Read the collected works of Willa Cather.
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My Antoniaby Willa Cather
(1875-1947)
Introduction
| Book 1
- The Shimerdas - Chapters: 1 | 2
| 3 | 4
| 5 | 6
| 7 | 8
| 9 | 10
| 11 | 12
| 13 | 14
| 15 | 16
| 17 | 18
| 19 | Book 2 - The Hired Girls
- Chapters: 1 | 2
| 3 | 4
| 5 | 6
| 7 | 8
| 9 | 10
| 11 | 12
| 13 | 14
| 15 | Book 3 - Lena Lingard - Chapters:
1 | 2
| 3 | 4
| Book 4 - The Pioneer Woman's Story - Chapters: 1
| 2 | 3
| 4 | Book 5 - Cuzak's Boys - Chapters:
1 | 2
| 3 |
Book 3: Lena Lingard
Chapter 1
AT THE UNIVERSITY I had the good fortune to come immediately
under the influence of a brilliant and inspiring young scholar. Gaston Cleric
had arrived in Lincoln only a few weeks earlier than I, to begin his work as
head of the Latin Department. He came West at the suggestion of his physicians,
his health having been enfeebled by a long illness in Italy. When I took my
entrance examinations, he was my examiner, and my course was arranged under
his supervision.
I did not go home for my first summer vacation, but stayed in
Lincoln, working off a year's Greek, which had been my only condition on entering
the freshman class. Cleric's doctor advised against his going back to New England,
and, except for a few weeks in Colorado, he, too, was in Lincoln all that summer.
We played tennis, read, and took long walks together. I shall always look back
on that time of mental awakening as one of the happiest in my life. Gaston Cleric
introduced me to the world of ideas; when one first enters that world everything
else fades for a time, and all that went before is as if it had not been. Yet
I found curious survivals; some of the figures of my old life seemed to be waiting
for me in the new.
In those days there were many serious young men among the students
who had come up to the university from the farms and the little towns scattered
over the thinly settled state. Some of those boys came straight from the cornfields
with only a summer's wages in their pockets, hung on through the four years,
shabby and underfed, and completed the course by really heroic self-sacrifice.
Our instructors were oddly assorted; wandering pioneer school-teachers, stranded
ministers of the Gospel, a few enthusiastic young men just out of graduate schools.
There was an atmosphere of endeavour, of expectancy and bright hopefulness about
the young college that had lifted its head from the prairie only a few years
before.
Our personal life was as free as that of our instructors. There
were no college dormitories; we lived where we could and as we could. I took
rooms with an old couple, early settlers in Lincoln, who had married off their
children and now lived quietly in their house at the edge of town, near the
open country. The house was inconveniently situated for students, and on that
account I got two rooms for the price of one. My bedroom, originally a linen-closet,
was unheated and was barely large enough to contain my cot-bed, but it enabled
me to call the other room my study. The dresser, and the great walnut wardrobe
which held all my clothes, even my hats and shoes, I had pushed out of the way,
and I considered them non-existent, as children eliminate incongruous objects
when they are playing house. I worked at a commodious green-topped table placed
directly in front of the west window which looked out over the prairie. In the
corner at my right were all my books, in shelves I had made and painted myself.
On the blank wall at my left the dark, old-fashioned wall-paper was covered
by a large map of ancient Rome, the work of some German scholar. Cleric had
ordered it for me when he was sending for books from abroad. Over the bookcase
hung a photograph of the Tragic Theatre at Pompeii, which he had given me from
his collection.
When I sat at work I half-faced a deep, upholstered chair which
stood at the end of my table, its high back against the wall. I had bought it
with great care. My instructor sometimes looked in upon me when he was out for
an evening tramp, and I noticed that he was more likely to linger and become
talkative if I had a comfortable chair for him to sit in, and if he found a
bottle of Benedictine and plenty of the kind of cigarettes he liked, at his
elbow. He was, I had discovered, parsimonious about small expenditures-- a trait
absolutely inconsistent with his general character. Sometimes when he came he
was silent and moody, and after a few sarcastic remarks went away again, to
tramp the streets of Lincoln, which were almost as quiet and oppressively domestic
as those of Black Hawk. Again, he would sit until nearly midnight, talking about
Latin and English poetry, or telling me about his long stay in Italy.
I can give no idea of the peculiar charm and vividness of his
talk. In a crowd he was nearly always silent. Even for his classroom he had
no platitudes, no stock of professorial anecdotes. When he was tired, his lectures
were clouded, obscure, elliptical; but when he was interested they were wonderful.
I believe that Gaston Cleric narrowly missed being a great poet, and I have
sometimes thought that his bursts of imaginative talk were fatal to his poetic
gift. He squandered too much in the heat of personal communication. How often
I have seen him draw his dark brows together, fix his eyes upon some object
on the wall or a figure in the carpet, and then flash into the lamplight the
very image that was in his brain. He could bring the drama of antique life before
one out of the shadows--white figures against blue backgrounds. I shall never
forget his face as it looked one night when he told me about the solitary day
he spent among the sea temples at Paestum: the soft wind blowing through the
roofless columns, the birds flying low over the flowering marsh grasses, the
changing lights on the silver, cloud-hung mountains. He had wilfully stayed
the short summer night there, wrapped in his coat and rug, watching the constellations
on their path down the sky until `the bride of old Tithonus' rose out of the
sea, and the mountains stood sharp in the dawn. It was there he caught the fever
which held him back on the eve of his departure for Greece and of which he lay
ill so long in Naples. He was still, indeed, doing penance for it.
I remember vividly another evening, when something led us to
talk of Dante's veneration for Virgil. Cleric went through canto after canto
of the `Commedia,' repeating the discourse between Dante and his `sweet teacher,'
while his cigarette burned itself out unheeded between his long fingers. I can
hear him now, speaking the lines of the poet Statius, who spoke for Dante: `I
was famous on earth with the name which endures longest and honours most. The
seeds of my ardour were the sparks from that divine flame whereby more than
a thousand have kindled; I speak of the "Aeneid," mother to me and
nurse to me in poetry.'
Although I admired scholarship so much in Cleric, I was not
deceived about myself; I knew that I should never be a scholar. I could never
lose myself for long among impersonal things. Mental excitement was apt to send
me with a rush back to my own naked land and the figures scattered upon it.
While I was in the very act of yearning toward the new forms that Cleric brought
up before me, my mind plunged away from me, and I suddenly found myself thinking
of the places and people of my own infinitesimal past. They stood out strengthened
and simplified now, like the image of the plough against the sun. They were
all I had for an answer to the new appeal. I begrudged the room that Jake and
Otto and Russian Peter took up in my memory, which I wanted to crowd with other
things. But whenever my consciousness was quickened, all those early friends
were quickened within it, and in some strange way they accompanied me through
all my new experiences. They were so much alive in me that I scarcely stopped
to wonder whether they were alive anywhere else, or how.
Introduction
| Book 1
- The Shimerdas - Chapters: 1 | 2
| 3 | 4
| 5 | 6
| 7 | 8
| 9 | 10
| 11 | 12
| 13 | 14
| 15 | 16
| 17 | 18
| 19 | Book 2 - The Hired Girls
- Chapters: 1 | 2
| 3 | 4
| 5 | 6
| 7 | 8
| 9 | 10
| 11 | 12
| 13 | 14
| 15 | Book 3 - Lena Lingard - Chapters:
1 | 2
| 3 | 4
| Book 4 - The Pioneer Woman's Story - Chapters: 1
| 2 | 3
| 4 | Book 5 - Cuzak's Boys - Chapters:
1 | 2
| 3 |