This story continues the story of those who call Port William, Kentucky home, sharing the life and thoughts of Hannah Coulter on her life, her family and the ever-changing world.
Growing up during the Depression years on a farm, Hannah had learned how to make do with little, and her dreams for the future were not dreams filled with an easy life of wealth, but with more realistic expectations. After finishing high school, she finds a job working for an attorney as his secretary. Time passes and she marries Virgil, becomes pregnant with their daughter, and not long after, loses her husband in the Battle of the Bulge.
’His story after the war, and especially after 1948, I know because it is my story, too. It is our story, for I lived it with him. It is the story of our place in our time: our farm of “150 acres more or less,” as the deed says, on the ridges and slopes above the creek known as Sand Ripple that runs down from Port William to the river. Nathan bought it in that year of 1948, hoping I would marry him, or in case I would, thinking he would need a place of his own to take me to.
Our story is the story our place: how we married and came here, moved into this old house and made it livable again while we lived in it; how we raised our children here, and worked and hoped and paid the mortgage, and made a pretty good farm of a place that had been hard used and then almost forgotten; how we continued making our life here day by day, after the children were gone; how we kept this place alive and plentiful, seeing it always as a place beyond the war--Nathan seeing it, as I now think, as if from inside a fire, how we got old, and Nathan died, and I have remained on for yet a little while to see how such lives as ours and such a place may fare in a bad time.
This is the story of my life, that while I lived it it weighed upon me and pressed against me and filled all my senses to overflowing and now is like a dream dreamed. So close to the end now, what do I look forward to? “Today shalt thou be with me in paradise.” Some morning, I pray, I’ll have the good happiness of “the man who woke up the dead.” who Burley Coulter used to tell about.
This is my story, my giving of thanks.’
After the end of the war, and time has passed, Nathan enters her life and slowly begins to enter her heart, as well. Eventually, they marry, and their family increases over time.
Theirs isn’t an easy life, but it has its own rewards. A gentle peacefulness, a willingness to care for each other in ways that don’t often involve grandiose gestures, but small, meaningful ones.
’When you are old you can look back and see yourself when you were young. It is almost like looking down from Heaven. And you see yourself as a young woman, just a big girl really, half awake to the world. You see yourself happy, holding in your arms a good, decent, gentle, beloved young man with the blood keen in his veins, who before long is going to disappear, just disappear, into a storm of hate and flying metal and fire. And you don’t know it.’
A moving, simple, and simply beautiful elegy to another time, a way of life that seems to have all but disappeared.