particularly, to charge prices, to live in squalor, to improve one's
mind, priorities, would rather, to pick up, free spirit, to think for
oneself, to stifle, Blue Cross, to run out, in case, to catch typhoid,
to ruin, to take a calculated risk, to ask of smb.., would you mind,
dinner dishes.
TEXT 26. A DAY'S WAIT
Ernest Hemingway
He came into the room to shut the windows while we were
still in bed and I saw he looked ill. He was shivering, "his face
was white, and he walked slowly as though it ached to move.
"What's the matter, Schatz?"
1
"I've got a headache." "You
better go back to bed." "No. I'm all right." "You go to bed. I'll see
you when I'm dressed."
But when I came downstairs he was dressed, sitting by the
fire, looking a very sick and miserable boy of nine years. When I
put my hand on his forehead I knew he had a fever.
"You go up to bed," I said, "you're sick."
"I'm all right," he said. When the doctor came he took the
boy's temperature. "What is it?" I asked him. "One hundred and
two."
Downstairs, the doctor left three different medicines in
different coloured capsules with instructions for giving them. He
88
said there was nothing to worry about if the fever did not go above
one hundred and four degrees. This was a light epidemic of flu and
there was no danger if you avoided pneumonia.
Back in the room I wrote the boy's temperature down and
made a note of the time to give the various capsules.
"Do you want me to read to you?"
"All right. If you want to," said the boy. His face was very
white and there were dark areas under his eyes. He lay still in the
bed and seemed very detached from what was going on.
I read aloud but could see he was not following what I was
reading.
"How do you feel, Schatz?" I asked him. "Just the same, so
far," he said.
I sat at the foot of the bed and read to myself while I waited
for it to be time to give another capsule. It would have been natural
for him to go to sleep, but when I looked up he was looking at the
foot of the bed, looking very strangely.
"Why don't you try to go to sleep? I'll wake you for the
medicine."
"I'd rather stay awake."
After a while he said to me, "You don't have to stay in here
with me, Papa, if it bothers you." "It doesn't bother me."
"No, I mean you don't have to stay if it's going to bother you."
I thought perhaps he was a little lightheaded and after giving
him the prescribed capsules at eleven o'clock I went out for a
while.
It was a bright, cold day, the ground was covered with a s leet
that had frozen so that it seemed as if all the bare, trees, the bushes,
the cut brush and all the grass and, the bare ground had been
varnished with ice. I took the young Irish setter for a little walk up
the road and along a frozen creek, but it was difficult to stand or
walk on the glassy surface and the red dog slipped and slithered
and I fell twice, hard, once dropping my gun and having it slide
away over the ice.
We flushed a covey of quail under a high clay bank with
overhanging brush and I killed two, missed five, and started back
pleased to have found a covey close to the house and happy there
were so many left to find on another day.
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At the house they said the boy had refused to let anyone come
into the room.
"You can't come in," he said. "You mustn't get what I have."
I went up to him and found him in exactly the position I had
left him, white-faced, but with the tops of his cheeks flushed by the
fever, staring still, as he had stared, at the foot of the bed.
I took his temperature.
"What is it?"
"Something like a hundred," 1 said. It was one hundred and
two and four tenths.
"It was a hundred and two," he said. "Who said so?" "The
doctor."
"Your temperature is all right," I said. "It's nothing to worry
about."
"I don't worry," he said, "but I can't keep from thinking."
"Don't think," I said. "Just take it easy."
"I'm taking it easy," he said and looked straight ahead. He was
evidently holding tight onto himself about something.
2
"Take this
with water."
"Do you think it will do any good?"
"Of course, it will."
I sat down and opened the book and commenced to read, but I
could see he was not following, so I stopped.
"About what time do you think I'm going to die?" he asked.
"What?"
"About how long will it be before I die?"
"You aren't going to die. What's the matter with you?"
"Oh, yes, I am. I heard him say a hundred and two."
"People don't die with a fever of one hundred and two. That's
a silly way to talk."
"I know they do. At school in France the boys told me you
can't live with forty-four degrees. I've got a hundred and two."
He had been waiting to die all day, ever since nine o'clock in
the morning.
"You poor Schatz," I said. "Poor old Schatz. It's like miles and
kilometres. You aren't going to die. That's a different thermometer.
On that thermometer thirty-seven is normal. On this kind it's
ninety-eight."
"Are you sure?"
90
"Absolutely," I said. It's like miles and kilometres. You know,
like how many kilometres we make when we do seventy miles in
the car?"
"Oh," he said.
But his gaze at the foot of the bed relaxed slowly. The hold
over himself relaxed too, finally, and the next day it was very slack
and he cried very easily at little things that were of no importance.
NOTES
1
Schatz – (нем.) сокровище.
2
Не was evidently holding tight onto himself about something.
— Он, очевидно, напряженно думал о чем-то своем.
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