My Ăntonia Willa Cather (autobiographies to read txt) đ
- Author: Willa Cather
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âBut itâs not all like that,â I objected.
âNear enough. Itâs all being under somebodyâs thumb. Whatâs on your mind, Jim? Are you afraid Iâll want you to marry me some day?â
Then I told her I was going away.
âWhat makes you want to go away, Jim? Havenât I been nice to you?â
âYouâve been just awfully good to me, Lena,â I blurted. âI donât think about much else. I never shall think about much else while Iâm with you. Iâll never settle down and grind if I stay here. You know that.â I dropped down beside her and sat looking at the floor. I seemed to have forgotten all my reasonable explanations.
Lena drew close to me, and the little hesitation in her voice that had hurt me was not there when she spoke again.
âI oughtnât to have begun it, ought I?â she murmured. âI oughtnât to have gone to see you that first time. But I did want to. I guess Iâve always been a little foolish about you. I donât know what first put it into my head, unless it was Ăntonia, always telling me I mustnât be up to any of my nonsense with you. I let you alone for a long while, though, didnât I?â
She was a sweet creature to those she loved, that Lena Lingard!
At last she sent me away with her soft, slow, renunciatory kiss. âYou arenât sorry I came to see you that time?â she whispered. âIt seemed so natural. I used to think Iâd like to be your first sweetheart. You were such a funny kid!â She always kissed one as if she were sadly and wisely sending one away forever.
We said many goodbyes before I left Lincoln, but she never tried to hinder me or hold me back. âYou are going, but you havenât gone yet, have you?â she used to say.
My Lincoln chapter closed abruptly. I went home to my grandparents for a few weeks, and afterward visited my relatives in Virginia until I joined Cleric in Boston. I was then nineteen years old.
Book IV The Pioneer Womanâs Story ITwo years after I left Lincoln I completed my academic course at Harvard. Before I entered the Law School I went home for the summer vacation. On the night of my arrival Mrs. Harling and Frances and Sally came over to greet me. Everything seemed just as it used to be. My grandparents looked very little older. Frances Harling was married now, and she and her husband managed the Harling interests in Black Hawk. When we gathered in grandmotherâs parlor, I could hardly believe that I had been away at all. One subject, however, we avoided all evening.
When I was walking home with Frances, after we had left Mrs. Harling at her gate, she said simply, âYou know, of course, about poor Ăntonia.â
Poor Ăntonia! Everyone would be saying that now, I thought bitterly. I replied that grandmother had written me how Ăntonia went away to marry Larry Donovan at some place where he was working; that he had deserted her, and that there was now a baby. This was all I knew.
âHe never married her,â Frances said. âI havenât seen her since she came back. She lives at home, on the farm, and almost never comes to town. She brought the baby in to show it to mama once. Iâm afraid sheâs settled down to be Ambroschâs drudge for good.â
I tried to shut Ăntonia out of my mind. I was bitterly disappointed in her. I could not forgive her for becoming an object of pity, while Lena Lingard, for whom people had always foretold trouble, was now the leading dressmaker of Lincoln, much respected in Black Hawk. Lena gave her heart away when she felt like it, but she kept her head for her business and had got on in the world.
Just then it was the fashion to speak indulgently of Lena and severely of Tiny Soderball, who had quietly gone West to try her fortune the year before. A Black Hawk boy, just back from Seattle, brought the news that Tiny had not gone to the coast on a venture, as she had allowed people to think, but with very definite plans. One of the roving promoters that used to stop at Mrs. Gardenerâs hotel owned idle property along the waterfront in Seattle, and he had offered to set Tiny up in business in one of his empty buildings. She was now conducting a sailorsâ lodging-house. This, everyone said, would be the end of Tiny. Even if she had begun by running a decent place, she couldnât keep it up; all sailorsâ boardinghouses were alike.
When I thought about it, I discovered that I had never known Tiny as well as I knew the other girls. I remembered her tripping briskly about the dining-room on her high heels, carrying a big tray full of dishes, glancing rather pertly at the spruce traveling men, and contemptuously at the scrubby onesâ âwho were so afraid of her that they didnât dare to ask for two kinds of pie. Now it occurred to me that perhaps the sailors, too, might be afraid of Tiny. How astonished we should have been, as we sat talking about her on Frances Harlingâs front porch, if we could have known what her future was really to be! Of all the
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