Everyone’s still a little nervous when Randy shouts that he’s seen the errant cattle.
‘Michael, take the right and bring ‘em round off the bank of that stream.’
Oh yes, thanks. Thanks a lot.
Of course I’ve done this many times, usually on my bicycle after seeing a John Wayne movie. Now that I’m actually on a real horse with real cows in the real West everything looks a little different. What the hell do I do if the beasts head straight for me, get out of control, or, enraged by a mosquito bite, start a stampede?
I needn’t have worried. The rebellious cattle number fewer than twenty, of which eight or nine are white, fluffy calves and the rest either nursing mothers or several months pregnant. It’s hardly a round-up, more like chasing a creche. The attorney from Buffalo takes a tumble during the slow chase back through the pine woods, but on the whole, this bit of cattle action has an electrifying effect on the party. Having to ride instinctively, without thinking about riding, has calmed the nerves and turned us all into swaggering cowboys. Rick, here to celebrate his second wedding anniversary, was, like me, a quivering jelly two hours earlier, now he moves through the trees like a professional, occasionally shouting, ‘Come on, cattle!’ Or more threateningly, ‘Hey! Cattle!’
Evening. Exhausted. At an open-air dinner beneath a big, protective river willow tree outside the old wood farmhouse, moments like the attorney’s fall grow in the retelling, along with those of my Laurel and Hardy-esque attempts later in the day to rebuild a pine-log fence with the help of two grandmothers from Massachusetts.
Over a good country meal of prime beef, with cabbage, mushrooms, jacket potatoes of exceptional flavour, cream, fresh-baked bread and a Cabernet Sauvignon riskily called ‘Dynamite’, Ellen draws out the guests with well-practised skill. Part schoolmistress, part ringmaster, part entertainer, she soon has us all recounting wedding stories and how we met stories, and Rick is telling us about romance in a Laundromat and soon personal hygiene secrets are being traded as if we’d known each other from school. This would surely have had Hemingway running for cover. He came to the dude ranches of the West to get away from people, to recharge the batteries, hunt, fish and write. And it seemed to work. On his first visit to Wyoming in 1928 he completed the first draft of A Farewell to Arms, though he was to change the ending forty-eight times before he was satisfied. Two years later, with A Farewell to Arms a firm bestseller, he was at the L-Bar-T ranch working on Death in the Afternoon and writing to his friend Henry Strater Am going damned well on my book - page 174 - I can shoot the Springfield as well as a shotgun now.’
He never lost his fondness for the wide open spaces, though increasing fame made it more difficult for him to find the privacy he needed, which is perhaps why, in 1939, he agreed to be one of the first celebrity guests at the Sun Valley resort in the Sawtooth mountains of Idaho, newly opened by Averell Harriman, owner of the Union Pacific Railroad. In exchange for free accommodation and the odd publicity photo calls, he would be left alone.
As we sit around the camp-fire listening to the jolly gurgling yodels of ‘The Singing Cowboy’ I try to envisage Ernest wrestling with the problems of true declarative sentences to the accompaniment of ‘Home, Home on the Range’ and I realise why he was tempted to take the rich man’s shilling and head for Sun Valley.
We leave the Hargrave Ranch with some regrets. Ellen and Leo are remarkable hosts, independent-minded and full of strong opinions; they seem truly happy here doing things their way, caring a lot for the land and not a fig for convention. They laugh a great deal, tell good stories and seem able to charm the most up-tight urbanite. For what it’s worth I think Hemingway would have liked them. Who knows, they might even have persuaded him to join in with a verse of ‘Happy Trails’ after a good day’s bear-shooting.
Sun Valley lies nearly four hundred miles due south of the Hargrave Ranch, where the big skies of Montana give way to the steeper valleys of Idaho, the potato state. Hemingway’s accommodation at the Sun Valley Lodge, Parlor Suite 206, can be obtained for $389. All mod cons and handy for the tennis courts where, as the Second World War broke out in Europe, he and his soon-to-be third wife Martha Gellhorn took on Mr and Mrs Gary Cooper.
I’m more interested in the later years when, for a short while, Hemingway made Idaho his permanent home. So I drive on past the tennis courts and the expensive cabins and into the nearby town of Ketchum.
Along the side of the road runs the old railway track that brought tourist prosperity to this small mining town. Now it’s tarmacked. Today’s car-bound tourists jog and cycle along it. A few of its elegantly curved steel bridges survive, and in the town itself remnants of the old red-brick, heavily corniced main street architecture can be found scattered amongst the new shopping malls and the park-and-ride schemes. Hemingway’s old haunts, like the Casino Bar and Christiania’s Restaurant (where he ate the night before his death) co-exist alongside boutiques like ‘Shabby Chic Fabrics’ and ‘Expressions In Gold,’ which would have had him turning in his grave.
Despite the amiable prettiness of Ketchum this is a melancholy place for the Hemingway follower, inextricably caught up with his final years, when, forced to leave Cuba by ill-health and political change, he came to live with Mary in an isolated house at the north end of town. I search for the house, down Warm Springs Road and right on East Canyon Run, without really wanting to find it. Throughout this journey I’ve driven up Hemingway driveways and knocked on Hemingway doors with a certain spring in my step, as if some of the man’s energy and buoyancy were keeping me going. Now I’m at the simple pine-bark arch which marks the edge of his last property, lifting the chain that’s slung across the road, knowing that I can no longer pretend that my travelling companion is immortal.
The man who lived here at 400 East Canyon Run was prematurely old, forgetful, paranoid and often desperately unhappy. At the end he believed FBI agents were tailing him (he thought he saw two of them sitting in Christiania’s restaurant the night before he died). He attempted suicide with almost comical persistence, grabbing at shotguns whenever the opportunity arose. He was anxious about money and pathetically dependent on his wife Mary. This house is not a place where the tragedy of his life can be avoided or glossed over. Which makes it, in a way, more important than any of the others.
It is practical rather than beautiful, tucked into a gentle hillside overlooking the stony course of the Big Wood River. Across the river and through the trees is the highway that runs north to the dramatically rising peaks of the Sawtooth range. It’s known as the Topping House (ironically) after the architect of the Sun Valley Lodge, who designed this in the same style, with walls of concrete poured into wood moulds, giving a first impression of a superior log cabin, but in fact being something much stronger. It was built in the 1930s, ‘above the flood-plain, unlike those new ones across the river’, remarks our guide, Trish, pointedly.
Trish has let us into the house which is owned by the Nature Conservancy and not open to the public. Since Mary Hemingway’s death in 1986 it has been maintained, like other Hemingway houses, in the way it was when he lived here. Apart from allowing us access, the Nature Conservancy are happy for me to be filmed spending the last night of my journey here. I know, as soon as I enter the house, there is no question of my doing that.
To someone who has spent ten months of the past year recreating Hemingway’s life it’s bound to come as a bit of a shock to be faced with the place where that life ended, but I feel something more than shock. Just as the sitting-room in his house in Havana gave me the feeling that he and his friends had only just left, so I find myself inside his house in Ketchum, standing in the eight- by five-foot porch-way where he shot himself as if it had just happened and I were the first man on the scene.
Yet it is nothing special, a perfectly ordinary entrance to a house, the sort of place where you slip off your hiking boots or muddy shoes, calling for a cup of tea after a long walk. It has a light brown lino floor, a small window with wild
flowers in a jar on the sill. The crew are passing in and out, bringing the gear up the stairs from the garden. But I can’t stop my imagination reminding me, with indecent vividness, of the final moments of Ernest Hemingway, raked over and repeated in all the biographies.
Seven o’clock on a perfect summer Sunday in July 1961. Hemingway, always an early riser, comes down the stairs (there they are - to the right of the fireplace behind me), and crosses the room to the kitchen. Does he ignore or enjoy the wide and wonderful panorama of river, trees and mountains beyond, which he couldn’t fail to have seen through the picture windows? Stepping up into the kitchen (I can hear his freezer humming from where I stand), he found the key to the gun room, selected a double-barrelled Boss shotgun, loaded two shells, walked through to where I’m now standing, turned the gun on himself and, somehow, fired both barrels into his head.
Blood, death and appalling injury would not have shocked Hemingway. He had been shooting living creatures since he was a boy, he’d seen men blasted apart by mortar shells before his eighteenth birthday, he’d wiped out lions and leopard and rhino, and seen the horns of a bull pass through a man’s thigh.
What terrified him most was not losing his life but losing his mind. Losing the ability to write. One of the saddest memories in this heart-breaking house must be that recalled by his doctor George Saviers, of Hemingway, the Nobel Prizewinner, breaking down in tears when he found himself unable to find words to compose a simple message for President Kennedy’s inauguration in February 1961.
I’m glad to finish the filming and leave behind this house with photos of Ernest and Mary in happy times and bathroom towels marked ‘Mama’ and ‘Papa’, and the shelves of books and racks of period magazines and the inevitable African game trophies on the walls. Two distinctive memories will always vaguely disturb me though. One is a lustily gruesome painting above the stairs of two Spanish abattoir workers in the act of skinning a bull; the other, two small boxes carefully preserved in a glass display-cabinet in the sitting-room. One contains 5 mm cartridges, the other .22 rifle bullets.
Next morning. It’s a beautiful July Sunday in Ketchum cemetery, on the far side of the Big Wood River from the house. It’s a small cemetery, whose wrought-iron gates offer the only touch of flamboyance. The graves are modest, some marked by nothing more than a metal tag with a single word inscription - ‘Baby’ or ‘Unknown’. The well-trimmed grass around them has been cut from the wild sagebrush scrub that covers the foothills behind and would, if it were allowed, push its way through the fence and reclaim the cemetery. This is still a hard land to live in.
The best way to find the plain marble tombstones of Mary and Ernest Hemingway is to look for the three tall spruce trees that stand above them. Around the horizontal grey slabs many other graves bear familiar names. His grand-daughter Mar-gaux (spelt ‘Margot’ on her gravestone), also took her own life and her epitaph, ‘A free spirit freed’, could almost be his as well. George Saviers, Hemingway’s doctor, lies a few yards away, and beside him the grave of his son Frederick Saviers, who died of a viral heart disease at the age of sixteen. One of Ernest Hemingway’s last letters was to this boy. Hemingway was having treatment at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester when he heard Saviers’ son was ill but still found time, on 15 June 1961, to write him a cheery letter. It ended:
‘Best always to you, old timer from your good friend who misses you very much.’
Not a bad way to sum up my feelings about this journey and the man whose footsteps I have followed from Oak Park to this graveyard in Ketchum - Ernest Miller Hemingway, July 21,1899-July 2, 1961.
Hemingway’s Life
1899
Ernest Miller Hemingway born 21 July in Oak Park, the Chica-go suburb of ‘wide lawns and narrow minds’.
1913
Enters Oak Park High School; pretty hopeless at football but makes up for it in writing for the school paper.
1917
First job, on the Kansas City Star, as a cub reporter.
1918
Volunteer ambulance driver for the American Red Cross in Italy. Wounded 8 July at Fossalta. Ends up in Milan hospital and starts love affair with nurse Agnes von Kurowsky.
1919
Reluctant homecoming - keeps out of mother’s way up in Michigan.
1920
Reporter on the Toronto Star Weekly.
1921
September: Marriage to Hadley Richardson.
November: they sail for France, where he works as foreign correspondent for the Toronto Star in Paris.
1922
Starts writing short stories (rejected), befriends Gertrude Stein who encourages him to keep writing.
En route to join Ernest in Switzerland, Hadley leaves suitcase of his original manuscripts on a train.
1923
First visit to Spain; first bullfight; first son John born; first book published - Three Stories and Ten Poems.
1925
In Our Time, a collection of short stories, published; the result of five years’ work. Following Pamplona Fiesta in July starts writing The Sun Also Rises.
1926
Meets F Scott Fitzgerald, and editor Max Perkins at Scribner’s. Scribner’s publish The Sun Also Rises. First literary success.
1927
Divorces Hadley for Pauline Pfeiffer. Men Without Women (a short story collection) published.
1928
Leaves Paris, rents house in Key West. Second son Patrick born. Father commits suicide. Starts writing A Farewell to Arms in Key West and in various ranches in Wyoming.
1929
A Farewell to Arms published.
1930
Working on Death in the Afternoon - the bullfighting bible - in Key West and also up at the L-Bar-T Ranch, Wyoming.
1931
Buys house in Key West. Third son Gregory born.
1932
Death in the Afternoon published.
1933
Winner Take Nothing published. First safari to Africa.
1935
Green Hills of Africa - first book about Africa.
1936
Working on To Have and Have Not in Wyoming, Cuba and Key West.
1937
To Have and Have Not published. Involved with Loyalists in Spanish Civil War, helps produce propaganda film Spanish Earth.
1938
The Fifth Column - play about the Spanish Civil War - and The First 49 Stories published.
1939
Separates from Pauline, starts living in Cuba with Martha Gell-horn. Writing For Whom the Bell Tolls in Paris, Cuba, Key West, Wyoming and Sun Valley, Idaho.
1940
For Whom the Bell Tolls published. Marries Martha Gellhorn. They set up home in Cuba at the Finca Vigia.
1941
He and Martha visit China and the Far East as foreign correspondents.
1942
Arms his boat Pilar to search for German submarines in Caribbean waters.
1944
War correspondent for Collier’s magazine. Flies with RAF and helps liberate Paris, especially the Ritz wine cellars. Gathers material for Islands in the Stream (published 1970).
1945
Divorces Martha.
1946
Marries Mary Welsh. They settle back in Cuba.
1948
Visits Europe. Falls for Adriana Ivancic in Venice.
1949
Starts writing Across the River and into the Trees. Begins writing what was to become The Garden of Eden (published 1986).
1950
Across the River and into the Trees published. First really unfavourable reviews. Finally starts The Old Man and the Sea and continues with Islands in the Stream.
1952
The Old Man and the Sea is published and his reputation is redeemed.
1953
The Old Man and the Sea awarded Pulitzer Prize.
1954
January: Premature obituaries following two plane crashes within three days in northern Uganda. Oc
tober: Awarded Nobel Prize for Literature.
1955
Starts writing African journal, to be published 44 years later as True at First Light.
1956
Old diaries discovered at the Paris Ritz which form the basis for A Moveable Feast, finally published in 1964.
1958
Moves out of Cuba and back to the American West, renting a cabin in Ketchum, Idaho.
1959
A 10,000-word article following the Ordonez-Dominguin mano a mano bullfights in Spain, later published in Life magazine (1960) and as the book The Dangerous Summer (published 1985). July: Celebration of 60th birthday in Malaga.
1960
Two suicide attempts. Treated at the Mayo Clinic with electric shock therapy.
1961
Discharged in January. Another suicide attempt in April, returns to clinic. Discharged as ‘cured’ 26 June. 2 July kills himself. Buried in Ketchum cemetery.
Acknowledgements
The Hemingway Adventure would not have been possible without the help of many people.
Hemingway Adventure (1999) Page 19