Mr. and Mrs. Elliot explained

"Mr. and Mrs. Elliot" is a short story written by Ernest Hemingway. The story was first published in The Little Review in 1924 and republished by Boni & Liveright in Hemingway's first American volume of short stories, In Our Time, in 1925.[1]

The story is about a 25-year-old Harvard student who follows a "clean" life. He marries a 40-year-old clean Southern woman in Boston and the next day they set off to Europe and they 'try very hard to have a baby'. They travel to Paris, then Dijon and finally at a chateau in Touraine. Eventually both become disenchanted with each other, and the wife's girlfriend moves in to live with her.[1]

The story was initially titled "Mr. and Mrs. Smith" when it first appeared in The Little Review; it was reputedly based on the 1921-4 marriage of writer Chard Powers Smith and his wife Olive Macdonald.[2] Smith resented Hemingway's story for the rest of his life.[3]

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Oliver (1999), 228
  2. Baker . Carlos . Ernest Hemingway and the Little Magazines: The Paris Years by Nicholas Joost . American Literature . 1969 . 40 . 4 . 527–574 . 10.2307/2923238 . 2923238 .
  3. https://archives.yale.edu/agents/people/67487 Chard Powers Smith papers, Yale University