According to Hemingway scholar Wendolyn Tetlow the short stories in
In Our Time are structured to form a thematic unity. The volume's early stories are about senseless death and the "ultimate nothingness of existence", whereas the second half of the collection focuses on how to cope with pain, wounding and suffering, and how to accept life.
Cross Country Snow is about escape and yet the need to accept life's burdens. The story's tension lies in the need opposition of freedom and duty, with the opening conveying a sense of freedom as
Nick Adams skis down the mountain. Both young men, Nick and George face duties after this day of skiing; George must return to school and Nick's wife is pregnant. In her article "Doomed Biologically: Sex and Entrapment in Ernest Hemingway’s ‘Cross Country Snow’," Olivia Carr Edenfield writes that by having Nick strap himself into his ski-binding creates and image of a young man bound and strapped into marriage and impending fatherhood. In the inn, while Nick and George are talking, the reader realizes several things about Nick. He is removed from the surroundings as if he were already a tourist visiting a foreign land. The Swiss locals in the bar are contrasted with the "boys" as they enter; and in counterpoint to Nick, the waitress is pregnant but unmarried. Although they want to ski again together the two young men know they might not; each has a responsibility and as Kenneth Johnston says "the best of friends often lose track of one another". The last piece of dialogue shifts from gloominess to hopefulness to defeat, according to Tetlow, ending with Nick's declaration there is no "good in promising". Hemingway used pervasive snow imagery in many short stories and in
A Farewell to Arms, usually symbolizing love and romance. The story's lyricism and "subtle nuances" are the strongest of the stories in the collection. Its structure is similar to "
The Three-Day Blow", which Hemingway would use again in the fishing scenes of
The Sun Also Rises. It begins with frequent use of soft sounds, "snow", "solidly", "surface", "skis", which reflect the movements of skiing. Tetlow says the "sensuous language renders the sensation of flight". The snow is equally visual and tactile. The language captures the rhythm of skiing, with up-and-down movements, the swoop of the slope, yet Nick tries to restrain himself from gathering too much speed, from losing control, and yet, not completely in control, he crashes. == References ==