Willa Cather was born December
7, 1873, near Winchester, Virginia. When she was nine years old, her family
moved to the town of Red Cloud, Nebraska, living among the newly-arrived
immigrants from Europe. She attended the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.
After college she spent the next few years doing newspaper work and teaching
high school in Pittsburgh. "No one can build his
security upon the nobleness of another person."
"Religion and art spring from the same root and are close kin. Economics and
art are strangers."
"The miracles of the church seem to me to rest not so much upon faces or
voices or healing power coming suddenly near to us from afar off, but upon
our perceptions being made finer, so that for a moment our eyes can see and
our ears can hear what is there about us always."
"Elsewhere the sky is the roof of the world; but here the earth is the floor
of the sky."
"I like trees because they seem more resigned to the way they have to live
than other things do."
"There are some things you learn best in calm, and some in storm."
"Only solitary men know the full joys of friendship. Others have their
family; but to a solitary and an exile, his friends are everything."
"When kindness has left people, even for a few moments, we become afraid of
them as if their reason had left them. When it has left a place where we
have always found it, it is like shipwreck; we drop from security into
something malevolent and bottomless."
|
