Literary San Antonio

WILLIAM SYDNEY PORTER (O. HENRY) 
Early O. Henry Photo
Early photograph of Porter (O. Henry)

Early Copy of The Rolling Stone
Preserved copy of The Rolling Stone,exhibited in restored O. Henry House on Dolorosa St.

William Sydney Porter (O. Henry) had first come to Texas in 1882, the same year that Oscar Wilde visited the city in June of that year. Porter spent most of his Texas residence in Austin, but he made visits to San Antonio, such as in late 1894 and 1895, at approximately the same time that Stephen Crane was here. As in the case of Wilde, Porter was patronized by the local journalist H. Ryder-Taylor, who convinced O. Henry that he could make his journal, The Rolling Stone, a national success if he would bring it to San Antonio and enter into a partnership with Ryder-Taylor (Long 74-75). Porter's dealings with Ryder-Taylor, unfortunately, were a mistake, and O. Henry's posthumously published collection of sketches and stories, Rolling Stones (1912), for the most part detracted from his reputation, although the work does contain one or two good stories, such as "A Fog in Santone" (Long 135).
Early Photo of Commerce St. Bridge
Early twentieth-century photo of Commerce Street Bridge (Institute of Texan Cultures)

Augusta St. Bridge
Augusta Street Bridge

Johnson St. Bridge
Johnson Street Bridge in King William Historic District, which contains one of the spires of the original Commerce Street Bridge

While a number of O. Henry stories and sketches feature San Antonio, "Fog" is one of only two in the major collections that use the city as their complete setting, the other being "The Enchanted Kiss." Of the two San Antonio stories, "A Fog in Santone" and "The Enchanted Kiss," the former provides the reader a clearer insight into William Sydney Porter as an author writing in the 1890's realistic-naturalistic mode, regardless of the fact that he tended to sentimentalize the fallen woman theme in a manner similar to Crane's "Maggie: A Girl of the Streets." In most other respects the story is pessimistic, which partly explains the ten or more rejection slips this story received before eventually being published in The Cosmopolitan in October 1912 (Current-Garcia 36). The narrative also ironically revisits the role of San Antonio as a refuge for tuberculosis sufferers in the nineteenth century, for in this case the consumptive protagonist --one Goodall of Memphis among the "three thousand invalids . . . hibernating in the town"--opens the story in a drugstore, where he is buying morphine tablets to end his far-gone suffering (Rolling Stones 100). After completing his purchase, he wanders out into the late-night fog and pauses upon "a little iron bridge, one of the score or more in the heart of the city, under which the small tortuous river flows" (101). Noticing that the guys of the iron bridge rattle ominously to the strain of his wracking cough, he moves on to a nearby "glittering bar," where he encounters, among others, "a middle-aged man, well-dressed, with a lined and sunken face," in contrast to Goodall himself, "a mere boy who is chiefly eyes and overcoat" (103).
Early Postcard of San Pedro Park
Early postcard of San Pedro Park, dating from about the time of O. Henry's "A Fog in San Tone"
After disposing of enough Kentucky whiskey "to floor a dozen cowboys" (104), the two men separate, the older invalid, Hurd of Toledo, having arranged for a carriage ride out to San Pedro Springs at 11:00 P.M. to meet "a fellow from Noo York . . . and the Castillo sisters at Rhinegelder's Garden" (105).
Liberty Bar near San Pedro Park
Liberty Bar on E. Josephine St., formerly a German beer hall, located near San Pedro Park

With these depressing thoughts in mind, Young Goodall makes his way, perhaps for one more fling before ending it all, to a German beer hall, where he encounters a young woman, pensive and alone, waiting to ply her trade as a prostitute. However, the nineteen-year-old Goodall, whose youthful beauty the "terrible god Phthisis" (106) enhances before destroying, awakens a feeling of compassion in the young woman. Her "Eve-like comeliness" and floor-length hair remind the narrator of the Lorelei from German folklore (107). Having long since grown weary of "Texas, tarantulas, and cowboys" (108), the lovely Miss Rosa becomes fascinated with the intense young sufferer from Memphis. Before long Goodall has revealed to her his thirty-six quarter grains of morphine, more than enough to end his worries, but after spending an hour in her company he discovers that he would prefer to keep on living. Placing an arm around his neck and kissing him on the cheek, Rosa sends young Goodall away, his innocence intact and his will to live so strongly renewed that he leaves the packet of morphine grains behind.
O. Henry House at Former Location
Henry House at former location on grounds of old Lone Star Hall of Horns

Although not as morbid as "A Fog in Santone," O. Henry's other San Antonio story, "The Enchanted Kiss," does not offer a much brighter view of human nature--Hispanic or Anglo--, it also having been written while Porter was in prison for embezzling bank funds. The plot centers around a young man named Sam Tansey, "a shallow youth of twenty-three, with an over-modest demeanor and scant vocabulary" (Complete Works, 1:478). His menial position as a drugstore clerk becomes more interesting in light of the fact Porter had held such a position during his own youth. Tansey's shyness is complicated by his secret adoration of Miss Katie Peek, the attractive daughter of Captain Peek, who owns the boarding house in which Tansey and several other young men reside.
O. Henry House at New Location
O. Henry House at new downtown location on Dolorosa St.

Early Photo of Ursuline Convent
Early photo of old Ursuline Convent (DRT Library)

Ursuline Convent (Southwest School of Art and Craft) Today

Ursuline Convent (Southwest School of Art and Craft) Today
Two present views of Ursuline Convent (Southwest School of Art and Craft)

Unable to bear the frustration of his suppressed emotion and the teasing of the other boarders, on one particular evening Tansey takes refuge in a nearby saloon where he makes the mistake as an unexperienced drinker of consuming "three absinthe anisettes" within a few minutes' time (479). Coming out of the saloon more than a little confused, he spurns the direction of the Peek boarding house and ventures down an unfamiliar street, until it comes suddenly to an end "(as many streets do in the Spanish-built, archaic town of Santone)" (480), the narrator parenthetically adds. Actually, Tansey finds himself directly in front of "the convent of Santa Mercedes, with which ancient and bulky pile he was better familiar from different coigns of view" (480). In reality, this structure could only have been the old Ursuline Convent, located on what is now the north side of downtown San Antonio. Having been built for a group of French nuns from New Orleans during the mid-nineteenth century, it had been praised by Sydney Lanier as one of the more impressive structures in the city. But for O. Henry the quaint old limestone building functioned simply as a kind of gothic setting in which to fashion the remaining details of the story.

At this point Tansey, feeling the full effects of the absinthe, falls into a drunken sleep and apparently dreams, much like Hawthorne's Goodman Brown, the subsequent details of the plot. Predictably, his somnolent fantasy makes him the hero of a wild scene in which he rescues Katie Peek from her own father, who has cruelly determined to sell his own daughter, with the assistance of an ominous Mexican dwarf. To complete the transaction, the cold-hearted father must take his desperate daughter to the old Military Plaza and deliver her to one Ramon Torres, the proprietor of a food stand.

Rear View of San Fernando Cathedral
Rear view of San Fernando Cathedral from east side of Military Plaza

It is the Military Plaza where the gothic elements of Tansey's fantasy become even more bizarre when the reader learns that Ramon Torres is exactly 403 years old, had come to Mexico with Cortes in 1519 [sic] at the age of twenty-three, had come to "thees country" in 1715, had seen the Alamo "reduced," and has maintained his longevity, as he explains to Tansey, by devouring "the flesh young and tender. That ees the secret. Everee month you must eat it, having care to do so before the moon is full, and you will not die any time" (485).
Spanish Governor's Palace
Spanish Governor's Palace, located on northwest corner of Military Plaza

Of course, the specific young virgin to be cannibalized is none other than Katie Peek, whose father has sold her to Torres for one thousand dollars and whose desperate screams bring Sam Tansey to her rescue. In the ensuing struggle, the 403-year-old Torres transforms suddenly into a screaming mummy and conveniently dies, not because of Tansey's heroics but because Torres' aged hag of a wife has tricked him--out of jealousy and spite--into waiting one night too long to prepare his human chile con carne. She also manages to plunge a dagger into the back of the astonished Tansey, whose next sensation is to wake up on the same limestone steps in front of the "sleeping convent" of Santa Mercedes (Ursuline Academy/Southwest School of Art and Craft ), where he had earlier reclined to rest--and to dream.
Restored O. Henry House
O. Henry House at new location on Dolorosa St.
This preposterous combination of Mexican folklore and romantic gothicism ends rather mundanely and, to no one's surprise, with typical O. Henry irony. Sam Tansey returns crestfallen to the Peek boarding house, where Katie has been waiting for him, though she accuses him of waking her up in the middle of the night. Turning the valve of the oil lamp the wrong way accidentally on purpose, Katie coyly plunges them into darkness and coaxes Tansey up the stairway to her room by the light of a match which he has managed to strike. While the story seems to end happily enough with his beloved Katie in his arms, Tansey considers himself an unhappy and "recreant follower of Destiny," an anti-hero manipulated by a "maid with unkissed, curling, contemptuous lips" (487), in contrast to the gallant scapegoat hero he had drunkenly fantasized himself to be, unselfishly sacrificing himself to rescue the heroine of his dreams.

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