Squaring the circle (geometry)
SUMMARY
The story deals about a feud between two families, or
clans, along many years. The typical example of a feud is the perpetual quarrel
between Capulets and Montagues in Romeo and Juliet.
In our story, the clans are the Folwells and the Harknesses.
The spark of the quarrel was the death of an opossum dog, a minor incident.
From that moment on, they were killing each other until only a member of each
family stayed alive, Carl Harkness and Sam Folwell.
As Carl didn’t like the idea of pursuing the feud, he
went away preventing Sam’s retaliation. At the beginning Sam didn’t know where
Carl had gone, but when he discovered he was in New York, he decided to go
there, look for him and finish the quarrel. He didn’t take the rifle: it was
too conspicuous; instead he grabbed a pistol, a weapon with a more appropriate
size.
So there he went. But it wasn’t easy to find Carl’s
hideaway. He only knew that he drove an express waggon round the city.
Sam had lived in the country all his live, so all that
he had seen was Nature, and according to the narrator’s theory, Nature is
circular, and Art (or anything made by humans) goes in straight lines; so Sam
was lost in New York because all the ways went in straight lines, right angles,
sharp corners and squares. And the people he met while looking for his enemy
weren’t nice at all; so he felt very uncomfortable there.
But at the end he found Carl coming along a street towards
him. Carl was unarmed.
What was the fight’s outcoming?
QUESTIONS
-What is your opinion about the narrator theory in
reference to circles and squares?
-What is the relation between the title and the story?
-Do you know any other classical or literary feud?
-For you, what would be the best way to stop a feud?
VOCABULARY
round, evened, laying out, pruning, washpot, butternut,
pink, haft, rote, smote, ourn, passel, bedeckings, bootless, locust club,
scowling, newsy, pelted, kith and kin