İNGİLİZCE KISA HİKAYE
O'Henry
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Living in early 20th century Greenwich Village are two young
women artists, Sue and Johnsy (familiar for Joanna). They met in
May, six months previously, and decided to share a studio
apartment. Stalking their artist colony in November is "Mr.
Pneumonia." The story begins as Johnsy, near death from
pneumonia, lies in bed waiting for the last leaf of an ivy vine
on the brick wall she spies through her window to fall.
"I’m tired of thinking," says Johnsy. "I want to turn loose my
hold on everything, and go sailing down, down, just like one of
those poor, tired leaves"(16). However, an unexpected hero
arrives to save Johnsy. It’s not the brusque doctor who gives
her only one in ten chances to survive, raising them to one in
five if Sue can get her to hope for something important like a
man, not her true desire to "paint the Bay of Naples some day"
(14).
Mr. Behrman, an old man who lives in the apartment below Sue and
Johnsy, who enjoys drinking, works sometimes as an artist’s
model, and as yet has made no progress over the past 40 years on
painting his own masterpiece, becomes in typical O. Henry
fashion the hero. The evidence of his heroics are found the day
before he dies from pneumonia: outside Johnsy’s window are a
ladder, a lantern still lighted "some scattered brushes, and a
palette with green and yellow colors mixed on it . . . it’s
Behrman’s masterpiece--he painted it [a leaf] there the night
that the last leaf fell"(19), Sue informs Johnsy.
There are two interesting things I found in this story in
addition to the general theme of death and dying. First, there
is the ambiguity surrounding the relationship of the two women.
I believe that they may have been lovers, but it was something
that the author only felt comfortable hinting at.
Second, I’ve been fascinated for years about the number of
persons, especially among the "house cases" I’ve seen on rounds,
who have been cared for by neighbors. In this story, the
neighbor, Mr. Behrman, makes the ultimate sacrifice through his
neighborly caregiving. I’m convinced that there are many persons
whose lives are saved (or at least the quality of their lives
are significantly improved) by caring acts of friends and
neighbors.
