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Hills Like White Elephants Ending Analysis

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Hills Like White Elephants Ending Analysis
“Happily Ever After?”
When eavesdropping on a person’s conversation who is nearby, sometimes a person won’t get all the information on what they are talking about or find out how their conversation ended. Sometimes a person could infer the wrong things or not get the whole story. Also, since the people talking in the conversation might not tell the full story, the person listening might not get to know how the end of their conversation went, but if they are lucky, they might. The narrator in the short story “Hills Like White Elephants”, by Ernest Hemingway, was not so lucky and didn’t find out the ending, or many details of what the couple was disgusting. The story just ended with the woman saying “There’s nothing wrong with me. I’m fine”
…show more content…
This couple was talking about a very serious topic but didn’t want to make it obvious to the people around them what they were talking about; but there was enough details to infer the subject of their conversation. The woman wanted to keep the baby, but the man disagreed and thought having an abortion would be best for the two of them. They were always living on the road and never stayed in once place for a long period of time. The man believed this was a good enough reason to not have the baby, but the woman argued, saying the baby could be on the road with them. Another thing they didn’t see eye-to-eye about is, the man believed “ It’s the only thing that’s made us unhappy” and “I think it is the best thing to do” but the woman was just worried if the man would still love her after the operation, if she would change her mind do it. After the two were disgusting this while drinking, the woman was starting to have enough of the conversation, it seemed and kept the man to stop talking. She wanted to keep the baby while the person she was going to have the baby with didn’t want the same thing. During the whole conversation between the two of them, they never used the word abortion; they never wanted the people around them to understand what they were disgusting. The readers of this story

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