A Farewell to Arms
Ernest Hemingway
A STEP BEYOND
TESTS AND ANSWERS
ANSWERS
TEST 1
- C
- B
- A
- A
- B
- C
- B
- A
- B
- A
11. Consider the characters and their attitudes toward the rules and laws of the society
they live in. Are Frederic and Catherine law-abiding citizens? Consider some of the
minor characters who live by rules, and also the kinds of rules they live by. Does
Hemingway portray them as sympathetic characters? For example, examine the priest,
the patriot Moretti, the carabinieri who arrest Henry, the Swiss police, the barman
in Stresa, Miss Van Campen, Rinaldi, the English ambulance driver who helps Henry.
12. "Disillusionment" is mentioned as a theme in this novel. Your job with this question
would be to figure out whether too much exposure to the reality of war and death
is responsible for Henry's change of character. You might also want to estimate
how strong an influence the death of Catherine's fiance had on her love affair with Henry.
Still another consideration is Henry's situation at the end of the book. What is
he going to do now that he has had a full close of reality? Or has he? Has his love
affair been real? Or is it more accurate to think of it as an escape from reality?
13. In answering this question you could use some of the same material as in question
11. The difference- it's minor, but a difference nevertheless- is that here we're
concerned more with the effect of society on the person and less with whether or
not the whole book is an indictment of society. Consider the same characters that you
looked at in question 11, but ask yourself, "Are they happy?" "In what ways are they
happy?" "Are they happy because they are social beings or antisocial beings?" -
14. Here is another all-purpose question that you can answer using this book, specifically
the experiences of Frederic Henry. His shock, of course, is his wound. He is a changed
person as a result. How has he changed? This essay might be organized as follows: a short introduction stating that Henry does change; a paragraph detailing how
he changes in his attitude toward Catherine; another paragraph showing his different
attitude toward the war; a third detailing his changed attitude toward society as
a whole; and finally a wrap-up.
Of course, you could view Catherine's death as a shock, too. That would require a
bit more conjecture, but you could write an essay that treats Henry as a changed
man after her death.
15. Here's your chance to use comparison/contrast. Your basic question is, Which book
has the greater impact, and why? The why is the key. If you can't support your assertions
by direct reference to the book in question, your answer to this one will fall flat.
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