Tuesday, June 9, 2020
Sex and Religion in A Farewell to Arms - Literature Essay Samples
In Hemingways A Farewell to Arms, Frederic Henry finds in his relationship with Catherine Barkley ââ¬â a relationship they think of as a marriage ââ¬â safety, comfort, and tangible sensations of love: things that conventional religious devotion and practice had been unable to offer him. Frederic does not love God, he is only ââ¬Å"afraid of Him in the night sometimesâ⬠, the result of guilt felt after indulging in the immoral sexual pleasures of the brothel (72). Frederic and Catherine have no religion save their love for one another, yet he retains a kind of ingrained religious sensibility. Sex is something at the center of both Catholic tradition (in terms of dogma) and Frederic and Catherines relationship, and is a source of mental conflict for Frederic. Their love for one another becomes like a replacement for religion, their ritual practice being sex; yet, Catherines death at the end of the novel is a direct result of their pre-marital sexual relations. Though Frede ric cannot fully shake religiously inspired sexual guilt and anxiety, he continues to engage in pre-marital sex. At the novels close, he is blindsided by a great loss and is forced to recognize, too late, that his great love ââ¬â his religion ââ¬â could not last and that the pre-marital sex that was its ritual could provide happiness only temporarily, such sexual activity without fail resulting in emotional and physical degradation. The Italian Catholicism present in A Farewell to Arms is hostile to pre-marital sexuality. Aymos two ââ¬Å"probably very religiousâ⬠virgin Catholic peasant girls have a strong emotional response to Aymos using the world ââ¬Å"ââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬Å", ââ¬Å"the vulgar wordâ⬠for sex (197,196). They misunderstand his meaning; one begins to sob for fear. Frederics sexual improprieties are sources of much emotional and spiritual turmoil, and affect him in a way not wholly dissimilar to the Catholic girls, their fear insp ired by their desire to not violate the tenets of their religion. Frederic fears God in the night, guilty about what the priest refers to as ââ¬Å"passion and lustâ⬠(72). Rinaldi teasingly describes Frederics actions upon returning home from the brothels: He tries ââ¬Å"to brush away the Villa Rossa from [his] teethâ⬠, to ââ¬Å"[brush] away harlotry with a toothbrushâ⬠(168). There is a stigma attached to sexuality because of the cultural prevalence of Catholic beliefs, the repercussions of which (guilt) can affect even those who do not necessarily believe in or follow the precepts the religion. The religiously inspired feelings of guilt and fear notwithstanding, Frederic does not have an affection for God or Catholicism. ââ¬Å"I was always embarrassed by the words sacred, glorious, sacrifice and the expression in vain,â⬠he says (184). These abstractions are unrelatable: ââ¬Å"I had seen nothing sacredâ⬠(185). Where the abstract is obscene, the concr ete had dignity. To Frederics mind, Catholicism cannot offer him anything tangible, and is therefore of no use to him, it has no meaning. However, his love for Catherine is something that can be made tangible and intimately relatable through sex ââ¬â their sex then attaining something of the status of religious ritual. Their love is based not on sacrifice, but on need, emotional and physical need that can be satisfied by their relationship. However, Frederics ââ¬Å"religiousâ⬠love for Catherine must compete with his peculiar tendency to hold, unthinkingly, to elements of the Catholic tradition. Catherine, however, is adamantly opposed to the institutional religious thought to which Frederic partially clings. Their ââ¬Å"marriageâ⬠is exclusively a private one, though Frederic says ââ¬Å"I wanted to be really married to Catherineâ⬠(114). She sees their private marriage as perfectly whole: ââ¬Å"I couldnt be married any moreâ⬠(114). She dubiously promise s that they will be married eventually, seemingly to placate Frederic: when he is in the hospital, they will marry some time after the war; when she is pregnant in Switzerland, they will marry once she is thin again. Frederic experiences guilt about he and Catherines premarital sex and her pregnancy. When Count Greffi, a non-devout man, brings up religion after billiards, Frederic says that religious feeling comes to him ââ¬Å"only at nightâ⬠; Greffi responds, ââ¬Å"Then too you are in love. Do not forget that is a religious feeling.â⬠(263), the ââ¬Å"Do not forgetâ⬠reads like a warning against, one, taking for granted the religious potential in his love for Catherine and, two, becoming too fully consumed by feelings of guilt. To Greffis reminder Frederic responds, ââ¬Å"You believe so?â⬠as if uncertain. One night after Catherine had gone to sleep, Frederic lay awake ââ¬Å"for quite a long time thinking about things and watching Catherine sleepingâ⬠(301). Fergy, Catherines nurse friend, expresses disgust at Catherines lack of shame about the pregnancy, shame that any decent Christian girl would have: ââ¬Å"You have no shame and no honor If you had any shame it would be differentâ⬠(247). Catherine thinks of she and Frederics love as ââ¬Å"innocent and simpleâ⬠and totally without sin: ââ¬Å"I cant believe we do anything wrong,â⬠she says (153). It is in the final pages of the novel that the ideas about sex and religion are most poignantly realized. They arrive at the hospital, and Catherine is asked to supply certain data, including religion and name, to an employee: ââ¬Å"She said she had no religion and the woman drew a line in the space after that word. She gave her name as Catherine Henryâ⬠(313). One can make no mistake about the meaning of this juxtaposition: religion is replaced by her full and deep love for Frederic ââ¬â their ââ¬Å"private marriageâ⬠; it is a clear affirmation of her rejection of religion and its replacement by their love. As complications compound and the danger of the childbirth becomes immediate, Frederic begins to muse; Hemingway provides us with his stream of consciousness: ââ¬Å"So now they got her in the end. You never got away with anything.â⬠He views their pre-marital sex as something he had hoped they would ââ¬Å"[get] away withâ⬠, something sinful. He continues: ââ¬Å"Get away hell! It would have been the same if we had been married fifty timesâ⬠(320). His moral dilemma is here made clear. He first feels that her dying is punishment for their sin, yet he quickly attempts to rationalize it as a natural phenomenon. He remembers Rinaldis syphilis, the result of his irresponsible womanizing (327); Frederic once was afflicted similarly, with gonorrhea (299). Before Catherine dies, Frederic asks, ââ¬Å"Do you want me to get a priest?â⬠She replies, ââ¬Å"Just you,â⬠affirming her faith in their love, their religion (330). Frederic leaves the hospital some time after and ââ¬Å"[walks] back to the hotel in the rainâ⬠(332). Ironically, it was the crux of Frederic and Catherines relationship that resulted in its demise. They rushed in to sex perhaps, treated it with too much lightness, Frederics Catholic inspired guilt suggesting the inevitable end all along. You are thrust into the world and told ââ¬Å"the rulesâ⬠, but ââ¬Å"the first time [youre caught] off base they kill youâ⬠ââ¬â a man never has a chance; love never has a chance. Frederic and Catherine were caught off base and they were killed; their religion, their private marriage, was ended. She died, and he was left with nothing ââ¬â before they ever ââ¬Å"had time to learnâ⬠(327).
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