Because he is sick with the flu and, more importantly,
because he has misunderstood the doctor's reading of his temperature, Schatz has become
"detached." His face is white from the high temperature, and he soon displays an
attitude of hopelessness. Instead of sleeping, he sits staring "strangely," preferring
to stay awake. He seems worried that he is bothering his father, who he assumes would
rather be doing something else. So, the father takes a break and goes hunting, flushing
a covey of quail before returning. Still flushed himself, Schatz is still staring as he
was before. He does not want his father to enter the room, fearing that he will catch
what the boys has. He asks the father if the medicine wil do any good, and then he asks
when he is going to die. Schatz did not understand when the doctor told his father that
his temperature was 102 degrees: Schatz was used to the centigrade scale, but the
American doctor was using the Fahrenheit scale. The next day, Schatz relaxed a bit, but
"he cried very easily at little things that were of no
importance."
Thursday, December 27, 2012
What was the attitude of Schatz in "A Day's Wait"?
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