Appointment with Love
S. I. Kishor’s short story, “Appointment with Love” is about a blind date between a
soldier and a mystery woman writing to each other for thirteen months but never
seeing or hearing the voice of each other. Lieutenant Blandford longed for her
since he felt love through her faithful letters that encouraged him when he
desperately needed one. Miss Hollis Meynell wrote to him stating that love
should be based on honesty not on appearance. They planed to meet in Grand
Central Station, New York
City at 6:00 pm, identifying each other with a red rose
on her coat and the book “Of Human Bondage” in his hand. While Blandford was
eager to meet her with his heart pounding, Meynell tested him to see how he
would react if she were not a young good-looking lady. But he passed the
test.
I enjoyed this story because it ended surprisingly with a happy ending
that I didn’t expect until the last minute. The
author placed a foreshadowing, the turning point, at the very last. It makes for
readers to feel the impact more from the author’s main idea. This story is also
suitable nowadays because we can relate with our everyday lives that blind
chatting is common among computer users. The author purposely put the key word
“honest” through Meynell’s writing and showing
Blandford’s integrity to prove it even though
it came to him abruptly with the bitter disappointment. It implies that honesty
will pay off in good way.
In conclusion, keep the faith with integrity if you have an intense
aspirations for something, it will compensate you in most of the
times.
October 17, 2003
S. Rhee
Reading 52B
Appointment with
Love
S.I.
Kishor
Six minutes to six, said the great round clock over the
information booth in Grand Central Station. The tall young Army lieutenant
who had just come from the direction of the tracks lifted his sunburned face,
and his eyes narrowed to note the exact time. His heart was pounding with a
beat that shocked him because he could not control it. In six minutes, he
would see the woman who had filled such a special place in his life for the past
thirteen months, the woman he had never seen, yet whose written words had been
with him and sustained him unfailingly.
He placed himself as close as he
could to the information booth, just beyond the ring of people besieging the
clerks…
Lieutenant Blandford remembered one night in particular, the
worst of the fighting when his plane had been caught in the midst of a pack of
Zeros. He had seen the grinning face of one of the enemy pilots.
In
one of his letters, he had confessed to her that he often felt fear, and only a
few days before this battle, he had received her answer. "Of course you fear.
. . all brave men do. Didn't King David know fear? That's why he wrote the
Twenty-d Psalm. Next time you doubt yourself, I want you to hear my voice
reciting to you: 'Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of
death, I shall fear no evil, for Thou art with me'. . ." And he had
remembered; he had heard her imagined voice, and it had renewed his strength
and skill.
Now he was going to hear her real voice. Four minutes to six.
His face grew sharp.
Under the immense, starred roof, people were walking
fast, like threads of color being woven into a gray web. A girl passed
close to him, and Lieutenant Blandford started. She was wearing a red flower
in her suit lapel, but it was a crimson sweet pea, not the little red rose
they had agreed upon. Besides, the girl was too young, about eighteen,
whereas Hollis Meynell had frankly told him she was thirty. "Well, what of
it?" He had answered. "I'm thirty-two." He was twenty-nine.
His mind
went back to that book-the book the Lord Himself must have put into his hands
out of the hundreds of Army library books sent to the Florida training
camp. Of Human Bondage, it was' and throughout the book were notes in a
woman's writing. He had always hated that writing-in habit, but these remarks
were different. He had never believed that a woman could see into a man's
heart so tenderly, so understandingly. Her name was on the bookplate: Hollis
Meynell. He had got hold of a New York City telephone book and found her
address. He had written, she hand answered. Next day he had been shipped out
, but they had gone on writing.
For thirteen months, she had faithfully
replied, and more than replied. When his letters did not arrive, she wrote
anyway, and now he believed he loved her, and she loved him.
But she had
refused all his pleas to send him her photograph. That seemed rather bad, of
course. But she had explained: "If your feeling for me has any reality, any
honest basis, what I look like won't matter. Suppose I'm beautiful. I'd
always be haunted by the feeling that you had been taking a chance on just that,
and that kind of love would disgust me. Suppose I'm plain (and you must admit
that this is more likely) then I'd always fear that you were going on writing
to me only because you were lonely and had no one else. No, don't ask for my
picture. When you come to New York, you shall see me and then you shall make
your decision. Remember, both of us are free to stop or to go on after
that-whichever we choose. . . ."
One minute to six. . . he pulled hard on
a cigarette.
Then Lieutenant Blandford's heart leaped higher than his
plane had ever done.
A young woman was coming toward him. Her figure was
long and slim; her blond hair lay back in curls from her delicate
ears. Her eyes were blue as flowers, her lips and chin had a gentle
firmness. In her pale green suit she was like springtime come
alive.
He started toward her, entirely forgetting to notice that she was
wearing no rose, and as he moved, a small, provocative smile curved her
lips.
"Going my way, soldier?" she murmured.
Uncontrollably, he
made one step closer to her. Then he saw Hollis Meynell.
She was standing
almost directly behind the girl, a woman well past forty her graying hair
tucked under a worn hat. She was more then plump; her thick-ankled feet were
thrust into low-heeled shoes. But she wore a red rose in the rumpled lapel of
her brown coat.
The girl in the green suit was walking quickly
away.
Blandford felt as though he were being split in two, so keen was
his desire to follow the girl, yet so deep was his longing for the woman whose
spirit had companioned and upheld his own; and there she stood. Her pale,
plump face was gentle and sensible; he could see that now. Her gray eyes had
a warm, kindly twinkle.
Lieutenant Blandford did not hesitate. His
fingers gripped the small worn, blue leather copy of Of Human bondagewhich was
to identify him to her. This would not be love, but it would be something
precious, something perhaps even rarer than love-a friendship for which he
had been and must ever be grateful. . . He squared his broad shoulders,
saluted and held the book out toward the woman, although even while he spoke he
felt choked by the bitterness of his disappointment.
"I'm Lieutenant John
Blandford, and you-you are Miss Meynell. I'm so glad you could meet me.
May-may I take you to dinner?"
The woman's face broadened in a tolerant
smile. "I don't know what this is all about, son," she answered. "That
young lady in the green suit-the one who just went by-begged me to wear this
rose on my coat. And she said that if you asked me to go out with you, I
should tell you that she's waiting for you in the big restaurant across the
street. She said it was some kind of a test. I've got two boys with Uncle
Sam myself, so I didn't mind to oblige you."
|