- Revelation (short story)
Infobox short story |
name = Revelation
title_orig =
translator =
author =Flannery O'Connor
country =United States
language = English
series =
genre =Southern Gothic
published_in = "Everything That Rises Must Converge "
publication_type = single author anthology
publisher =
media_type =
pub_date = 1965
english_pub_date =
preceded_by =
followed_by ="Revelation" is a
short story byFlannery O'Connor . It was published in 1965 her short story collection "Everything That Rises Must Converge ". O'Connor finished the collection during her final battle withlupus . She died in 1964, just before her final book was published. A devoutRoman Catholic , O'Connor often used religious themes in her work."All my stories are about the action of grace on a character who is not very willing to support it, but most people think of these stories as hard, hopeless and brutal." -
Flannery O'Connor Plot summary
Ruby Turpin, a very heavy-set woman, enters a crowded waiting room at a doctor's office accompanied by her husband Claude, who takes the last empty seat in the room. Almost immediately, Mrs. Turpin begins surveying the room and assessing the others seated around her. In her head, she labels each person: a pleasant woman, her daughter (an ugly girl with bad acne), a white trash woman and her sleeping son, and an old woman (the white trash's mother).
Mrs. Turpin strikes up a conversation with the pleasant woman about the importance of being refined and having a good disposition. They also talk about being grateful and how it is important to be thankful for the good things you have been given in life. The entire time they are conversing, the white trash woman repeatedly interjects comments that show her ignorance and lack of intelligence. The pleasant woman's daughter, Mary Grace, a fat ugly girl with bad skin, scowls at Mrs. Turpin and seems to grow angry during the course of the conversation.
All at once, Mary Grace hurls the book she is reading at Mrs. Turpin and lunges at her throat. The book, ironically titled "Human Development", strikes Mrs. Turpin above her eye. The girl is subdued by the doctor and nurse who call an ambulance to come and take the girl away. Before she leaves, she whispers a powerful message to Mrs.Turpin. Just loud enough for her to hear, she says, "Go back to hell where you belong, you old wart hog." Mrs. Turpin finds this comment very unsettling, and she wonders if it may have been a message from
God , who may be trying to intervene in her life. Still anxious, she returns home. While working on her farm she questions God aloud. As she contemplates the "message" he has sent her, she has a vision of the souls of the characters from the waiting room walking up to Heaven, and her soul last of all.Characters
* Mrs. Ruby Turpin
* Claud
* Pleasant Woman
* Mary Grace* White Trash Woman
* Old Woman
* Young Sleeping Child
* Negro Boy
* Doctor
* Nurse
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