"The Poison Ladies."

The narrator recalls an adventure, at four years old, in which he followed an older and cocky lad in hopes of seeing two old women who "poison you fust, then boil you arterwards." Following his companion's instructions, by "screw[ing] up my eyes like an owl's," the boy "sees" "the two old poison ladies, one with yellow eyes and the other with a green mouth and long white pigtails, both of them with awful ears, like sows." They run away in terror, only to relax in immense laughter upon reaching a big open field, chanting"We see the poison ladies!..They chased us! They nearly got us!....Everything Ben shouted I shouted too. When he laughed I laughed. What he believed I believed." In The Watercress Girl and Other Stories (1959), The Poison Ladies and Other Stories (1976). Reprinted in Snapshots: A Collection of Short Stories (1995).

ID: 
b255
Title: 
"The Poison Ladies."
Genre: 
Story
Page Count: 
10
Word Count: 
ca. 2470
Year of Publication: 
1959
Topic: 
Boyhood