A Day's Wait

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"A Day's Wait"
Short story by Ernest Hemingway
Publication
Published inThe Snows of Kilimanjaro
Publication date1933

"A Day's Wait" is a short story by Ernest Hemingway published in his 1933 short story collection Winner Take Nothing, which portrays a young boy's reaction to becoming ill.[1][2][3][4]

Plot[edit]

The story is narrated in first person by the father, who calls his boy Schatz (German, meaning darling).[5] When the boy gets a fever, a doctor prescribes three medicines and tells the boy's father that his temperature is 102 degrees. The boy is quiet and does not listen when his father reads to him Howard Pyle's book about pirates. Later, when the father returns from hunting game, the boy asks when he will die. He had believed his temperature to be lethal because he heard in France (where Celsius is used) that one cannot live with a temperature over 44 degrees. When the father explains to him the difference between Fahrenheit and Celsius, the boy relaxes. The next day, "he cried very easily at little things that were of no importance."

Reception[edit]

Sheldon Norman Grebstein Junior said Hemingway handled "a potentially sentimental situation without expressing feeling in overt terms and without calling directly upon the reader's sense of pathos. We surmise the father's love and concern for his sick son not from any declaration of it in exposition or dialogue but rather from a series of observations, gestures and dramatic metaphors".[6]

This story is very close to the one by Amicis "From the Apennines to the Andys", in his book "Heart". There, a little Italian boy has adventures while trying to find his mom who went to Argentina to work, to help the family finances. The boy gets sick and is sure he'd die when he hears that his temperature is over 100. The book was published in 1886.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "A Day´s Wait by Ernest Hemingway". gs.cidsnet.de. Archived from the original on 2005-12-21. Retrieved 27 December 2013.
  2. ^ Striker, Jonet. "The Short Story Elements In A Day's Wait". articlesnatch.com. Archived from the original on 28 December 2013. Retrieved 27 December 2013.
  3. ^ Cearley, Valery Faye Thomson. Exploring connections in Ernest Hemingway's "A day's wait". worlcat.org. OCLC 50542423.
  4. ^ "A Day's Wait". litmed.med.nyu.edu. Retrieved 27 December 2013.
  5. ^ Stafford, N. E. (1999). Piggott, Arkansas (ed.). "'A Day's Wait'". Arkansas Review: A Journal of Delta Studies. 30 (2): 139 – via EBSCO.Closed access icon
  6. ^ Beegel, S. F. (1993). "Howard Pyle's Book of Pirates and male taciturnity in Hemingway's 'A Day's Wait'". Studies in Short Fiction. 30 (4): 535.[dead link]