![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#73 | ||||||
|
![]()
some really deep and good thinking here.... charlie
|
||||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
A Hemingway biographer's comments-- | ![]() |
![]() |
#74 | ||||||
|
![]()
Hemingway described with unusual knowledge and authority physical pleasure, the natural world, violent experiences, and sudden death. He portrayed the heroic possibilities and tragic consequences of wars, the psychic dislocation in battle, and the stoicism of survival. He created unsurpassed images of Italy, France, Spain, and Africa. As a man, he had intense idealism, curiosity, energy, strength, and courage. He attractively combined hedonism and hard work, was a great teacher of ritual and technique, carried an aura of glamor and power. As an artist, he wrote as naturally as a hawk flies and as clearly as a lake reflects."
Ernest Hemingway died 51 years ago this month. IMO, he, and one other American writer, who also had a newspaper reporter's training, have been enduring influences on the entire field of literature, and will be so for as long as man takes pen to paper. The other writer is Samuel Langhorn Clemens.
__________________
I am pleased to be here! |
||||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
The Following User Says Thank You to Grantham Forester For Your Post: |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#75 | ||||||
|
![]()
Steve , i humbly disagree with some of the points you raised about my comments and would ask you to condsider , with an open mind, my response.Hemingway was dressed as a girl not to fit in with fashion but because his mother wanted twin girls.This was a fantasy she was very open about.Hemingway had nightmares at Christmas because he was afraid Santa would think he was a girl and bring him girl toys. As I remember it Hemingways mother moved a female student into their house because she was in love with her. You can imagine what this did to his fathers self esteem. Your comments about his wounds not being too much to be concerned with are open to a further debate. I must assume that you like me are a combat vet and have a valid point of view. I can only say that a mortar attack is frightening event and stays with you for a long time .Hemingways uniform was shredded and his body filled with shrapnel.We really don't know a lot about PTSD and there is no hard and fast rule about who is vulnerable to the after effects of combat. When viet nam vets came back early from the war and complained of hearing voices and screaming in their heads they were incorrectly diagnosed as suffering from schizophrenia .Little did the doctors know that real past experiences of combat were being replayed in their heads. Hemingway was diagnosed as bipolar and I think the episodes of fighting and boozing during his manic stages are very well documented. I rest my case and will now open the Bourbon and go to sleep.
|
||||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Andy Kelley For Your Post: |
![]() |
Hemingway was decorated for bravery after Fossa | ![]() |
![]() |
#76 | ||||||
|
![]()
There was no question during WW1, when Italy was NOT an ally of Germany, unlike WW11, about Hemingway's courage. He lied about his age by one year and tried to get into the US Army, but was turned down due to poor eyesight, mainly in his right eye. So he volunteered for the Red Cross as an ambulance driver, received a commission as a Lt. by the Italian Army, and went under heavy fire to rescue two Italian soldiers wounded by German mortar fire. Both his legs were filled with shrapnel, and he recuperated in an Italian hospital (later the theme in "A Farewell To Arms") and fell in love with a nurse who tended to his wounds. His short story "Soldier's Home" may speak to what we now commonly call PTSD.
Hemingway's mother, Grace Hall, was a somewhat talented opera singer and musician, about in the order of German opera singer Gertrude Schenk. She lived across the street from Dr. Hemingway, who had his medical practice in his home, and after a courtship, they were married. She dominated Dr. Hemingway in their marriage and the five children they had together, two boys: Ernest, and his 15 year old junior brother, Leicester, the last of the litter. Both Ernest, Leicester, his father Dr. Clarence Hemingway and later Hemingway's third son, Gregory-- committed suicide. In one of his stories about his boyhood in Oak Park, Hemingway detailed his mother's callous disregard for her husband. He had just returned from a hunting trip (he was a superb wingshot with hawk-like vision, unlike Ernest) and while he was gone Grace threw out all his bottled collection of bird and animal specimens, plus his collection of Indian artifacts, mostly arrowheads picked up when they summered in Northern MI at their Windemeer cottage on Walloon Lake--
__________________
I am pleased to be here! |
||||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
The Following User Says Thank You to Grantham Forester For Your Post: |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#77 | ||||||
|
![]()
reading this makes me want to cut a hickory switch and give himmingways momma a good thrashing... charlie
|
||||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
The Following User Says Thank You to charlie cleveland For Your Post: |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#78 | |||||||
|
![]() Quote:
Carlos Baker's book was my fave, and I think I still have it. I should re-read. Concerning the VN war, I was an attack pilot and did not spend time in the bush, as you apparently did. When we experienced the occassional rocket attack we had to get our Marines off of the roofs of their hooches because they wanted to click away with their new Japanese cameras. The experience of war affects different people differently, and yes, HEM was badly wounded. I believe he spent a year in the hospital where he met and fell in love with his nurse, Agnes, several years his senior. I doubt he suffered from PTSD because he did not hesitate to discuss the event and was proud of it. Nor do I see evidence of serious metal disease, as you allude to. As I posted earlier, I do believe that he experienced a mental disorder, but only late in life when he suffered brain damage by butting his head into the door of his crashed aircraft. Dura fluid leaked from his ears. Hem must have become depressed and with today's drugs he probably would have done much better than he did. He was under a doctor's care and he took drugs and shock treatments. Hem experienced many successes which leads me to believe that he was not only sane but also in control, at least for most of his life. Hard writing requires a clear head and organized mind. Hem was ego driven; not unique. When his self image began to falter (in his eyes) his ego was crushed. He could not tolerate the man he had become and being a man of action, he killed himself. Which leads us to the question: Can a man with such a gigantic ego and all consuming self awareness who committed suicide also be sane? As I am sure you can tell I am no expert, my degree is in history. Was Hem tormented because he was dressed as a girl? I doubt it, because it was a common practice. ![]() This boy is John Ernest Robert, Sallie and William Robert's eldest son. Sallie was a friend of Billy the Kid. She dressed her son in a dress. He turned out fine. This boy was born in 1881. |
|||||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#79 | ||||||
|
![]()
Steve, you make many thoughtful remarks and I'm glad we're still friends..I think my clinical impression about the PTSD diagnosis comes mostly from my experience with VN vets in the Tucson VA hospital when I was doing an internship there. One common thread among the vets was a seemingly normal life prior to the war and then living a nightmare when they returned. Speaking about war experiences or not speaking about them really wasn't a hard and fast measurement of sound mental health. I think that it is very telling that in The Sun Also Rises the narrator, a war vet, has been emasculated due to a war wounding. Maybe that was Hemingway trying to tell us how he felt about his own war experience ....Aren't we supposed to be discussing Parkers.
|
||||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Book order en route | ![]() |
![]() |
#80 | ||||||
|
![]()
I am going to order a copy of this book about Hemingway and his guns- from all the replies posted here, it sounds like a great read. So-- the question before us-- did the late Ernest Hemingway ever own and shoot Parkers??
__________________
I am pleased to be here! |
||||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|