O Pioneers! (B&N) by Cather Willa
Author:Cather, Willa [Cather, Willa]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: Fiction, Classics, Novel
Publisher: Barnes&Noble
Published: 1913-01-01T02:00:00+00:00
VII
MARIE’S FATHER, ALBERT TOVESKY, was one of the more intelligent Bohemians who came West in the early seventies. He settled in Omaha and became a leader and adviser among his people there. Marie was his youngest child, by a second wife, and was the apple of his eye. She was barely sixteen, and was in the graduating class of the Omaha High School, when Frank Shabata arrived from the old country and set all the Bohemian girls in a flutter. He was easily the buck of the beer-gardens, and on Sunday he was a sight to see, with his silk hat and tucked shirt and blue frock-coat, wearing gloves and carrying a little wisp of a yellow cane. He was tall and fair, with splendid teeth and close-cropped yellow curls, and he wore a slightly disdainful expression, proper for a young man with high connections, whose mother had a big farm in the Elbe valley. There was often an interesting discontent in his blue eyes, and every Bohemian girl he met imagined herself the cause of that unsatisfied expression. He had a way of drawing out his cambric handkerchief slowly, by one corner, from his breast-pocket, that was melancholy and romantic in the extreme. He took a little flight with each of the more eligible Bohemian girls, but it was when he was with little Marie Tovesky that he drew his handkerchief out most slowly, and, after he had lit a fresh cigar, dropped the match most despairingly. Any one could see, with half an eye, that his proud heart was bleeding for somebody.
One Sunday, late in the summer after Marie’s graduation, she met Frank at a Bohemian picnic down the river and went rowing with him all the afternoon. When she got home that evening she went straight to her father’s room and told him that she was engaged to Shabata. Old Tovesky was having a comfortable pipe before he went to bed. When he heard his daughter’s announcement, he first prudently corked his beer bottle and then leaped to his feet and had a turn of temper. He characterized Frank Shabata by a Bohemian expression which is the equivalent of stuffed shirt.
“Why don’t he go to work like the rest of us did? His farm in the Elbe valley, indeed! Ain’t he got plenty brothers and sisters? It’s his mother’s farm, and why don’t he stay at home and help her? Haven’t I seen his mother out in the morning at five o’clock with her ladle and her big bucket on wheels, putting liquid manure on the cabbages? Don’t I know the look of old Eva Shabata’s hands? Like an old horse’s hoofs they are—and this fellow wearing gloves and rings! Engaged, indeed! You aren’t fit to be out of school, and that’s what’s the matter with you. I will send you off to the Sisters of the Sacred Heart in St. Louis, and they will teach you some sense, I guess!”
Accordingly, the very next week, Albert Tovesky took his daughter, pale and tearful, down the river to the convent.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Evelina by Fanny Burney(26799)
Evelina, Or, the History of a Young Lady's Entrance into the World by Fanny Burney(26233)
Twilight of the Idols With the Antichrist and Ecce Homo by Friedrich Nietzsche(18504)
Pale Blue Dot by Carl Sagan(4913)
The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky(4575)
Dune 01 Dune by Frank Herbert(4315)
Double Down (Diary of a Wimpy Kid Book 11) by Jeff Kinney(4208)
Man and His Symbols by Carl Gustav Jung(4069)
Walking by Henry David Thoreau(3894)
Separate Beds by LaVyrle Spencer(3771)
Ficciones by Jorge Luis Borges(3574)
FOUNDATION AND EMPIRE by Isaac Asimov(3551)
The 101 Dalmatians by Dodie Smith(3454)
Mystery at School by Laura Lee Hope(3372)
Anna and the French Kiss by Stephanie Perkins(3319)
120 Days of Sodom by Marquis de Sade(3184)
Some Prefer Nettles by Tanizaki Junichiro(2843)
The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry(2828)
My Ántonia by Willa Cather(2812)