How did Schatz react when his father read to him the first time ?Why did he behave that way? From "A Day's Wait".
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Answer:
When his father tells him to go to bed, Schatz says that he is alright. Schatz repeats this, so at this point, he really does think it
Answer:
Certainly, with Hemingway's minimalist style, it is difficult to specifically assess the relationship between father and son in "A Day's Wait." Nevertheless, the reader may infer that the father does indeed love his son dearly, and Schatz must feel close to him, although he is a reserved child. And, perhaps, he is much like his father who is coolly rational, although he lacks his father's life experience.
Hemingway's opening line indicates Schatz's iron self-control:
He came into the room to shut the windows when we were still and bed and I saw he looked ill.
For, most children in Hemingway's time would wake their parents, particularly the mother, and tell her that they do not feel well. Then, when his father--not the mother--perceptively asks Schatz what is wrong, the nine-year-old replies that he merely has a headache and is "all right." After the father dresses and goes downstairs, he checks the boy's forehead and realizes that the child is running a fever; so, he calls the doctor. [In those days, doctor's made house calls.]
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