Sunday, March 22, 2020
For Whom The Bell Tolls By Ernest Hemingway (1899 - 1961) Essays
  For Whom the Bell Tolls by Ernest Hemingway (1899 - 1961)    For Whom the Bell    Tolls  by Ernest Hemingway (1899  - 1961)    Type of Work:    Romantic war novel    Setting    Spain; 1937    Principal Characters    Robert Jordan, an American fighting with    Spanish Loyalists    Maria, Jordan's lover    Anselmo, Jordan's elderly guerilla guide    Pablo, a drunken guerilla leader    Pilar, Pablo's strong and commanding wife    El Sordo, another guerilla leader    Rafael, a gypsy member of Pablo's band    Story Overveiw    Robert Jordan, the young American, could  think of nothing but the bridge as he and his seasoned guide Anselmo hiked  through the mountains behind Fascist lines. Golz, one of many Russians  also working for the Loyalist forces in their civil war with the Fascists  for control of Spain, explained the importance ot Jordan's mission. Golz  was organizing a major offensive against the enemy. To protect is troops  from reinforcements sent up after the attack commenced, Golz needed the  strategic bridge destroyed: "[Do it] as soon as the attack has started  and not before. I must know that bridge is gone."    Jordan and Anselmo worked their way u p  the mountains where the bridge was located. The plan was for Jordan to  make contact with a guerilla band led by Pablo and his devoted, fierce,  and swarthy wife, Pilar. After taking a few days to examine the bridge  and organize the attack, he would wait for the proper moment to blow it  up.    Though he had destroyed other bridges,  and trains as well, Jordan was apprehensive about this mission. He felt  even worse when he made contact with Pablo's band. The guerilla leader  was surly and insecure; he demanded to know what Jordan intended to do:    "If it is in this territory, it is my business." Jordan quickly changed  the subject.    That night Jordan stayed at the guerrilla's  cave hideout with Pitar, Rafael the gypsy, six other guerrillas, and Maria,  a young girl who had been rescued from the Fascists. Jordan asked Pilar  if more guerrillas could be rounded up for the attack on the heavily guarded  bridge. She said that she would enlist the help of a band of six or seven  mountain men, led by the reclusive but proficient El Sordo. However, the  attack would be very dangerous, and afterwards the entire band would have  to abandon their mountain camps.    Pablo was drunk earlier than usual that  evening. He criticized Jordan's plans and told everyone in the cave that  the mission would fail. But Pilar stepped in and ushered Jordan outside  for a breath of air. The gypsy, Rafael, quickly followed. "Three or four  times we waited for you to kill him. Pablo has no friends," Rafael declared.    Although the idea of killing Pablo had in fact flashed across Jordan's  mind, he had restrained himself: "For a stranger to kill where he must  work with the people afterwards is very bad."    For weeks all of Jordan's thoughts had  centered on his mission. Now, however, all throughout the evening's tension-filled  dinner, it was not Pablo or the bridge that occupied his mind, but Maria.    The two flirted, sneaking glances and sly touches back and forth. Later,  when Jordan bedded down outside beneath the stars - along with the dynamite,  which no one wanted in the cave - Maria came to him, torn between hope  and reluctance. Among the Fascists she had been subjected to starvation,  torture and rape, and she believed that no one could love a defiled woman.    But Jordan persuaded her to slide into his sleeping bag next to him, and  they became lovers. And Jordan, who had lived until then mainly for the  ceremony of risking his life, now knew that, though he would still fight  for the cause, he no longer wished to court death; he wanted to live -  for Maria.    The next day, Pilar, Jordan and Maria paid  a visit to El Sordo's camp. Along the way Pilar spoke of how the war had  begun in her native village. Pablo had led the attack on the local , "civilia  guardia," trapped in their barracks. After killing the soldiers, Pablo  and his rebels gathered Fascist party members into the town hall. There,  one by one, they were forced to run through a gauntlet formed by the townspeople,  who beat them with shovels and rakes. To Robert Jordan, it was a horrible,  disgusting story.    At the camp, El Sordo agreed to help with  the mission to blow up the bridge, and assured that he could secure horses  for the ensuing escape.it was snowing heavily when they returned to their  own camp. The snow was a bad omen. Jordan grimly acknowledged that it could  ruin the entire mission. Pablo, on the other hand, was elated.    
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