An interesting thing occurs at the
opening of chapter 3 of the Ox-Bow Incident. We’re given a one-sentence description of the landscape as
the soon-to-be lynch mob leaves Tetley’s house. “Davies didn’t catch up with us until we had passed Tetley’s
big and secret house behind it’s picket fence and trees and were out in the
road between the meadows.” (pg 105).
The narrator then takes a few sentences to go back over this subject,
redefining what he just described.
He explains that basically the meadows are not meadows and the road is
not what one would traditionally call a road. His need to alter the statement implies that the world he
inhabits is not the same as the one the reader might know. The west in this novel is still being
explored by Europeans, it is at a stage where it is being settled and
defined. It is so different from
the growing civilization in the East though, that Art doesn’t seem to feel like
familiar language is sufficient to describe it.
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