Chapter XIX
The fiesta has ended, and the people of Pamplona are
cleaning up. Jake and Bill sit in the café. Bill says he is going back to Paris, and Jake says he will stay away another week, while Mike plans to go to Saint Jean
de Luz. They take the car through Basque country back to Bayonne. When they arrive,
they drive to Biarritz, find a bar there and have a few drinks. They roll dice
to determine who pays for the drinks, and Mike loses three in a row. He says
that he can't afford the last round, and Bill asks him what he's going to do
for money. He replies that he can live cheaply at a pub in Saint Jean. Bill
asks Mike if Brett has any money. Mike says probably not, since she paid most
of his hotel bill in Pamplona. Mike says that she has only a small allowance
each year, and that most of it is used to pay interest on old debts.
They leave the bar and decide to drive around the coast. After
dropping Mike off at his hotel at Saint Jean, Bill and Jake take the car back
to Bayonne, where Bill catches a train back to Paris and he and Jake say
goodbye. Bill will be leaving for the United States shortly after his return
to Paris, and they won't see each other.
Jake asks the driver how much it would be to take him to San Sebastian, but the price is too high, so he checks into the same hotel that he stayed
in at Bayonne with Cohn and Bill, and even stays in the same room. He has a
pleasant dinner in the hotel, where he tries a liqueur that the waiter says is made
from the flowers of the Pyrenees. He doesn't like it, and the waiter is a
little offended. He tips the waiter too much, and the waiter suddenly likes
him. He tips everyone in Bayonne too much that day, and he says that it makes
him more friends. In France, he says, things are much more clear because
everything is about money. In Spain, it is not so clear.
In the morning, he takes a train to San Sebastian. He
checks into a hotel and then goes to the beach to swim. After swimming, he
walks up to a café and has a drink alone. He returns to the hotel for dinner,
and there are a number of bicycle riders in town at the hotel for a road race.
He watches their table and listens to their conversations.
Later he has coffee with one of the managers of a big
bicycle manufacturer. The manager tries to impress him with talk about bicycle
races, and offers to call him early the next morning to help him wake up to
watch the race. He avoids the call, and does not watch the race the next
morning. He goes swimming again. After sitting on the beach for a while, he
returns to his hotel and reads the sporting magazines that the cyclists left
lying around. He receives two telegrams from Brett asking him to come to the
Hotel Montana in Madrid, because she is "rather in trouble."
Jake quickly makes arrangements to leave on the fastest
available train, and sends a telegram that he will arrive the next day, and
signs it "love." He thinks for a moment about how pathetic he is, having sent
Brett off with Cohn, introducing her to Romero for the same thing, and then
going back to get her and signing with love.
He shortly arrives at Brett's hotel, where they won't let
him in until Brett agrees to see him. He finds her in her room, having sent
Romero away. She isn't sure why she sent him away, except that she realized
she shouldn't be with him. She says that she realized he shouldn't be living
with anyone, and Jake agrees. She says that Romero was ashamed of her for a little
while, because Romero's friends and followers made fun of her short hair. She
says that Romero wanted her to grow it out to make her look more "womanly." Romero
also wanted to marry her. She says that they were happy together, and that
they would have stayed together if she hadn't realized that it was bad for
him. She admits her age (thirty-four), and says that she doesn't want to be a
woman who ruins children, and then starts crying. She says she's going back to
Mike, and that he's her kind of man.
They leave the hotel, and the woman won't let him pay the
bill, saying that it has been paid already, apparently by Romero. They get
tickets on the train for the evening, and go into the bar at the Palace Hotel
for drinks. Brett keeps talking about Romero, first about how young he is
(only nineteen), then about how he's only been with two other women. Jake
remarks that she said she would never talk about it again, but that she keeps
talking about it. She'll lose it if she keeps talking about it, he says.
Brett says that it makes her feel good deciding not to be nasty, and that it is
"what we have instead of God." Jake responds that a lot of people have God.
They take a cab to a famous restaurant called Botin's for
lunch. Jake eats a big lunch and drinks three or four bottles of wine. Brett
doesn't eat much. Jake continues to drink, and Brett tells him twice that he
doesn't have to get drunk. When they finish, they decide to take a taxi ride
around Madrid. They are stopped suddenly, and Brett is pressed against him.
She says that they could have had such a good time together. Jake says, in the
last line, "Isn't it pretty to think so?"
Analysis, Chapter XIX
The novel is clearly winding down, with characters being
sent home or, in the case of Mike, to places where they can survive. That
Romero survives Brett becomes a testament to his greatness. But the group has
changed, and the experience of driving back through Spain to Bayonne is very
different after the experience of the fiesta. The book ends with what seems
like despair: the impossible love between Jake and Brett, driving both of them
to jealousy, irresponsibility, and other immoral acts that they wouldn't do
otherwise, doesn't even have the beauty that they seem to be so upset about.
In other words, the last lines of the novel make the reader wonder if Jake and
Brett, if there were no wound, could have a meaningful relationship, or if the
impossibility created by the wound is the source of the relationship.
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