In Ernest Hemingway’s “A Clean, Well-Lighted Place,’ the central idea of the story deals with the loneliness and despair associated with old age. An old and deaf man symbolizes this feeling, even though he does not quite say a dozen words in the course of the story. The discussions between the two waiters further develop this concept of loneliness. With a young waiter portraying the optimistic role of youthful human nature, that which believes itself both immortal and never alone; conversely, an older waiter is at the opposite pole, with a belief in an inevitable mortality and a terrible feeling of loneliness and despair. This conviction is apparent in the elder waiter’s preoccupation with nada or nothing, through which Hemingway tries to impress upon the reader that man’s inevitable fate is to enter into nothingness from nothingness, for life is nothing. The old man in the story sought merely to enjoy a drink in the company of a clean, well-lighted place.
Even though it is apparent he is comfortably set with his finances; the old man had attempted to commit suicide by hanging himself. The young waiter, who figures that he s lonely, surmises the reason for the attempted suicide to which the older waiter replies, “he might be better with a wife.’ The loneliness and despair of the old man is largely a fault of his own; because he chose to see the darkness instead of the light, he chose to look upon death instead of life. The younger waiter believes that even a wife would be no good to him now. The young waiter is the impatient type and even becomes angry with the old man, wishing that “he should have killed himself last week.’ Refusing to serve the old man another drink, the young waiter instead tells him to leave. The young waiter is eager to get home to his wife and, busily sets out to close the shop. The old man slowly gets up and leaves, walking with dignity even though he has been thrown out of the cafe, a place where he felt comfort against the terrors of the night.
The Essay on Shorter Sixth Man Young Sammy
Stories about youth and the transition from that stage of life into adulthood form a very solidly populated segment of literature. In three such stories, John Updike's "A & P," Richard Wright's "The Man Who Was Almost a Man," and James Joyce's "Araby", young men face their transitions into adulthood. Each of these boys faces a different element of youth that requires a fundamental shift in ...
The young waiter is constantly portraying his one-sided view of life, saying that an hour has more value to him than to an alcoholic old man. The younger waiter, ever true to his nature, tells the older waiter to “stop talking nonsense’s o that he can go home. The young waiter bids his co-worker good night and departs for home. The young man is similar to the old man because he has a narrow-minded outlook on the world, partly due to his age. The old waiter compares to that of the old man sitting on the terrace.
The older waiter is upset at the younger one for expelling the man so early and feels that an hour is the same, regardless of age. The older waiter relies upon his experiences throughout his life. He makes a joke to the young waiter, teasing him that he is so eager to return home before the usual hour. After the younger waiter leaves, the older waiter continues the conversation within his mind, asking himself what bothered him. It was not fear he realized with sadness, but a realization that everything was nothing. Life was nothing and a man was barely even a trace amount of nothing.
The older waiter makes the comment near the end of the story that “each night I am reluctant to close up because there may be someone who needs the cafe.’ The older waiter is sympathetic to the old man because he himself is lonely. Confessing that ‘ I am of those who like to stay late at the cafe, with all those who need a light for the night’ The old waiter himself has never had confidence, lost his youth, and only has a job with which to comfort him. In conclusion, “A Clean, Well-Lighted Place’ could be Hemingway’s portrayal of life as he views it. He sees old age as a time of despair. The story presents itself in an interesting way with which to view life, but an imperfect one. Although many people go through their lives in ignorance of the grand design, the old waiter “knew it all was nada y pues nada y nada y pues nada.’ This preoccupation with nada is the elder waiter’s attitude towards life.
The Essay on A men with nada
... view of an hour between the young waiter and the old waiter. In the story, the young waiter, who impatiently waits for the deaf man to leave, ... was nada y pues nada y nada y pues nada." This preoccupation with nada is one of the most bothersome of the elder waiter's attitude towards life; ...
But, after visiting a bar, he felt better with himself, because the bar, even though well lit, was unpolished, while his cafe was clean and well lighted. For the young, an hour is forever, a time in which to do a thousand different things, all of which is the living of life. In old age, an hour is also an eternity. All of this meaning that time is the most precious of all.