Thomas Wolfe’s “The Far and the Near” is so short and so simple I wondered whether my high school English teacher would have counted it as a short story.
The problem is with the plot. If it has one, it amounts to this: A railroad engineer passes a farm just after 2 p.m. on his daily run and always blows the whistle. A woman always waves back. The woman has a little girl who waves too. During the story, the little girl grows into a woman. Both women always wave.
When the engineer retires, he decides that he must visit the farm. Instead of finding two women, smiling and waving, he sees two women, suspicious and fearful.
He walked away down the path and then along the road toward town, and suddenly he knew that he was an old man. His heart, which had been brave and confident when it looked along the familiar vista of the rails, was now sick with doubt and horror as it saw the strange and unsuspected visage of the earth which had always been within a stone’s throw of him, and which he had never seen or known.
A lot of what we experience about a place depends on context. When the context changes, we feel lost — we feel that we have looked without seeing, that we’ve studied a place and somehow don’t know it at all.
• Source: I found a copy of the story at the Thomas Wolfe Memorial:
https://wolfememorial.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/The-Far-and-the-Near.pdf