"There Was an Old Woman" (1944)
When she was a child, Tildy's mother died, and Tildy's response was to boycott death, to pretend death doesn't exist, to refuse to believe in death. She neglected to attend her father's funeral. She doesn't listen to the radio or read the paper because of all the talk of death in the news. She didn't get married because she could never find a man who refused to believe in death, a man who could promise her he'd never die.We learn all that background in flashbacks--the story begins with Aunt Tildy, now old, being visited by the Grim Reaper! He tries to convince her to accept her own death, saying stuff like "Aren't you tired?" and "It would be so nice for you to rest," but Aunt Tildy is adamant. The Reaper leaves, but when Emily, Tildy's niece, returns home and is shocked to see her Aunt there, Tildy realizes she is a ghost, that her body has been taken to the funeral home! She rushes to the funeral home and refuses to leave until the mortician and staff sew her body back up and put her blood back in it and carry the corpse back to her home, where she exerts all the considerable force of her will and reenters her body and gets it walking and talking again. Aunt Tilly has foiled death and will live for the foreseeable future, always on guard against another visit from the Reaper.
This is kind of silly joke story with macabre elements; I guess maybe people who like this sort of thing would use the word "whimsical" to describe it. To me, "There Was an Old Woman" seems merely tolerable. One of my issues with it is that Aunt Tildy speaks in a sort of rural dialect, for example, making extensive use of variations on the phrase "Lands of Ghosen!" and I tend to find that kind of thing annoying.
"There Was an Old Woman" has not been anthologized much, though it has of course been reprinted a billion times in various Bradbury collections. It was presented in a 1949 issue of the British magazine Argosy, however.
The 1961 British printing of The October Country on the right, isfdb is telling me, omits seven stories from the Ballantine edition; "There Was an Old Woman" and "The Wind" were among the survivors |
"The Wind" (1943)
This is a traditional Weird Tales-type story about an educated Westerner who goes to the mysterious East and when he gets back home to England or America or wherever is haunted by something that he encountered in "the Orient," as we used to say.Colt, aged 30, is one of these adventurer guys who has been all over Africa and Asia; he is an expert on storms who has written books on tornadoes and hurricanes and that sort of thing, written them based on direct experience of extreme weather phenomena from every corner of the globe! In Tibet he climbed some mountain the locals warned him it was blasphemy to touch, climbed this "vast evil mountain, gray and jutting" and looked into a valley that was full of winds, "not one wind but millions, small and large, light and smoke-hued." The evil winds of the world who kill thousands of people via typhoon and twister, offended that their secret lair had been discovered, followed Colt back home to the USA. Colt has had his house reinforced, and the wind batters it for several nights. At first Colt thinks the wind wants to destroy him, but he realizes it is trying to take him alive--it wants to integrate his mind or soul or whatever into its own, as he is the world expert on wind and countermeasures mankind can use to defend itself from the wind, knowledge of value to this weird being! As his house begins to fall apart, Colt rushes to the cellar to hang himself, but he is too slow--the last scene of the story makes clear his consciousness is now one with that of the evil winds.
I found this story a little more entertaining than "There Was an Old Woman," but "The Wind" is obviously less original than that tale and lacks the distinctive Bradbury voice which is so evident in "There Was an Old Woman." Quite a few editors have reprinted "The Wind" in their anthologies, and the story was even included in a 1977 issue of the fanzine The Diversifier.
If you read the "October Country" version of "The Wind" will find a big different version. More "heminway - esque", superior to the original on Weird Tales.
ReplyDeleteBest regards from Argentina, a science fiction country.
Ahh, interesting! Maybe I should check that out!
DeleteThanks for stopping by--it is fun to hear that people from around the globe are reading my blog!