Martha Gellhorn — Profile of a Writer

Novelist, Journalist, and War Correspondent

Steve Newman Writer
15 min readSep 13, 2020

--

Martha. Image: theheroincollective.com

On August 25th 1944, Martha Gellhorn was sitting on a beach overlooking the Adriatic reading Lawrence’s Women In Love, drinking rum and watching a young Allied airman float down to Earth hanging from the tentacles of his parachute.

She wondered how many more young men must die before this bloody war was over.

As Martha flicked over the page, unable to concentrate as the airman came ever closer to earth, she came across this passage:

Whatever life might be, it could not take away death, the inhuman transcendent death. Oh, let us ask no question of it, what it is or is not. To know is human, and in death we do not know, we are not human. And the joy of this compensates for all the bitterness of knowledge and the sordidness of our humanity. In death we shall not be human, and we shall not know. The promise of this is our heritage, we look forward like heirs to their majority…

Martha was struck by the very correctness of it, by the way it went right to her very soul, and illuminated all she had been feeling ever since she knew she had to break away from Ernest, even though she also knew that would leave a huge hole in her life in her very heart. But there was nothing she could do, not any more. If she didn’t…

--

--