AFTER THE STORMS
Hemingway was
raised in Oak Park, Illinois. After high school, he
reported for a few months for The Kansas City Starbefore
leaving for the Italian Front to
enlist as an ambulance
driver in World War I. In 1918, he was seriously
wounded and returned home. His wartime experiences formed the basis for his
novel A Farewell to Arms (1929).
The story opens with two men
fighting over very little, something that has to do with making punch. One man
is getting the better of the other by choking him. This man, however, manages
to get his knife out, and he slashes the arm muscles of his attacker, after
which he leaves the bar where the fight has taken place. He gets into his
skiff, which is full of water from a recent storm, bails it out, and sails
toward the open sea.First he sees a three-masted ship that has sunk during the
storm. He can see the stumps of the ship’s spars sticking out of the water, but
the vessel itself rests in water too deep for him to have any hope of reaching
it and claiming the salvage. Then he notices a huge congregation of birds in
the distance. He sails toward them and eventually comes on the wreckage of the
largest steamer he has ever seen. The ship is lying on its side in sand, some
of it close enough to the surface of the water that he can stand on it and be
only chin-deep in water. He can see rows of sealed portholes as he looks at the
side of the ship down through the clear water.He speculates on what riches the
ship might have been carrying. After he tries unsuccessfully to break one of
the porthole windows with a wrench tied to a pole, he strips and dives into the
water carrying the wrench with him. He gets a grip on the edge of one of the portholes
and tries to break the glass, but it will not yield. He can see through the
window. On the other side is a dead woman, her hair floating languidly in the
water.



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