A serious Hemingway is known for leaving something in his writings. He believes that if you know something good enough, you can still get your opinion leaving it. At a short story "The end of things", he left something. What he never said, what others knew before he said that. Because the reader can guess something, he must know what he is writing. In this particular story, the reader knows something about the past.
Ernest Hemingway does not feel the need to explain this environment in detail. The reader knows that it is now very late and these people are at the cafe. The hero sat down in the shadow and drank a brandy. Although Hemingway omits details from the setting, he knew that the cafe was as clean and bright as the title. He explained only the important aspects of the setup and proved that there is nothing in detail or "nothing". Throughout his writing, Hemingway hinted at the old man that he felt that the details of the world were meaningless. When an older waiter asked a young waiter the reason why a drunken man tried to commit suicide a week ago, the young waiter simply said "There is nothing, he has enough money" (Hemingway 17 ). In the heart of a young waiter, the old man has everything. Obviously, it is worth noting that the old man considers nothing like money.
In Ernest Hemingway 's short story' Clean and bright place ', Hemingway explained a sneaky old man sitting in a cafe one evening from the eyes of two waiters at a restaurant. When two waiters were waiting for the old man to leave the cafe so that they could close, they talked about the life of the old man. That old man is very depressed. His wife passed away and he tried to commit suicide recently. The young waiter does not sympathize with the old man. - "Clean and bright place" reflects Hemingway's view of the loss of faith and humility from the world. After the fear of World War I, he wrote this short story. Like many other writers in his time, Hemingway has always been affected by war. His experience is full of doubt. Hemingway made a story to express his emptiness and the lost emotions brought about by the war.