Openai/695bad73-ac00-8006-b1c7-1857d5770cde
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gpt-5-2[edit | edit source]
User: hi![edit | edit source]
hi!
what do you know about Hemingway's quote "for whom the bells toll"?
Assistant: !https://www\.bells\.org/sites/default/files/why\are\bells\ringing\today\.jpghttps://www.bells.org/sites/default/files/…[edit | edit source]
!https://www\.bells\.org/sites/default/files/why\_are\_bells\_ringing\_today\.jpg[2] !https://res\.cloudinary\.com/aenetworks/image/upload/c\_fill%2Car\_2%2Cw\_3840%2Ch\_1920%2Cg\_auto/dpr\_auto/f\_auto/q\_auto%3Aeco/v1/spanish\-civil\-war\-gettyimages\-3205437?\_a=BAVAZGID0[3] !https://collectionimages\.npg\.org\.uk/large/mw111844/John\-Donne\.jpg[4] 4 The phrase “for whom the bell tolls” is older than Hemingway—and that’s precisely why he chose it.
Origin: John Donne (1624)[edit | edit source]
The line comes from a meditation by John Donne, written while he was seriously ill. In Meditation XVII, he reflects on church bells that tolled to announce a death in the community:
- “No man is an island, entire of itself…
- never send to know for whom the bell tolls;
- it tolls for thee.”
Meaning: When someone dies, the bell is not ringing only for that person—it’s ringing for all of us. Human lives are fundamentally interconnected; any loss diminishes the whole.
This fits remarkably well with Donne’s worldview: deeply Christian, but also profoundly social and almost proto-existential.
Hemingway’s use[edit | edit source]
Hemingway took the phrase as the title of his 1940 novel For Whom the Bell Tolls, set during the Spanish Civil War.
In Hemingway’s hands, the bell becomes:
- a symbol of death
- a reminder of moral responsibility
- a statement about solidarity, even in a brutal, fractured world
The novel insists that no death in war is “abstract.” Every execution, every loss, tolls for humanity as a whole—even when ideologies try to reduce people to symbols.
Why the quote resonates so strongly[edit | edit source]
There are at least three layers working simultaneously:
- Existential – You cannot detach yourself from the fate of others.
- Ethical – Indifference is a form of moral failure.
- Political – Wars are not distant events; they implicate everyone, even spectators.
This is one of the rare literary phrases that condenses an entire worldview into a single image.
A small but important clarification[edit | edit source]
Hemingway did not invent the quote, and he never presented it as his own. He expected educated readers to recognize Donne—and to feel the weight of a 300-year-old moral insight crashing into a 20th-century war.
That collision between old metaphysics and modern violence is exactly the point.
If you’d like, we can:
- unpack how this idea connects to modern networked societies,
- compare it with Camus or Hannah Arendt,
- or look at how the phrase has been emptied or distorted by pop culture.
Just tell me where you’d like to take it.
References[edit | edit source]
- ↑ "For Whom the Bell Tolls". ChatGPT. Retrieved 2026-01-09.
- ↑ "https://www\.bells\.org/sites/default/files/why\_are\_bells\_ringing\_today\.jpg". bells.org. Retrieved 2026-01-09.
{{cite web}}: External link in(help)|title= - ↑ "https://res\.cloudinary\.com/aenetworks/image/upload/c\_fill%2Car\_2%2Cw\_3840%2Ch\_1920%2Cg\_auto/dpr\_auto/f\_auto/q\_auto%3Aeco/v1/spanish\-civil\-war\-gettyimages\-3205437?\_a=BAVAZGID0". res.cloudinary.com. Retrieved 2026-01-09.
{{cite web}}: External link in(help)|title= - ↑ "https://collectionimages\.npg\.org\.uk/large/mw111844/John\-Donne\.jpg". images.openai.com. Retrieved 2026-01-09.
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