Sunday, December 1, 2019
Slopes Of Kilimanjaro Essays - The Snows Of Kilimanjaro,
  Slopes Of Kilimanjaro    Ernest Hemingway's background influenced him to write the short story ?The  Snows of Kilimanjaro.? One important influence on the story was that Hemingway  had a fear of dying without finishing a work. Hemingway confirmed this fear in  many interviews. Baker, in ?The Slopes of Kilimanjaro,? states that  Hemingway could well express the feelings of Harry because they both feared  death in the event that they may have unfinished a work (50). Similarly, in  ?The Snows of Kilimanjaro? Harry, the protagonist, is constantly facing  death. In an effort to get his ideas and feelings expressed, Harry resorts to  flashbacks, which to him were ?very real moments? (Chaman 111). In addition  to his feelings on mortality, another influence on the story is Hemingway's  history with women. Hemingway married many times, possibly inciting the bitter  feelings toward the women in his stories. By comparison, Harry is very bitter  towards the woman, his companion on the wild African Safari. He demonstrates  bitterness best in comments like ?you bitch, you rich bitch? (Hemingway 9)  and ?she shot very well this good, this rich bitch, this kindly caretaker and  destroyer of his talent? (11). Perhaps the most important influence on the  story is that Hemingway had been on many safaris in Africa. In an interview with  Pilmpton, Hemingway states that for ?The Snows of Kilimanjaro,? he drew on  his ?knowledge and experience acquired on the same long hunting trip? and  tried to ?convey the feelings felt while on his trip? (qtd. 32). This  background together with a believable plot, convincing characterization, and  important literary devices enables Ernest Hemingway in ?The Snows of  Kilimanjaro? to develop the theme that a person should neither waste the gifts  he holds nor lead his life taking advantage of others. To develop this theme,  Hemingway creates a believable plot through an internal conflict and a  determinate ending. Hemingway formulates a believable plot through the internal  conflict in Harry. Harry, an aspiring writer, came to realize in his dying all  that he had not accomplished. He began to blame others for the death that was  awaiting him and for all the things, he never wrote. Harry shows his  disappointment of not being able to write by stating ?he would never write the  things that he had saved to write until he knew enough to write them well?  (Hemingway 5). Harry's first blame for not being successful was his present  wife, whom he married for her money. Harry emphasizes his quest for a better  life and more money in the statement, ?Your damned money was my armour. My  Swift and my Armour? (9). He further separates himself from his wife by  implying he did not like doing things with her. Harry established this feeling  with the statement, ?the only thing I ever really liked to do with you I  can't do now? (9). Harry also changed his opinion on dying many times. At  times, he seemed to welcome the thought of ending it all, and at other times he  was bored with the idea of dying. In the end, Harry was afraid of dying and  tried to fend off his death; he tried to ?send it away without  speaking?(15). Along with the internal conflict, Hemingway further creates a  believable plot in his story by using a determinate ending. With the reference  to the dead leopard on the mountain, Hemingway foreshadows the ending of the  story from the very beginning. This short preamble indicates someone in the  story will fall short of his or her goals. While dying of gangrene, Harry can  see the vultures that were once circling above now beginning to perch around the  camp sight (3). The next clue that Harry was going to die was the appearance of  the hyena. Whenever the hyena appeared, it was to symbolize the onslaught of  death. When Harry faced the realization of his death, it came ? with a  rush?of a sudden evil-smelling emptiness?that the hyena slipped lightly on  the edge of it? (15). Furthermore, when the death actually occurred it was the  hyena that announced it with a ?strange, human, almost crying sound (27). In  addition to creating the theme with a believable plot, Hemingway also develops  the theme of ?The Snows of Kilimanjaro? by convincingly characterizing  Harry, the protagonist. Harry was a convincing character because he was  constantly facing his death. From the beginning when the reader finds out he had  gangrene, the story tells the reader that even if his leg was removed, he would  still die. This whole short story is centered on the death of the    
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