Monday, April 11, 2022

He, by Katherine Anne Porter

1930


He is a 1927 short story by Katherine Anne Porter. You can read it online at this link. It begins,
Life was very hard for the Whipples. It was hard to feed all the hungry mouths, it was hard to keep the children in flannels during the winter, short as it was: “God knows what would become of us if we lived north,” they would say: keeping them decently clean was hard. “It looks like our luck won’t never let up on us,” said Mr. Whipple, but Mrs. Whipple was all for taking what was sent and calling it good, anyhow when the neighbors were in earshot. “Don’t ever let a soul hear us complain,” she kept saying to her husband. She couldn’t stand to be pitied. “No, not if it comes to it that we have to live in a wagon and pick cotton around the country,” she said, “nobody’s going to get a chance to look down on us.“

Mrs. Whipple loved her second son, the simple-minded one, better than she loved the other two children put together. She was forever saying so, and when she talked with certain of her neighbors, she would even throw in her husband and her mother for good measure.

“You needn’t keep on saying it around,” said Mr. Whipple, “you’ll make people think nobody else has any feelings about Him but you. “

“It’s natural for a mother,” Mrs. Whipple would remind him. “You know yourself it’s more natural for a mother to be that way. People don’t expect so much of fathers, some way. “

This didn’t keep the neighbors from talking plainly among themselves. “A Lord’s pure mercy if He should die,” they said. “It’s the sins of the fathers,” they agreed among themselves. “There’s bad blood and bad doings somewhere, you can bet on that. ” This behind the Whipples’ back. To their faces everybody said, “He’s not so bad off. He’ll be all right yet. Look how He grows!”

Mrs. Whipple hated to talk about it, she tried to keep her mind off it, but every time anybody set foot in the house, the subject always came up, and she had to talk about Him first, before she could get on to anything else. It seemed to ease her mind. “I wouldn’t have anything happen to Him for all the world, but it just looks like I can’t keep Him out of mischief. He’s so strong and active, He’s always into everything; He was like that since He could walk. It’s actually funny sometimes, the way He can do anything; it’s laughable to see Him up to His tricks. Emly has more accidents; I’m forever tying up her bruises, and Adna can’t fall a foot without cracking a bone. But He can do anything and not get a scratch. The preacher said such a nice thing once when he was here. He said, and I’ll remember it to my dying day, The innocent walk with God—that’s why He don’t get hurt. ‘” Whenever Mrs. Whipple repeated these words, she always felt a warm pool spread in her breast, and the tears would fill her eyes, and then she could talk about something else.

He did grow and He never got hurt.
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17 comments:

  1. Well, that was a depressing read. I'm not even sure what to think about the story.

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  2. Indeed a sad tale all round.

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    1. Yes, it was. I wonder if there was no one who could sit this family down and engage them in a real heart-to-heart, but maybe nobody realized...

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  3. Replies
    1. This story was new to me, but I've liked the other work I've read by her.

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  4. I like this author, and I remember her from back in college. This is a good story too, even if it is a bit sad.

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  5. Thanks, i enjoyed the taster and am looking forward to reading the rest! Valerie

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  6. I'll have to come back to this. I've always enjoyed her writing.

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  7. So sad. If anything it made me glad to not be someone like her with all her negativity and constant worrying about what other people are going to think. Her life was more miserable than His by a long shot.

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    1. She was ill-equipped and poorly sourced. If she'd had some honest truths shared with her I wonder if her life would've been more peaceful. I know His would've been a better one.

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  8. What a depressing and incredibly sad tale. It was almost like He was being put down like a dog.

    I would have been here sooner, but I've been stuck with my new tax man most of the day. Nothing like waiting till the last minute to get everything filed.

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    Replies
    1. So little understanding, so few resources, so much denial :(

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    2. As I read my comment that could apply just as well to our tax system :(

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