer, just as it is for American and indeed for
Page-by-Page Notes on Hemingway’s “The Snows of Kilimanjaro” (1846-64).
1848-49. The story’s simple motif is that of “a person’s life reviewed at the point of death.” But this motif is complicated by the statement that talking is just something one does to pass the time and that the speaker really doesn’t much care about anything by now. His days as a writer are done, so he will not be able to pass along any of his insights about living or dying.
1850-51. One likes to think of snow as symbolizing purity, but here the references indicate something more like deception, or even cruelty and oblivion.
1852-54. The argument between Harry and his wife arises because he seems determined to wound her, to “leave nothing behind.” It’s better, he thinks, to reduce their relationship to sex, money, comfort, and reputation. Even privately, he casts himself as a hollow liar selling “vitality”—the vitality that should have gone into his writing. No doubt this was a serious consideration for Hemingway, too—he went in for politics and journalism, and adopted the George Orwell ethos that one should go to the front, to the slums, and so forth, to make authentic contact with one’s subject matter. But now Harry is a “kept man,” and he lacks the will to do better than, say, F. Scott Fitzgerald in writing about the upper crust, which is his current milieu.
1854-56. Circumstances really get the better of the characters in this story: Helen’s search for meaning in life was badly impacted by the death of her child in a plane crash. Then Harry’s random (?) failure to treat his wound properly—is it just chance that makes him behave so self-destructively? Or is it a will to annihilation? Well, in spite of his machismo, he will be taken down by some invisible germs. And on 1855, the Hyena symbolizes death as something stealthy and opportunistic—not at all like the famous Grim Reaper of medieval iconography.
1857-64. Harry’s mortal illness is especially galling to him because he has long felt it a duty to write about his experiences. Having rendered that experience inauthentic and fallen in love with lies as the grease of social interaction and romance, he has nothing about which to write, and now he’s too tired and sick to grapple with a final description of the ultimate experience, death. Becoming alienated and hollowed out, we might say, gives one a certain perspective on feelings, events, and relationships, but perhaps it is also fatal to a writer in that it strips him of the desire to write anything at all. In the end, Harry dreams of escaping to the white summit of Kilimanjaro. Harry’s failure, of course, allows Hemingway the scripter to offer us some of his finest insights and most lyrical (if stark as always) writing. So perhaps through Harry, Hemingway has at least for a time confronted his own anxieties as a writer and dealt with them.
Edition: Baym, Nina et al. (eds.) The Norton Anthology of American Literature, Vols. C, D, E. 6th ed. New York: Norton, 2002. ISBN 0393977943.