"Distant and Correct" The Double Life and The Professor's House
MICHAEL LEDDY
I'm trying to cut out all analysis, observation, description,
even the picture-making quality, in order to make things and people tell
their own story simply by juxtaposition, without any persuasion or explanation
on my part.
Just as if I put here on the table a green vase, and beside it a yellow
orange. Now, those two things affect each other. Side by side, they produce
a reaction which neither of them will produce alone. Why should I try to
say anything clever, or by any colorful rhetoric detract attention from
those two objects, the relation they have to each other and the effect
they have upon each other? I want the reader to see the orange and the
vase-beyond that, I am out of it.... One must choose one's audience, and
the audience I try to write for is the one interested in the effect the
green vase brings out in the orange, and the orange in the green vase.
An author who is "out of it," composition by juxtaposition: the
above credo seems quite clearly a document of modernism. One can be forgiven
for not recognizing these words as Willa Cather's, as given in a 192-1
interview with Latrobe Carroll (216). But seventy-odd years later the case
for Cather as a crypto-modernist, a modernist in nineteenth-century clothing,
seems rather persuasive.[1] And Cather's tendencies toward modernism are
nowhere clearer than in The Professor's House, a novel built upon
thematic, formal, and imagistic juxtapositions-of contemporary Midwestern
town and ancient cliff-dwelling culture, of third- and first-person narrative,
of not the green vase and the yellow orange but the dull silver and turquoise
of Rosamond Marsellus's bracelet.
Though Cather is elsewhere careful to distance herself from art that
too loudly proclaims a break with the old, her comments on the relation
of The Professor's House to visual art and sonata form are unmistakable
evidence of her own desire to make it new.[2] And her comment to Carroll
is particularly striking in that it points toward an idea of the novel
not as narrative but as image, as if placing objects against one another
in space were indeed a way to tell a (temporal) story. Thus it is altogether
appropriate that in its structure The Professor's House bears an
affinity to an overtly modern aesthetic of juxtaposition, namely, the idea
of the image propounded by the French poet Pierre Reverdy (1889-1960),
whose poetry forms a verbal approximation of the juxtapositions of cubist
painting and collage. In his 1918 essay "L'Image," Reverdy offers the following
statement on the image:
Elle ne peut naître d'une comparaison mais du rapprochement
de deux réalités plus ou moins éloignées.
Plus les rapports des deux réalités rapprochées
seront lointains et justes, plus l'image sera forte-plus elle aura de puissance
émotive et de réalité poétique.
Deux réalités qui n'ont aucun rapport ne peuvent se rapprocher
utilement. Il n'y a pas création d'image.
Deux réalités contraires ne se rapprochent pas. Elles
s'opposent. (73)[3]
Though Reverdy offers no explanatory examples, his emphasis is clear:
the image as an unexpected conjunction of likeness and unlikeness, a matter
neither of comparison (as in a metaphysical conceit, or more broadly, metaphor
itself, with tenor riding vehicle) nor of mere dissonance.
Reverdy's idea of the image offers a surprisingly exact way to think
about the relation between the two realities of The Professor's House,
an image in the form of a novel, a conjunction of two worlds that bear
"distant and correct" relations to one an other. More than a mere contrast
between noble past and degraded present, the relation between Cliff City
and Hamilton is of far greater emotive power, as each embodies a conflict
between the competing obligations of private life and communal life, the
double life that Cather describes in her essay "Katherine Mansfield":
One realizes that even in harmonious families there is this
double life: the group life, which is the one we can observe in our neighbour's
household, and, underneath, anothersecret and passionate and intense-which
is the real life that stamps the faces and gives character to the voices
of our friends. Always in his mind each member of these social units is
escaping, running away, trying to break the net which circumstances and
his own affections have woven about him. One realizes that human relationships
are the tragic necessity of human life; that they can never be wholly satisfactory,
that every ego is half the time greedily seeking them, and half the time
pulling away from them. (109)
What is most remarkable is that Cather establishes the relation
between Cliff City and Hamilton not only in theme but in abundant parallels
of detail that mark specific "distant and correct" correspondences. While
a handful of these details have been noted in passing in previous criticism,
their full presence in and relevance to The Professor's House have
not been fully recognized. Their multiplicity and resonance suggest that
in ways both large and small The Professor's House is indeed an
image in the form of a novel, a conjunction of two realities with surprising
correspondences.
We can begin mapping these correspondences with a single phrase from
Tom Outland, his characterization of the Blue Mesa as "a world above the
world" (240), a phrase that captures nicely the competing obligations of
the double life. Outland's words suggest communal aspiration: they are
typically read as a gloss on the lost culture of Cliff City, in accordance
with Father Duchene's comment on the Blue Mesa as a place where "humanity
has ... lifted itself out of mere brutality," the home of a "superior people"(221,
219). But the phrase "a world above the world" is also a fair description
of St. Peter's attic study, a place that offers him "isolation, insulation
from the engaging drama of domestic life," with no one "trampling over
him'! (26). To rest in a neat symmetry, however-Cliff City, group life;
attic study, private life-would be to ignore Cather's insistence on the
copresence of competing obligations. St. Peter's study is hardly "above"
the affairs of the world; it is in fact the site of numerous discussions
of familial discord and financial complications, often occasioned by unannounced
visitors. And Outland's characterization of "a world above the world" has
an ironic relation to his own presence on the Blue Mesa: his words refer
not to the culture of Cliff City but to the mesa itself ("the feeling of
being on the mesa, in a world above the world" [240]), soon to be
the site of his own isolation, his months of living alone in the cabin
that he built with Rodney Blake. Outland's insistence upon absolute principle
(the inviolability of Cliff City's artifacts, above commerce) and his forsaking
of Blake leave him in a solitary world above the world, having placed principle
above any consideration of Blake's reasons for selling the artifacts that
the two uncovered. As Outland himself recognizes, the pleasures of his
solitary months on the mesa involve a "heartlessness" that frightens him
(252), and as he remarks to St. Peter, "anyone who requites faith and friendship
as I did, will have to pay for it" (253). Indeed, the image of a young
man reading Virgil under a Cliff City cedar suggests an almost dandyish
indifference to human relations. Outland rather blithely recalls, "I'd
forget all about Blake without knowing it" (252). The lack of mere contrast
between these two worlds is clear: Cliff City and St. Peter's attic study
are sites of both elements of the double life; the relation between these
sites is one that is "distant and correct."
But Cather moves well beyond thematic relation with abundant parallels
of detail between these two worlds, parallels that range in effect from
irony to poignance. Both Cliff City and the attic study are a matter of
difficult travel-the mesa's "hazardous trails," which threaten the loss
of life (213), and St. Peter's "perilous journey down through the human
house [during which] he might lose his mood, his enthusiasm, even his temper"
(27), an ironic reminder of the contrast between Cliff City's struggles
and those of St. Peter. More subtly, Cather places each location in relation
to a figurative sustaining ocean: Cliff City faces "an ocean of clean air"
(213); the attic study's window looks onto Lake Michigan, "the inland sea"
of St. Peter's childhood (29).[4] Thus Cather extends the well-known analogy
of the Dutch Interior- "I wanted to open the square window and let in the
fresh air that blew off the Blue Mesa" ("Literary Experimentation" 192)-
from St. Peter's attic to Cliff City itself, which also opens onto an ocean
of sorts.
More particular details of interior establish further parallels. Outland
describes Cliff City's back courtyard as "a long, low, twilit space that
got gradually lower toward the back until the rim rock met the floor of
the cavern, exactly like the sloping roof of an attic" (208-9) and rather
like St. Peter's own "dark den" (16). The back courtyard features several
clay ovens, a spring, and water jars (209); St. Peter's attic holds his
rusty gas stove and a private stock of sherry, "his wine" (102). Cliff
City's decorated walls, "frescoed in geometrical patterns" or adorned with
"a painted border" of tents (213), have their comic counterpart in St.
Peter's once ugly but now inoffensive wallpaper (16). Even Cliff City's
"yucca-fibre mats" (208) have their double in the attic's "matting on the
floor" (16).[5] Here again Cather suggests relationships both "distant and
correct." The slope of Cliff City's ceiling ends in a site of communal
life, the location of what Outland calls "a kind of common kitchen" (209)
and the source of the community's water, while St. Peter's stove and sherry
are elements of his solitude. Frescoed walls and yucca mats suggest a communal
aesthetic and sense of comfort; St. Peter's wallpaper and "worn and scratchy"
matting (16) suggest a decided lack of interest in his own comfort. (Hence
the irony of an otherwise inexplicable detail regarding his shopping expedition
with Rosamond: "He was supposed to know a good deal about rugs, too" [151])
Cather has constructed a relation both "distant and correct": those details
of Cliff City that suggest communal life and comfort find their counterparts
in details that attest to one person's private pleasures and discomforts.
The relation between these two worlds is further evident in correspondences
between Cliff City and St. Peter's garden. Outland describes Cliff City's
front courtyard as bordered by a "low stone wall" and a "fringe of cedars
... like a garden" (208, 201). But only like a garden: "The court-yard
was not choked by vegetation, for there was no soil. It was bare rock,
with a few old, flat-topped cedars growing out of the cracks, and a little
pale grass" (208). The front courtyard bears an unmistakable resemblance
to St. Peter's "walled-in garden," a French anomaly in Hamilton: "There
was not a blade of grass; it was a tidy half-acre of glistening gravel
and glistening shrubs and bright flowers. There were trees, of course;
a spreading horse-chestnut, a row of slender Lombardy poplars at the back,
along the white wall, and in the middle two symmetrical, round-topped linden-trees"
(14-15). Yet there is a significant difference between these spaces. Aside
from its wall, the cliff dwellers' courtyard is a matter of something found,
not made; as Father Duchene remarks, the inhabitants of Cliff City "built
themselves into this mesa and humanized it" (221). St. Peter's grassless
garden, in contrast, is the work of twenty years spent getting "the upper
hand" (15), and there is quite a difference between humanizing a place
and getting the upper hand of it: the cliff dwellers find natural life
amid bare rock, while St. Peter imposes bare rock upon the soil and its
natural life. He is, in this odd respect, a grotesque, harmless version
of his Spanish adventurers, conquering and killing what he encounters,
imposing a foreign idea of order.
Although St. Peter's garden serves a private purpose as "the comfort
of his life" (14), to rest in a contrast between common courtyard and private
garden would be to simplify the particulars of the case, for the competing
obligations of the double life figure in St. Peter's garden as in his study.
Begun after Rosamond's birth, when St. Peter could no longer spend as much
time alone at the lake or tennis court, the garden, like the attic, is
a space within a space, embodying both an acknowledgment of the demands
of family and an insistence upon privacy nonetheless. Cather's strategy,
again, is hardly rigid: the garden, like the study, is not simply a solitary
retreat. It does serve as such during the summers, when Lillian, Rosamond,
and Kathleen go west and St. Peter lives as "a bachelor again" (15). Yet
St. Peter has his landlord's help with its construction (14); he spends
time there with Tom Outland (15, 176); Kathleen plays alone there as a
child (88); and the garden is the scene of numerous conversations between
Outland and St. Peter's young daughters (125). And like the study, the
garden has its unannounced visitors: it is there that Tom Outland first
finds St. Peter one Saturday morning (112).
The most poignant and enigmatic correspondences between Cliff City and
St. Peter's world concern particulars not of places but of persons-the
corpse known as Mother Eve and the professor himself. A likeness between
Mother Eve and the attic's dress forms has been noted in previous criticism,[6]
and Cather has again established a parallel of detail: Mother Eve, with
her "great wound in her side" and "ribs [sticking] out through the dried
flesh" (214), bears a clear resemblance to the second, unnamed dress form,
with "no viscera behind its glistening ribs" (A). It is clear that Mother
Eve and the dress forms are relics of past forms of life-the lost Cliff
City and the early history of St. Peter's family, "back in the years when
holidays were holidays indeed" (100-101) and his daughters' "party frocks
used to hang on them at night" (60). There is also a shared suggestion
of duplicity: Father Duchene suspects that Mother Eve was caught in adultery
and murdered by her husband (223), and the dress forms are associated in
various ways with deception: the first looks inviting, but "if you touched
it you suffered a severe shock" at its hardness (18); the second looks
like "a woman of light behaviour, but she never fooled St. Peter.... he
had never been taken in by one of her kind!" (19). Yet there seems to be
no plausible way to establish a four-term homology that would link such
deceptions with the early history of St. Peter's faimily.[7]
As Cather's correspondences move toward disparate, multiple meanings,
a link between Mother Eve and St. Peter seems entirely plausible. Both
are young in a way that marks them as out of place: Cliff City's three
other corpses are those of old people (215); Lillian St. Peter remarks
to her husband, "You are not old enough for the pose you take" (16z), a
comment that has unusual resonance in relation to his later conviction
that he is to die soon. Both Mother Eve and St. Peter are left behind by
their communities: at least Father Duchene speculates that "perhaps when
the tribe went down to the summer camp, our lady was sick and would not
go" (223), and St. Peter of course chooses to remain behind when Lillian
and the Marselluses sail to France for the summer. (Mother Eve remains
behind a second time as well: as Rodney Blake says, "She refused to leave,"
plunging to the bottom of Black Canyon on a mule while being removed from
Cliff City [244], and one might even link this fall with St. Peter's fall
in the gas-filled, "pitch-black" attic [276].) Both experience a private,
silent agony: Mother Eve's mute, frozen scream, her mouth open in "terrible
agony" (214), finds its analogue in St. Peter's unnamed, unspoken grief.
Both are found lying on a floor and then tended to with blankets (214,
277). And as if to seal the connection, Cather places Mother Eve not in
Cliff City itself but "in a high arch" that Tom Outland calls the Eagle's
Nest (214): like St. Peter, she too is found at a higher altitude, in a
world above a world.
The "distant and correct" relationship between Mother Eve and St. Peter-captured
in twin images of a body on a floor, caught in a private, unexplained agony-suggests
that their different stories form a double narrative of the double life.
It is telling that critical accounts celebrating Cliff City as an ideal
image of communal life have difficulty acknowledging Mother Eve's agony.
She is sometimes missing altogether, as in David Stouck's characterization
of the mesa as a "pastoral center in the novel," a place of "purity and
beauty," "fixed in 'immortal repose"' (104), a characterization that takes
no account of Mother Eve's fixed scream. Fritz Oehlschlaeger offers a similarly
elegiac reading of Cliff City, suggesting that "the mesa image imaginatively
lifts life with others above the world" only to be destroyed by another
tribe on the plains below (84). Yet destruction can come from within as
well as from without, as Mother Eve's fate attests: all indications are
that Cliff City was never discovered by intruders, that Mother Eve's murderer
must therefore have been a member of the cliff dwellers' community. For
Oehlschlaeger, who leaves this question aside, Mother Eve represents "unfaithfulness
and corruption" (77), and he suggests that women in the novel are "of the
world, the world below the mesa and the attic" (77), a difficult position
to uphold when Cliff City itself is below the mesa and Mother Eve is found
above Cliff City proper, in a place analogous to St. Peter's attic. James
Maxfield adopts a strategy similar to Oehlschlaeger's, calling Cliff City
a "perfect form of the ideal society" (79), with Mother Eve cast as a symbol
of "evil" (80), "an example of how selfish personal desires disrupt the
harmony of society" (79).[8]
But if we are to take Cather's account of the double life at its word,
we must acknowledge the inevitability of personal desire and of what Father
Duchene, with unwitting accuracy, calls "personal tragedy" (223), what
Cather calls private life "secret and passionate and intense" ("Katherine
Mansfield" 109). To say so is not to make a case for adultery, much less
murder; it is only to insist that a wholly communal life is, on Cather's
terms, ideal, fictive, and that Cliff City is more than its communal courtyards.
Or, to paraphrase Cather, one realizes that even in harmonious societies
there is this double life, the agony of St. Peter's near suicide, of Mother
Eve's scream.[9]
In this novel of images it is fitting that the theme of the double life
finds its most inventive expression in a pair of figures that suggest the
difficulty of integrating the claims of private life and group life. One,
an elaborate simile, accounts for the relation between St. Peter's solitary
scholarship and his family life:
All the while he had been working so fiercely at his eight
big volumes, he was not insensible to the domestic drama that went on beneath
him. His mind had played delightedly with all those incidents. just as,
when Queen Mathilde was doing the long tapestry now shown at Bayeux,-working
her chronicle of the deeds of knights and heroes,-alongside the big pattern
of dramatic action she and her women carried the little playful pattern
of birds and beasts that are a story in themselves; so, to him, the most
important chapters of his history were interwoven with personal memories.
(101)
Cather's simile is intriguing, and more troublesome than critics
have recognized.[10] Its "just as" ought perhaps to make a reader initially
suspicious with regard to the prospect of easy equivalence; at any rate,
the more closely one looks at this comparison, the more remarkably it dissolves
into uncertainties that suggest anything but interweaving. For one, the
simile represents the two stories of the Bayeux tapestry not as a unified
whole but as separate and unequal matters, a "big pattern" from the human
realm and, alongside it, a "little pattern" from nature, whose creatures
form "a story in themselves." For another, the simile suggests a reversal
of the relation between house and attic, "domestic drama" and scholarly
labor, making the drama of St. Peter's household a peripheral matter, with
its analogue not "the big pattern of dramatic action" but "the little playful
pattern" of the natural world: the most important chapters of St. Peter's
history are those, not of his history, his family life, but of his
books, with his family life forming a marginal accompaniment, as if the
house were an adjunct to its own attic. (And to say that St. Peter is "not
insensible" to the life of his house is to suggest a desultory attention
to what is on the margin.) Finally, whatever weaving St. Peter has made
remains private, ideal, without an achieved form. His chapters themselves
do not unite his private scholarship and his domestic life; it is only
that "to him, the most important chapters of his history were interwoven
with personal memories" (emphasis added). Cather's simile suggests no easy
union of the two elements of the double life; rather, it dramatizes the
difficulty of achieving such a union, with St. Peter's personal memories
functioning as a private mental accompaniment to the chapters of his books.[11]
A second figure addresses the relationship between St. Peter and Augusta,
the sewing woman with whom he has shared his attic space. As St. Peter
opens the box-couch to retrieve her dress patterns, here is what he finds:
At one end of the upholstered box were piles of notebooks and
bundles of manuscript tied up in square packages with mason's cord. At
the other end were many little rolls of patterns, cut out of newspapers
and tied with bits of ribbon, gingham, silk, georgette; notched charts
which followed the changing stature and figures of the Misses St. Peter
from early childhood to womanhood. In the middle of the box, patterns and
manuscripts interpenetrated.
"I see we shall have some difficulty in separating our life work, Augusta.
We've kept our papers together a long while now." (22-23)
A literal sharing of a common space, and a poignant image,
suggesting, even in St. Peter's reference to "life work" rather than "lives'
work," a union with Augusta. Yet suggestions of such a union are undercut
by indications that St. Peter knows very little of her. He is amazed by
her comment that she never expected to work for his family for so many
years: "What other future could Augusta possibly have expected?" (23);
he wonders how she could know anything of his lectures: "And how do you
know what I say to my classes, may I ask?" (99); he is surprised to learn
that she has invested and lost money in the stock market: "Augusta? Are
you sure? What a shame!" (128).[12] Certainly the idea of a future dour solidarity
with Augusta is one that the novel does not make easy to imagine; that
there is for St. Peter "a world full of Augustas, with whom one was outward
bound" (281) suggests innumerable solitary movements toward death rather
than a communal journey. Perhaps it is only in the meeting of St. Peter's
manuscripts and Augusta's patterns that Cather can present the possibility
of genuine union: in an almost sexual image of interpenetration, squares
and cylinders remain themselves yet meet to form a single "life work."
Here again Cather has presented two realities whose relations are "distant
and correct": St. Peter's manuscripts and Augusta's patterns suggest history
and domesticity, mind and body, word and image, yet they both suggest design,
and Cather never chooses a word more carefully that when she tells us that
it is in the attic that St. Peter's notes and ideas are "woven into their
proper place in his history" (25).
It is in the realm of figure and image that patterns can become "papers"
and writing can become weaving, that St. Peter's work can become Augusta's
work, that the separate work of two lives can become a "life work." If
The Professor's House is indeed an image in the form of a novel,
it is the work of an imagination that asks us to ponder the relation between
turquoise and dull silver, between writing and weaving, between ancient,
austere cliff dwellings and a "shabby" American attic, between the agony
of Mother Eve and that of Godfrey St. Peter, between "group life" and another
life, "secret and passionate and intense "- to ponder the details of, in
Reverdy's words, two realities that are more or less distant from each
other.
NOTES
1. Phyllis Rose makes the case for Cather's modernism, and Hermione
Lee suggests that in The Professor's House, in particular, Cather
"places herself in the company of Proust, Lawrence, Eliot, and Virginia
Woolf" (190). Marilyn Arnold collects a number of Cather's remarks on conventional
narrative.[go back]
2. Cather's well-known remarks on visual and musical analogues are included
in her public letter "Literary Experimentation" (192). Her suspicion of
the avowedly new in literature is evident, for example, in this comment,
apparently on Imagism: "So far, the effort to make a new kind of poetry,
'pure poetry,' which eschews (or renounces) the old themes as shop-worn,
and confines itself to regarding the grey of a wet oyster shell against
the sand of a wet beach through a drizzle of rain, has not produced anything
very memorable: not even when the workmanship was good" ("Escapism" 28).[go back]
3. "It cannot be born from a comparison, but rather from the bringing
together of two realities that are more or less distant from each other.
The more distant and correct the relationships between these realities,
the more emotive power and poetic reality the image will have. Two realities
that have no relationship cannot be brought together usefully. No image
is created. Two contrary realities cannot be brought together. They oppose
each other." The translation is Ron Padgett's, from the afterword to his
Among the Blacks (44-45). There is no evidence to suggest that Cather
was familiar with Reverdy; my argument is not one of influence.[go back]
4. The name Blue Mesa itself is of course a more overt link: both St.
Peter and Outland live in relation to blue places, and St. Peter is on
the water when the design of his Spanish Adventurers presents itself
to him (106). The color red also has a recurring role: Cliff City's red
tower (201), the red brick physics building (143), and the pink Washington
Monument (234). The physics building itself is likened to the Smithsonian
(143), an interesting touch in light of the bitter disappointment of Outland's
trip to Washington.[go back]
5. As John Hinz notes, both the walls and the wallpaper are yellow (74),
but there is a more pointed relation between artifice ancient and modern.
Hinz also notes the presence of mats in Cliff City and the attic but seems
to attribute such details to a New Critical anxiety to prevent the novel
"from coming asunder" (74).[go back]
6. Frederick Hoffman was the first critic to draw a thematic connection,
remarking that "the grotesque outlines of human forms on the mesa recall
the attack of some predatory tribe; the dressmaker's forms in the study
remind the Professor that another kind of predatory society has taken away
his daughters and indeed destroyed the family" (160). But the novel suggests
that Cliff City's people were killed below the mesa, at their summer camp,
and that "brutal invaders never even learned of the existence of this mesa"
(221). The three bodies found in the burial chamber are apparently those
of older people "left behind when the tribe went down to live on their
farms in the summer season" (215).[go back]
7. Jean Schwind argues that Duchene's suspicion of adultery is mistaken,
suggesting that Cather imagined Mother Eve as belonging to a matrilineal
culture in which murder by a jealous husband would be unthinkable. But
while Schwind argues persuasively that Mother Eve "is thoroughly misunderstood
by her male historian" (76), she leaves open the question of what Mother
Eve's agony means to the novel: "Whatever the circumstances of her death
may be, Eve's story is not Duchene's history" (77). Right or wrong, Duchene's
history adds an unsettling overtone to St. Peter's quip when Louie Marsellus
kisses Lillian St. Peter's hand: "That is always the cue for the husband
to enter, isn't it?" (76).[go back]
8. David Harrell, likening the Blue Mesa to Cather's Kingdom of Art,
sees Mother Eve as "an ominous priestess, one whose fate foreshadows that
of the artist who forsakes all others to follow his craft. Perhaps the
scream that still seems to be emanating from that agonized face protests
the fate that makes such sacrifice a prerequisite for creation" (137).
But in seeing Mother Eve as a figure for the artist, Harrell seems to overlook
the literal fact of her murder: her scream is that of someone in physical
pain; her wound is not, as Harrell suggests, part of "the process of creation,"
"the sacrifice of part of oneself to creation" (136, 136-37). Harrell further
suggests that Mother Eve, like Adam and Eve, meets "the everlasting punishment
for presuming too much" (137), a suggestion at odds with the idea of self-sacrifice,
and one that gives a disturbingly godlike authority to Mother Eve's murderer.[go back]
9. The problem of idealizing Cliff City occurs in an interesting way
within the novel: Father Duchene's praise-"I am inclined to think that
your tribe were a superior people" (219)-is undercut by his characterization
of Cliff City as a "primitive society [in which] the husband is allowed
to punish an unfaithful wife with death" (223). He seems unaware of the
irony of holding both opinions.[go back]
10. David Harrell, for instance, leaves the simile unexamined, noting
only that "there was a time when St. Peter's personal and social lives
were happily intermingled, when 'the most important chapters of his history
were interwoven with personal memories"' (180). Hermione Lee describes
the tapestry as an interweaving of "the heroic and the domestic" (236),
seemingly confusing the two parts of the simile, as Cather's reference
to birds and beasts hardly suggests domestic life.[go back]
11. A further complication: when Cather wrote The Professor's House
there was thought to be no relation between the Bayeux Tapestry's main
scenes and its borders. That view found its first challenges in 1939 and
1966 (Bernstein 129, 216) and is now discredited (as is the legend that
Queen Mathilde was the tapestry's maker), superseded by the view that the
borders form a running commentary upon the main scenes (see McNulty 1-23).
Cather's simile has difficulties either way: a relation between borders
and main scenes hardly suggests a healthy union of family life and private
scholarship, for on that account the events of St. Peter's family life
would form a commentary on his Spanish Adventurers, a bizarre possibility
reminiscent of Nabokov's Pale Fire.[go back]
12. Augusta talks to Louie about investing and to Kathleen about her
loss (128). When Kathleen recounts these matters to St. Peter, he shows
no surprise about having been in the dark, no surprise that Augusta did
not tell him about these things.[go back]
WORKS CITED
Arnold, Marilyn. "Willa Cather's Artistic 'Radicalism."' CEA Critic
51.4 (1989): 2-10.
Bernstein, David J. The Mystery of the Bayeux Tapestry. Chicago: U of
Chicago P, 1986.
Carroll, Latrobe. "Willa Sibert Cather." Bookman 53 (1921): 212-16.
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