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get the truth out of" Marian Forrester: that is, to explain her by imposing his fictions upon her (100
blesses them and sends them on their way, he feels only "inadequacy and spiritual defeat" (Archbishop 100
PMLA 100 (1985): 51-67.Sergeant, Elizabeth Shepley. Willa Cather: A Memoir. 1953.
that it seemed only men possessed, such women decided to cross rather than to blur gender boundaries. (100
The human brain is the world's most complex biological phenomenon, with 100 billion neurons and 100 trillion
Enemy 23), while the church at Ácoma "was more like a fortress than a place of worship" (Archbishop 100
Lincoln: U of Nebraska P, 1996. 100–114.Slote, Bernice, and Virginia Faulkner, ed.
seemed fluid to the eye under this constant change of accent, the ever varying distribution of light” (100
continual circling” and freedom to “go backward and forward” from one pole to its opposite (“Joseph” 100
The circumstances leading to the discovery, restoration, and display of these tapestries (Cavallo 100
In The Professor’s House, Cather comments on this aspect of the Bayeux tapestry (100).
See Boudet 5–7.The Bayeux tapestry is mentioned in The Professor’s House (100).Relative to these virtues
’s survival has to do with his final conscious transcendence of this conflict (Cather’s Imagination 100
One of Ours 421–22 with Cather’s earlier description in Willa Cather in Europe 93–100).
absolute and infinitely sweet,” “vested with a peace that passes understanding” (Willa Cather in Europe 100
New York: Knopf, 1956. 93–100.Cather, Willa. Letters to Dorothy Canfield Fisher.
New York: Knopf, 1956. 90–100.Lewis, Edith. Willa Cather Living.
on him”; his mother, too, feels that circumstances have conspired to ensnare her son in “a net” (99–100
on the point of being brought together, on the eve of being arranged into mountain, plain, plateau” (100
the pagan/Judeo-Christian symbol of the spherical censer to the mesas and their “attendant clouds” (100
PMLA 100 (1985): 51–67.Smetanova, J. “Beloved Artist.” Art and Artists 13 (1978): 53.Stouck, David.
industry, most of whom by the 1890s were attending prestigious preparatory schools elsewhere (Couvares 100
$3,000 for repairs to the high school’s physical plant, $1,000 for fuel, $2,500 for janitor services, $100
close, and was tainted with gaseous odors which had been tormented forth by the processes of science. (100
might have looked like this when the dry land was drawn up out of the deep, and all was confusion. (99–100
PMLA, vol. 100, no. 1, January 1985, pp. 51–67.Sergeant, Elizabeth Shepley.