To begin with, in A Farewell to Arms, Hemingway presents us a world of violence, despair and depression, a world of self-infliction and vanity, a world of chaos and inhumanity. Such a world produces a disillusioned society, a tragic world. Thematically speaking, there are three cycles: the seasonal cycle of land, the seasonal cycle of the war, and the seasonal cycle of love. The development of the three cycles finally proves to end with nothing. The ending of the novel, with the death of the heroine and her baby in the hospital and the hero’s lonely return to his hotel room, clearly makes it a tragic novel. Technically, most of the big events or scenes in the novel are playing symbolic function in the novel. Hemingway’s famous “ice-berg” theory is also very well employed in the novel.
Besides, in A Farewell to Arms motifs are images, objects or situations that keep reoccurring throughout the story, and symbolism deals with metaphoric substitution.
A Farewell to Arms is strongly saturated in images of nature, many of which serve as recurring motifs throughout the work. Most of them can be found in the first chapter, where Hemingway apposes image of harvest and life against those of death, and this