- All's Well That Ends Well
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The end of “The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber” contains its most shocking, ambiguous scene. Hemingway does not reveal whether Margot purposefully shot her husband—noting instead that she “shot at the buffalo,” hitting Macomber on his skull—leaving it up to readers to decide whether Margot is a murderess or just a bad shooter. By affording the reader multiple paths of interpretations for Macomber’s death, Hemingway points to the complicated, ambivalent nature of relationships between men and women. Did Margot wish to reclaim the power that Macomber took away from her by becoming a “man of action?” Did Margot want…