The Wall Analytical Essay
The Wall Analytical Essay
The Wall Analytical Essay
The central theme of the story is most notably displayed through a person
versus society con@lict where Pablo is presented with an antagonizing choice at the
end of the story. Another dominant theme is death. When the protagonist is
sentenced to death, Pablo looks at life in a completely new way. The people that had
once meant so much to him no longer mattered. He also views his remaining few
hours as the beginning of his death. He concludes that death is not natural, for
people lead their lives under the presumption that they will continue to live; as he
puts it, people maintain "the illusion of being eternal."
For Sartre, there is no afterlife, no trace of individual human passage on earth
except for the sum total of accomplishments to be recorded after death. Pablo
stubbornly persists in preserving his code of honour, in his implied commitment to
the liberal cause and in his determination to die cleanly and well, in contrast to
his fellow prisoners ([Juan] ran across the whole cellar waving his arms in the air
then fell sobbing on one of the mats.) The experience is disconcerting but Pablo has
lost all sense of fear and feels that, death or life, all amount to the same for him. He
has nothing to live or die for so, even the promise of a reprieve from execution does
not excite him: I wondered how Id been able to walk, to laugh with the girls: I
wouldnt have moved so much as my little @inger if I had only imagined I would die
like this. My life was in front of me, closed, shut, like a bag and yet everything inside
of it was un@inished.
The wall of the storys title is the wall of the prison courtyard against which
the prisoners are lined up to be shot, however, it comes to symbolize the boundary
between life and death. Pablo crosses this wall before he even dies.