The Stoat

by

John McGahern

The narrator is a medical student who is spending August in Strandhill with his father and Miss McCabe, his father’s girlfriend. The narrator claims that he’s not upset about his father moving on from his deceased mother and finds it silly that his father has him acting as a chaperone to his courtship with Miss McCabe. The narrator was both amused and horrified by his father’s method of looking for a wife by placing an ad in the newspaper, though he didn’t openly express this. Indeed, throughout the story, the narrator tells his father what he wants to hear rather than giving his honest opinion. The father and son struggle to genuinely connect, and as a result, the narrator sees his uncle as a sort of stand-in father figure whom he can confide in. The narrator clearly admires his uncle, who is a surgeon, but also finds him intimidating. However, the narrator is defensive of his father when his uncle criticizes him, suggesting that he cares for his father despite their strained relationship and perhaps wants to be closer to him. Nevertheless, when Miss McCabe has a health scare and his father decides to sneak away and leave her and the narrator behind, the narrator is ashamed of him and comes to the conclusion that his father is like the rabbit he founded while playing golf. Attracted by its cries, the narrator discovered the rabbit fatally wounded by a stoat. After imagining the rabbit’s journey to this point, the narrator killed the rabbit out of mercy, and he imagines his father on the same journey of fleeing from the inevitable (death).

The Narrator Quotes in The Stoat

The The Stoat quotes below are all either spoken by The Narrator or refer to The Narrator. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Fear, Flight, and Futility Theme Icon
).
The Stoat Quotes

I was standing over the rabbit when I saw the grey body of the stoat slithering away like a snake into the long grass. The rabbit still did not move, but its crying ceased…It did not stir when I stooped. Never before did I hold such pure terror in my hands, the body trembling in a rigidity of terror. I stilled it with a single stroke.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Narrator’s Father, Miss McCabe
Related Symbols: The Stoat , The Rabbit
Page Number: 152
Explanation and Analysis:

Then as I crossed to the next tee I saw the stoat cross the fairway following me still…As I made my way back to the cottage my father rented every August, twice I saw the stoat, following the rabbit still, though it was dead.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Narrator’s Father, Miss McCabe
Related Symbols: The Stoat , The Rabbit
Page Number: 152
Explanation and Analysis:

All night the rabbit must have raced from warren to warren, the stoat on its trail. Plumper rabbits had crossed the stoat’s path but it would not be deflected; it had marked down this one rabbit to kill. No matter how fast the rabbit raced, the stoat was still on its trail, and at last the rabbit sat down in terror and waited for the stoat to slither up and cut the vein behind the ear. I had heard it crying as the stoat was drinking its blood.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Narrator’s Father, Miss McCabe
Related Symbols: The Stoat , The Rabbit
Page Number: 152
Explanation and Analysis:

My father was reading the death notices on the back of the Independent on the lawn of the cottage. He always read the death notices first, and then, after he had exhausted the news and studied the ads for teachers, he’d pore over the death notices again.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Narrator’s Father, Miss McCabe, The Narrator’s Mother
Related Symbols: The Rabbit
Page Number: 152
Explanation and Analysis:

“Another colleague who was in Drumcondra the same year as myself has gone to his reward”

…I held up the rabbit by way of answer.

“Where did you get that?”

“A stoat was killing it on the links.”

“That’s what they do. Why did you bring it back?”

“I just brought it. The crying gave me a fright.”

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Narrator’s Father (speaker), Miss McCabe
Related Symbols: The Stoat , The Rabbit
Page Number: 153
Explanation and Analysis:

At their age, or any age, I thought their formality strange, and I an even stranger chaperone.

“Why do you want me to come with you?” I had asked.

“It’d look more decent – proper – and I’d be grateful if you’d come. Next year you’ll be a qualified doctor with a life of your own.”

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Narrator’s Father (speaker), Miss McCabe
Page Number: 153
Explanation and Analysis:

“Would you take it very much to heart if I decided to marry again?”

“Of course I wouldn’t. Why do you ask?”

“I was afraid you might be affronted by the idea of another woman holding the position your dear mother held.”

“Mother is dead. You should do exactly as you want to.”

“You have no objections, then?”

“None whatever”

“I wouldn’t even think of going ahead it you’d any objections.”

“Well, you can rest assured, then. I have none. Have you someone in mind?”

“No I don’t.”

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Narrator’s Father (speaker), The Narrator’s Mother
Page Number: 153
Explanation and Analysis:

He offered me a sheet of paper on which was written in his clear, careful hand: Teacher, fifty-two. Seeks companionship. View marriage. “What do you think of it?” he asked.

“I think it’s fine.” Dismay cancelled a sudden wild impulse to roar with laughter.

“I’ll send it off, then, so.”

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Narrator’s Father (speaker)
Page Number: 153-154
Explanation and Analysis:

After about a month he showed me the response. A huge pile of envelopes lay on his desk. I was amazed. I had no idea that so much unfulfilled longing wandered around in the world. Replies came from…childless widows, widows with small children, house owners, car owners…and a woman who had left at twenty years of age to work at Fords of Dagenham who wanted to come home.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Narrator’s Father
Page Number: 154
Explanation and Analysis:

“My God, if you hang round long enough you see everything.”

My uncle combed his fingers through his long greying hair. He was a distinguished man and his confidence and energy could be intimidating. “At least, if he does get married, it’ll get him off your back.”

“He’s all right,” I replied defensively. “I’m well used to him by now.”

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Narrator’s Uncle (speaker), The Narrator’s Father, Miss McCabe
Related Symbols: The Rabbit
Page Number: 155
Explanation and Analysis:

I met Miss McCabe in the lobby of the Ormond Hotel…They sat in front of me, very stiffly and properly, like two well-dressed, well-behaved children seeking adult approval. She was small and frail and nervous…Though old, she was like a girl, in love with being in love…

“Well, what was your impression?” he asked me when we were alone.

“I think Miss McCabe is a decent, good person,” I said uncomfortably.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Narrator’s Father (speaker), Miss McCabe
Page Number: 155
Explanation and Analysis:

“Do you think she has her feet on the ground?”

“I think you are very lucky to have found her,” I said. The way he looked at me told me he was far from convinced that he had been lucky.

The next morning he looked at me in a more dissatisfied manner still when a girl came from the Seaview to report that Miss McCabe had a mild turn during the night... The look on his face told me that he was more than certain now that she was not rooted enough.

“Will you come with me?”

“It is yourself she wants to see.”

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Narrator’s Father (speaker), Miss McCabe
Page Number: 156
Explanation and Analysis:

“What are you going to do?”

“Clear out,” he said. “There is no other way.”

As if all the irons were suddenly being truly struck and were flowing from all directions to the heart of the green, I saw that my father had started to run like the poor rabbit. He would have been better off if he could have tried to understand something, even though it would get him off nothing…Because I was ashamed of him I carried everything he wanted to the car.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Narrator’s Father (speaker), Miss McCabe
Related Symbols: The Rabbit
Page Number: 156-157
Explanation and Analysis:
Get the entire The Stoat LitChart as a printable PDF.
The Stoat PDF

The Narrator Character Timeline in The Stoat

The timeline below shows where the character The Narrator appears in The Stoat. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
The Stoat
Fear, Flight, and Futility Theme Icon
The narrator is golfing when he hears crying coming from the long grass next to the course.... (full context)
Fear, Flight, and Futility Theme Icon
The narrator goes back to the golf course with the rabbit, leaving its body at the edge... (full context)
Fear, Flight, and Futility Theme Icon
Relationships and Loneliness  Theme Icon
Communication and Dishonesty Theme Icon
The narrator imagines that the rabbit had been running from the stoat all night. Despite fatter rabbits... (full context)
Fear, Flight, and Futility Theme Icon
When the narrator gets back to the cottage, his father is reading the newspaper, specifically the death notices... (full context)
Relationships and Loneliness  Theme Icon
Communication and Dishonesty Theme Icon
...they will have for dinner, reminding him that Miss McCabe is coming over that evening. The narrator says they will not eat the rabbit and explains the dinner menu. Miss McCabe is... (full context)
Relationships and Loneliness  Theme Icon
Communication and Dishonesty Theme Icon
When his father asked him to come to Strandhill in August, the narrator asked why his father wanted him there. His father replied that his courtship would seem... (full context)
Relationships and Loneliness  Theme Icon
Communication and Dishonesty Theme Icon
...previous summer, his father had asked him if he would be hurt if he remarried. The narrator replied that he would not. His father was afraid he would be bothered by a... (full context)
Relationships and Loneliness  Theme Icon
The narrator forgets about it until his father presents him with the ad he is going to... (full context)
Relationships and Loneliness  Theme Icon
Communication and Dishonesty Theme Icon
That winter, the narrator sees his father often because he is meeting many of the interested women in Dublin,... (full context)
Relationships and Loneliness  Theme Icon
Communication and Dishonesty Theme Icon
Because he saw his father so much in the winter, the narrator does not have to go home for Easter, and instead he spends it with his... (full context)
Relationships and Loneliness  Theme Icon
Communication and Dishonesty Theme Icon
His uncle says that eventually you see everything, and the narrator describes his uncle as a man with long greying hair who is distinguished and confident... (full context)
Relationships and Loneliness  Theme Icon
Communication and Dishonesty Theme Icon
The narrator describes how he met Miss McCabe. In a hotel lobby, his father and Miss McCabe... (full context)
Fear, Flight, and Futility Theme Icon
Relationships and Loneliness  Theme Icon
Prior to the rabbit incident, they had been in Strandhill for a week. The narrator has had three to four casual encounters with Miss McCabe thus far. She is enjoying... (full context)
Fear, Flight, and Futility Theme Icon
Relationships and Loneliness  Theme Icon
Communication and Dishonesty Theme Icon
Once Miss McCabe has returned to her hotel, his father asks the narrator what he thinks of her, asking if the narrator thinks “she has her feet on... (full context)
Fear, Flight, and Futility Theme Icon
Relationships and Loneliness  Theme Icon
Communication and Dishonesty Theme Icon
...plans for the future and decides the only solution is for him to “clear out.” The narrator realizes that his father is like the rabbit. The narrator asks where he will go... (full context)
Fear, Flight, and Futility Theme Icon
Relationships and Loneliness  Theme Icon
Communication and Dishonesty Theme Icon
His father says he hopes it doesn’t bother him that he is leaving. The narrator says it doesn’t. The narrator watches the car drive off. Once it is out of... (full context)