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A Clean Well-Lighted Place Summary

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“A clean,well-lighted place” by Ernest Hemingway is a short stories about three character which are the old man, the younger waiter and the older waiter mainly at a café in midnight. The whole short story is focus on one thing: nothing.
Ernest Hemingway wrote this short story in a simple way which included only the essential information with few use of adverbs and adjectives. Short and direct dialogue and inner monologue is used as shown in the excerpt above. Ernest Hemingway often use pronoun without clear explanations. For example, the word “it” is use in the excerpt above without clarifying what the word “it” refers to. Even though the word “it” in the sentence is never defined, we can still get the message that the writer trying to conveys: …show more content…

The story begins with third person omniscient point of view as if someone was sitting at the bar and watching the three character conversation and action. Start from the first paragraph of the excerpt above, the point of view of the story change into the older waiter point of view showed by the old waiter’s conversation with himself. The technique of 'Stream of Consciousness' is used to dramatise the consciousness and thoughts of the older and lonely waiter who is under tremendous amount of stress because of his realisation of the futility and meaninglessness of old age. ( “What is the point of view of “ A Clean, Well-lighted Place”?”. Enotes editor. (25 June,2009.) Retrived from: http://www.enotes.com/homework-help/what-point-view-clean-well-lighted-place-90099). The use of 'Stream of Consciousness' technique is to show the reader the inside and outside of the older waiter’s mind: loneliness, despair, trouble, aging. From the monologue of the older waiter, we can suggests that he believes that a person life’s have no great purpose and there is nothing that a person can belief and hold on forever but there are always a temporary space for people to escape from all problems temporarily. Then, the short stories continue with the third person omniscient point of view until the

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