Katherine Anne Porter's lead character in "Theft" has made a life of not being heard. "She had been pleased with the bleak humility... which ordered the movements of her life without regard to her will in the matter." <1> A splendid long sentence follows - fused with colons; a short paragraph really - expressing the character's sense of having been "robbed". Things, journeys, words, friendships and love: "all that she had had, and all that she had missed, were lost together, and were twice lost in the landslide of remembered losses."
II.
Humility is one thing. Cowardice, another. When her purse is stolen in the story, and she thinks she knows by whom, the woman's habit of mind is to let the matter pass, as "it would be impossible to get [the purse] back without a great deal of ridiculous excitement." An "almost murderous anger" changes her mind, however. She confronts the thief.
The lady is correct in her suspicions. A janitor has indeed taken the purse. But when the janitor explains her thieving, the woman is no longer so eager to getting the purse back. The janitor tells her that she had taken the purse for her niece, who's of marriage age, and "'needs pretty things'". The janitor's next words are piercing: "'You're a grown woman, you've had your chance, you ought to know how it is!'" The woman has sought to make a virtue out of her negligent attitude to life. Meanwhile, her losses have come to fester. We might infer that this sharpens a rage within her, that "almost murderous anger".
What we mustn't neglect to also notice is that when the lady finally does choose a battle, it is with a janitor, a person below her in class and power position. Porter bespeaks the political here, to relate the issues of agency and justice in modern society.
III.
The lady in the subtle weave of "Theft" is unnamed by Katherine Anne Porter. "I was right not to be afraid of any thief but myself, who will end by leaving me nothing." A proper name, not least.
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<1>Porter, Katherine Anne. "Theft". The Norton Anthology Of Short Fiction, 1986.
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