A Piece of Steak
"A Piece of Steak (short story)" | |
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Periodical | |
Publisher | Curtis Publishing Company |
Media type | Magazine |
Publication date | November 1909 |
"A Piece of Steak" was a short story written by
Plot
The story deals with Tom King, a boxer who is at the very end of his career. Once a great star who spent money freely and generously on himself and others, he is now so poor that the local merchants will not even loan him enough money for a piece of steak. Before his fight against a rising star, Sandel, he eats only bread and gravy and must send his wife and children to bed without food. The majority of the story details his boxing match with Sandel, who, as a much younger man, has far better stamina and recuperative abilities than King. Though King is much more experienced and tactically advanced than Sandel, King loses the fight. He knows that had he been able to eat a steak before the fight, the outcome would have been different. Because he has already taken out credit on the loser's share of the purse, he leaves the fight penniless and in despair. The story ends with King crying on his two-mile walk home, as he cannot afford a cab ride.
Analysis
The story shows the sickening nature of poverty. "A Piece of Steak" was written at the height of the
References
- Complete text with illustrations Archived 2016-08-18 at the Wayback Machine from the November 20, 1909 issue of The Saturday Evening Post magazine, posted on Carl Bell's Web Page.
- Summary, by enotes
- A Piece of Steak public domain audiobook at LibriVox