The Namesake (short story)

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CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Published inMcClure's
"The Namesake"
Short story by Willa Cather
Text available at Wikisource
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreShort story
Publication
Published inMcClure's
Publication typeMagazine
Publication dateMarch 1907

"The Namesake" is a short story by Willa Cather. It was first published in McClure's in March 1907.[1]

Charles Bentley, one of Hartwell's students, is about to leave. After going to an upscale restaurant, Maxim's, they all gather at Hartwell, who goes on to tell his life story. His father, an American, moved to Italy to seek inspiration for his sculptures. His uncle stayed in America and died in the Civil War shortly after. At age eleven, his mother died and he was sent to work as an apprentice in a sculpture atelier in Rome until age twenty-one. When he was fourteen his father died. On coming of age, he moved to Paris where he studied with more masters, and eventually took a trip to America to see his father's birthplace in Western Pennsylvania. Although at first he didn't feel at home with the ravages industrialisation had wreaked on the landscape, he soon learned his uncle had been buried in the garden. Later in the attic he found a trunk with his own name on it, and realised this was his uncle's. The sense of kinship was rekindled; that is why he feels going home is always something special.

Characters

  • Lyon Hartwell, a sculptor.
  • Student from New Hampshire
  • Student from Colorado
  • Student from Nevada
  • Student from the Middle West
  • Student from California, the narrator.
  • Charles Bentley, a fellow student, leaving Paris for home.
  • Two young Poles
  • The Gascon
  • The waiter at Maxim's
  • An old woman from Pennsylvania. She tells him about his uncle's grave.
  • An old soldier from Pennsylvania. He tells him about his uncle's eagerness to go to war.
  • Lyon Hartwell, Hartwell's uncle. He died in the Civil War at age fifteen.

Allusions to other works

Literary significance and criticism

References

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