Table of Contents [hide]
- 1 How are the two waiters similar in A Clean Well Lighted Place?
- 2 What do the waiters discuss in A Clean Well Lighted Place?
- 3 How are the old man and the old waiter similar?
- 4 How do the waiters treat the old man in a clean well-lighted place?
- 5 Why does the old waiter want to keep the café open in A Clean Well-Lighted Place?
- 6 Why does the old waiter FEEL A Clean Well-Lighted Place is preferable to a dirty noisy bar?
- 7 What different attitudes do the two waiters express about the old man and what factors do you think influence their views and opinions about him?
- 8 What is the older waiter afraid of?
- 9 What do the waiters see at the beginning of a clean?
- 10 What language is the dialogue in a Clean Well-Lighted Place?
How are the two waiters similar in A Clean Well Lighted Place?
A Clean, Well-Lighted Place by Ernest Hemingway The older waiter sees how his own life is similar to the old man’s life. For this reason, the older waiter is kinder than the younger waiter towards the old man. The older waiter defends the old man’s life to the younger waiter.
What do the waiters discuss in A Clean Well Lighted Place?
The waiters speculate about the old man’s recent suicide attempt. The young waiter wants the patron to go home, and complains that he never gets to bed before three o’clock, while the older waiter is more understanding of the old man’s plight.
How are the old man and the old waiter similar?
Like the old man, the older waiter likes to stay late at cafés, and he understands on a deep level why they are both reluctant to go home at night. The old man lives alone with only a niece to look after him, and we never learn what happened to his wife. He drinks alone late into the night, getting drunk in cafés.
What is the purpose of the description and dialogue about a girl and a soldier?
What is the purpose of the description and dialogue about a girl and a soldier? The soldier represents the stability the cafe gives to the old man; the soldier wears a uniform and walks a source pace, relating how to the cafe gives the man a steady sense of effort.]
How are the two waiters different?
The younger waiter is impatient because the old man is the last customer and is keeping him from going home to his wife. The older waiter, on the other hand, is more understanding of the old man’s loneliness. As he says to the younger waiter, I am of those who like to stay late at the café . . .
How do the waiters treat the old man in a clean well-lighted place?
Despite the young waiter’s rude behavior to him and despite his own intoxication, the old man is polite and well behaved: He says “thank you” to the rude young man (who does not deserve such courtesy), pays for his drinks, leaves a tip, and walks away “unsteadily but with dignity.”
Why does the old waiter want to keep the café open in A Clean Well-Lighted Place?
The young waiter wants the old man to go to one of the all-night cafes, but the old waiter objects because he believes in the importance of cleanliness and light. Here, in this well-lighted cafe, the light is a manmade symbol of man’s attempt to hold off the darkness — not permanently, but as late as possible.
Why does the old waiter FEEL A Clean Well-Lighted Place is preferable to a dirty noisy bar?
Loneliness is the immediate cause of this, perhaps, and certainly living in the “light” would mitigate the discomfort of being in the “dark,” where one in fact can see nothing. He too is lonely with no one to go home to. He can understand why the old man would want to drink at a cafe rather than a bar.
Why do the old man and the old waiter want to stay in the café longer how does this contrast with the younger waiter?
The older waiter, in contrast, is patient, unselfish, nonjudgmental, and kind in his treatment of the old man. He wants to remain open so long as the old man might “need” the light of the cafe. The young waiter says the old man has “plenty of money,” but money cannot make up for what is missing in the old man’s life.
What is the significance of the Soldier and Girl In A Clean Well Lighted Place?
Hemingway implies that we are all potentially this everyman, facing despair, and we therefore should treat each other with sensitivity and compassion. The soldier in this short story is a human representation of the stability that the café represents to the old deaf man.
What different attitudes do the two waiters express about the old man and what factors do you think influence their views and opinions about him?
What is the older waiter afraid of?
Perhaps he has insomnia, but we know better: The old waiter cannot sleep because he is afraid of the darkness, afraid of nothingness. Hemingway himself suffered severe bouts of insomnia, feeling alone and deserted in the universe.
What do the waiters see at the beginning of a clean?
At the beginning of Ernest Hemingway’s “A Clean, Well-Lighted Place,” the two waiters are discussing the old man’s suicide attempt. It is then that they see the soldier. A girl and a soldier went…
What is the conversation between a waiter and a guest?
Conversation between a waiter and guests in a restaurant Guests: Can we’ve a table for two, please? [‘Can’ and ‘may’ show politeness.] (The waiter guides the guests toward a table in a corner of the sprawling, brightly-lit room, which wasn’t to their liking.)
What stage of life are the characters in a Clean Well Lighted Place?
Each of the three characters in “A Clean Well-Lighted Place” by Ernest Hemingway is in a different stage of life: the young waiter, the older waiter, and the old man. As in any work, several… How would I compare the attitudes of the younger and older waiter toward the old man in “A Clean, Well-Lighted Place”?
What language is the dialogue in a Clean Well-Lighted Place?
“A Clean, Well-Lighted Place” is one of Hemingway’s works of fiction which is set in Spain. In most of these works the dialogue is in English, but he wrote the dialogue in such a way that the… In “A Clean, Well-Lighted Place,” where does the story climax, and what are the falling action and resolution?