300
Mention at least 3 symbols from the story
black attire of the killers: Death; corruption; evil.
clock: Indifference, apathy. Accepting the Status Quo.
counter towel: George's wish to forget about the Andreson matter. When he wipes the counter, he wipes clear the Andreson episode and moves on with his life.
restaurant: The changing times. The restaurant had been a tavern but was remodeled into a restaurant after the government outlawed the sale of liquor. Like the restaurant, society as a whole also changed.
streetcar tracks: Inability to escape death. The tracks connect to Chicago and the outside world. Ole Andreson has been running from the killers and takes refuge in a rooming house in Summit. But, as the streetcar tracks suggest, it is impossible for Andreson to isolate himself completely from the men "tracking" him down."
tree branches: Imminence of death. As Nick leaves the restaurant to go to the rooming house, the narrator says, "Outside the arc-light shone through the bare branches of a tree." Obviously, it is late fall, not long before winter—a traditional symbol of death.
wicket: Racial barrier. Sam, a black man, is the cook. Working in the kitchen, he is separated from the whites by the wicket (a tiny door) through which he passes food.