A Clean, Well Lighted Pleace
\"A Clean, Well-Lighted Place\" is not between two characters, but, rather, in a more abstract sense, between man and time. The story deals with characters that all have different visions of the meaning of time – the youngest man values it, but the older characters don't. The oldest character, a man near the end of his life, is simply passing the time until he dies (in fact, we learn that he even tries to commit suicide to hurry along the process). The point is, the older you get, the more time wears upon you, and the more you feel your mortality.
And the story is with light and shadows, as an old man sits through another sleepless night--in the quiet of a well-lighted cafe. The older waiter explains to the younger, more impatient waiter, \"You do not understand. This is a clean and pleasant cafe. It is well lighted. The light is very good and also, now there are shadows of the leaves.\" For a lonely, old man, the clean, well-lighted cafe is a slight respite from the darkness. He drinks himself into a drunken state, hoping that sleep will come--taking him from the quiet desperation that has already caused him to attempt suicide once
In café, only the two waiter and a single customer, the old man. This café is a kind of idealized space, the loneliest and most despairing of men can find some kind of comfort. The café represents a space in which one can escape from troubles, from the despair of everyday life.
1. Nothingness
In this article, Hemingway suggests that life has no meaning and that man is an insignificant speck in a great sea of nothingness.
The older waiter makes his idea as clear as he can, and he says, “it was all a nothing and man was a nothing too.” he said the Spanish word nada(nothing) into the prayers, means that many people want to find meaning and purpose, but it is also just nothingness. Not everyone is aware of the nothingness. For example, the younger waiter hurtles through his life hastily and happily. But for the old man, and the other people who need late night cafes, however, the idea of nothingness is overwhelming and leads to despair.
So the old man and older waiter struggle to find a way to deal with their despair, but even their best method simply subdues the despair rather than cures it. Like, we know that he has money, but money has not helped. We know that he was once married, but he no longer has a wife. We also know that he has unsuccessfully tried to commit suicide to quell the despair. The only way the old man can deal with his despair now is to sit for hours in a clean well-lit café. Deaf, he can feel the quietness of the nighttime and the care, and although in his own private world, sitting by himself in the café is not the same as being alone.
The older waiter, in his mocking prayers filled with the word nada, shows that religion is not a viable method of dealing with despair, and his solution is the same as the old man’s he waits out the nighttime in cafes. He like the type of café, because it was well lit and clean. Bars and bodegas, although many are open all night, do not lessen despair because they are not clean often must stand at the bar rather than sit at a table. The old man and the older waiter also glean solace from routine. Sitting in the café and drinking help them deal with despair.
2. Loneliness
Loneliness pervades “A Clean, Well-Lighted Place” and suggests that even though there are many people struggling with despair, everyone must struggle alone. The deaf old man, with no wife and only a niece to care for him, is lonely. The younger waiter, frustrated that the old man won’t go home, defines himself and the old man in opposites: “He’s lonely. I’m not lonely.” Loneliness, for the younger waiter, is a key difference between them, but he didn’t thought why the old man might be lonely and doesn’t consider the possibility that he may one day be lonely too. The older waiter, although he doesn’t say explicitly that he is lonely, is so similar to the old man in his habit of sitting in cafés late at night that we can assume that he too suffers from loneliness. When the older waiter goes home to his room and lies in bed alone, telling himself that he merely suffers from sleeplessness. Even in this claim, however, he instinctively reaches out for company, adding, “Many must have it.” The thought that he is not alone in having insomnia or being lonely comforts him.
3. The Café
The café represents the opposite of nothingness: its cleanliness and good lighting suggest order and clarity, whereas nothingness is chaotic, confusing, and dark. Because the café is so different from the nothingness the older waiter describes, it serves as a natural refuge from the despair felt by those who are acutely aware of the nothingness. In a clean, brightly lit café, despair can be controlled and even temporarily forgotten. When the older waiter describes the nothingness that is life, he says, “It was only that and light was all it needed and a certain cleanness and order.” The it in the sentence is never defined, but we can speculate about the waiter’s meaning: although life and man are nothing, light, clealiness, and order can serve as substance. They can help stave off the despair that comes from feeling completely unanchored to anyone or anything. As long as a clean, well-lighted café exists, despair can be kept in check.