For this week's post, I
read Tobias Wolff's story "Say Yes." This is a story about a
disagreement about interracial marriage, and it stirred up some powerful
feelings in me to the point that I'll be writing about them more in depth for
another project for my class, which I may post on here later.
In the short story, an
older married couple is washing dishes when the wife asks the husband what he
thinks about interracial marriage. He says that "all things
considered" he thinks it is a bad idea. His wife persists in asking him
why he thinks so even as he tries to change the subject.
He denies being racist,
saying "I went to school with blacks and I've worked with blacks and lived
on the same street with blacks, and we've always gotten along just fine. I
don't need you coming along now and implying I'm racist."
As his wife begins to get
upset, he tries to explain what he’s thinking.
“They don’t come from the
same culture as we do,” he says – like that makes it okay.
This heats up the
conversation. Then the wife accidentally cuts her thumb on a knife. The
husband, who already sees himself as incredibly considerate for helping with the
dishes, runs up stairs to get a Band-Aid in order to rescue her.
While he holds her thumb
to bandage it, she looks accusingly at him.
“So,” she says, “you
wouldn’t have married me if I’d been black.” She says this as a statement. Not
a question. She already knows she’s right.
He attempts to tell her
she’s being ridiculous.
“But say that I’m black,
but still me, and we fall in love. Will you marry me?” his wife asks.
He thinks about it, and
he responds, “Jesus, Ann. All right – no.”
She stalks out of the
room. To atone for his sins, he mops the floors and takes out the garbage.
After some time to cool
down, he says he’ll make it up to her. “I’ll marry you,” he whispers.
“We’ll see,” she says.
“Go on to bed.”
Now the story takes a
mysterious turn. The tone of the final paragraph is eerie.
“Then he heard a movement
across the room. He sat up but couldn’t see a thing. The room was silent. His
heart pounded as it had on their first night together, as it still did when he
woke at a noise in the darkness and waited to hear it again – the sound of
someone moving through the house, a stranger.”
I think the ending of the
story implies that their strong moral separation has erased all of their years
together and made them strangers. A feeling I can identify with all too well.
Wow! This made me want to read the story myself. Great job!
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