|
Fall/Winter 2004
|
It was the custom for the
mowers to have their dinner in the field. The scythes were left beside the swath
last cut, and the hands gathered in the shade under a wide-spreading maple tree.
In every hayfield one big tree was left for that purpose. It was always called
"the mowers' tree."
—Sapphira and the Slave Girl |
|
Scholars' Summit Uncovers Exciting Progress Jessica Rettig
Cather's Little-Known Friendships Timothy Bintrim and Kari Ronning
The Burden of Letters: Willa Cather, Wallace Stegner, and the Literary Tradition of the American West Linda Karell
The Cather Archive Amber Harris Leichner
June 18-25, 2005; "Violence, the Arts and Cather", Red Cloud and Lincoln, NE
Congratulations to Dr. Andy Jewell Congratulations to Dr. Mary K. Stillwell
Credits
|