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Willa CatherA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
An unnamed narrator encounters a childhood friend, Jim Burden, on a train crossing Iowa during the summertime. They recall growing up in the same prairie town in Nebraska in which the natural world created a distinctive experience. Although the narrator and Jim now reside in New York, they seldom see each other: Jim is often away on business as the legal counsel for a Western railroad, and the narrator dislikes Jimâs wife. Despite Jimâs disappointing marriage, his âromantic dispositionâ (x) is unchangedâhe loves the country and has played an important role in its development.
Both friends affectionately remember a Bohemian girl, Ăntonia, who represents the conditions of their Nebraskan childhood. Jim has recently renewed a friendship with Ăntonia and has begun writing his memories about her. The narrator asks to read Jimâs account, and months later, Jim brings the finished recollections, titled âĂntonia,â to the narrator. However, before Jim hands it over, he adds another word to the title, making it âMy Ăntonia.â
When Jim Burdenâs parents both die within a year, Jimâs relatives in Virginia send the 10-year-old boy to live with his grandparents in Nebraska. On his train ride across the American plains, Jim travels in the care of Jake Marpole, a teenaged farmhand. Jake is going West to work for Jimâs grandfather, so the two boys are setting out âtogether to try our fortunes in the new worldâ (3). Jake buys every item the newsboys sell along the route, including a book, Life of Jesse James, for Jim, which the 10-year-old loves to read. The conductor tells them about a European family on board in the immigrant car heading for their same destination of Black Hawk, Nebraska. No one in the immigrant family can speak any English except for a few basic words known by the daughter who is about 13 years old. Shy Jim avoids meeting the girl, and Jake approves because he thinks foreigners might have diseases.
When they arrive at Black Hawk at night, Jim notices a man pick up the immigrant family in a farm wagon. His grandfatherâs hired man, Otto Fuchs, loads Jim and Jake into another farm wagon, and Jim is impressed to see ânothing but land: not a country at all, but the material out of which countries are madeâ (7). He feels erased, overwhelmed by the vast expanse of sky and earth.
After arriving at his grandparentsâ farm, Jim sleeps until the afternoon. He meets his grandmother, a tall, strong, dark-haired woman with wrinkled, brown skin, who looks as if she is thinking of âthings that were far awayâ (10). Jim is surprised that she takes him âdown to the kitchen,â instead of âout in the kitchenâ (9) as it was situated in his Virginia home, and learns that his grandparentsâ residence is the only wooden home west of Black Hawk: Their few neighbors live in sod houses or dugouts. Grandmother Burden talks with Jim about his journey and the new Bohemian family who will be their nearest neighbors. She informs Jim that Otto Fuchs emigrated from Austria to America as a young boy and had adventures in the Far West. After supper, Otto tells Jim exciting stories about his life, shows his cowboy boots and spurs, and reveals that a pony named âDudeâ has been purchased for Jim to ride.
The next morning, Jim explores the farmstead. His grandfatherâs cornfield is larger than any he has seen in Virginia, and everywhere else there is only tall, red grass. He imagines the shaggy grass as âa sort of loose hide, and underneath it herds of wild buffalo were gallopingâ (16). When his grandmother, holding a cane to kill rattlesnakes, takes him to her garden, Jim sits down, leaning his back against a large pumpkin. Grandmother Burden returns to the house, but he remains peacefully sitting in nature, feeling âentirely happy . . . dissolved into something complete and greatâ (18).
On Sunday, Otto drives Jim and Grandmother Burden over to meet their new neighbors, the Shimerdas, and take them some provisions. The immigrants have no garden, no chicken house, and not much plowed land. A fellow Bohemian, Peter Krajiek, had sold them his rough homestead for more than it is worth, but they made the deal before immigrating and are now stuck in a less-than-ideal situation. Mr. Shimerda knows nothing about farming; he was a skilled weaver and violinist in his homeland.
When Mrs. Shimerda comes out of the cave where the immigrants dwell, Jim notices her âsharp chin and shrewd little eyesâ (22) as she complains about her residence. Her 19-year-old son, Ambrosch, has eyes similar to those of his mother, but slyer and more suspicious. He is short with a strong, broad back, and a wide face. However, the 14-year-old daughter, Ăntonia, is beautiful with big, warm eyes âfull of lightâ (23). Her younger sister, Yulka, is pretty and obedient. The youngest Shimerda boy, Marek, is strange: Born with webbed fingers, Marek makes odd noises, but he is harmless. Mr. Shimerda is tall and slender, with white, well-shaped hands. However, his eyes are melancholy. He greets the visitors with an understanding look and courteously kisses Grandmother Burdenâs hand.
Ăntonia holds out her hand to Jim, and they playfully run towards the creek, followed by Yulka, and sit in the tall grass. While they gaze at the blue sky, Ăntonia quickly and eagerly persuades Jim to teach her his name and other words in English. In gratitude, she tries to give him her silver ring, but he refuses, thinking she is being overly generous. When her father calls her, she runs and kisses his hand. Mr. Shimerda shows Jim a book that has the English alphabet on one side and the Bohemian alphabet on the other. He gives the book to Grandmother Burden before they depart and entreats them to teach Ăntonia English.
On that same Sunday afternoon, Jim takes his first ride on his pony, âDude,â under the guidance of Otto. After that, Jim serves as an errand boy for the Burdens, saving the hired men time by riding twice a week to the post office six miles away, and carrying messages to the neighbors. Otto tells Jim the legend that Mormon explorers had scattered sunflower seeds when they were seeking a place to freely worship, leaving a trail for the Mormon settlers to follow. Consequently, for Jim, âthe sunflower-bordered roads always seem . . . the roads to freedomâ (29). Sometimes, Jim rides north, accompanied by Ăntonia, to the large prairie dog town, where they watch earth owls nest underground with the prairie dogs and avoid the rattlesnakes that lurk there. Almost daily, Ăntonia runs across the prairie to take English lessons from Jim, and she is soon able to express her many strong opinions. At first, Mrs. Shimerda grumbles about the time Ăntonia spends on lessons but eventually realizes the need for a family member to speak English.
Ăntonia loves to learn about cooking and housekeeping from Grandmother Burden. The Burdens are suspicious about Mrs. Shimerdaâs housekeeping skills and are horrified by the ash-grey bread she prepares using an old peck-measure formerly kept in the barn. The Shimerdas hate Krajiek, but they allow him to live with them because they feel dependent on their countryman.
Ăntonia and her sister are happy playing on the prairie with Jim, and Ăntonia is excited when she sees her father laugh for the first time in America. She tells Jim that Mr. Shimerda has befriended two Russian immigrants because they came from a part of Russia where the language is similar to Bohemian. After Mr. Shimerda meets the two Russians, who live near the prairie dog town, he visits them nearly every evening. Jim finds the Russians, Pavel and Peter, strange: He feels a little frightened of the fierce-looking Pavel whose inability to speak English and whose wild gestures give rise to the rumor that he is an anarchist. Pavelâs large build has a wasted appearance, and he has a persistent cough. His companion, Peter, is fat, short, and friendly. The Russians work together as farmhands.
One afternoon, Jim and Ăntonia ride his pony to visit the Russiansâ neat log cabin. Peter tells Ăntonia âthat in his country only rich people had cowsâ (35), but here, he can have his own. He grows watermelons, which he says his countrymen eat for their health and hospitably eats some melons with his visitors. Peter plays the harmonica to entertain Jim and Ăntonia and gives them cucumbers for Mrs. Shimerda to cook.
Ăntonia now knows enough English that she can talk to Jim about almost anything, and he familiarly refers to her as âĂntonia.â One day on a grassy bank near a badgerâs hole, Ăntonia informs Jim about how much badgers are valued in her Bohemian homeland and how special the dogs are that hunt them.
The weather is beginning to cool, and Ăntonia tells Jim about an old woman in her home village who sells herbs that she digs up in the forest. The elderly beggar, Old Hata, sings songs to the Bohemian children in a cracked voice that sounds like this insect. The children in Ăntoniaâs village love to see her and save their sweets to give to her. When Jim and Ăntonia start homeward, Ăntonia carefully places the tiny insect in her hair and ties her handkerchief loosely over it. They see Ăntoniaâs father wandering on the farmstead, and she confides to Jim that her father is always sick. Ăntonia runs to her father and places his hand against her cheek: âShe was the only one of his family who could rouse the old man from the torpor in which he seemed to liveâ (41). Mr. Shimerda shows them the rabbits he has shot for meat and to make Ăntonia a rabbit-skin hat. He states that he will give Jim his fine gun from Bohemia when he is older; Mr. Shimerda was given the gun by an aristocrat when he played his violin at the rich manâs wedding.
As much as Jim likes Ăntonia, he also resents the superior tone that she sometimes adopts with him: He is âa boy and she is a girl,â and he does not like her âprotecting mannerâ (43). After one particular adventure, however, Ăntonia begins to treat Jim more like an equal and even defers to him in other areas besides their reading lessons.
On a visit to the Shimerdas, Jim learns that Ăntonia is planning to walk to Peterâs house in order to borrow a shovel for Ambrosch, so Jim offers her a ride on his pony. After they fetch the shovel, Ăntonia suggests they stop at the prairie-dog town and dig into one of the holes to see if it goes straight down or horizontally. While they are examining the hole, Jim hears Ăntonia scream and point behind him. When Jim whirls around, he sees a large rattlesnake. Although he feels sick and frightened, he strikes the snake with the spade, repeatedly pounding its head flat. For Ăntonia, Jimâs feat places him in the traditional masculine role of protector, and she no longer sees Jim as a little boy.
Misfortune seems to follow the two Russian immigrants. Peterâs debt increases faster than his crops grow because he is cheated by Wick Cutter, an unscrupulous moneylender in Black Hawk. When Mr. Shimerda and Ăntonia visit the Burdens to get buttermilk, Russian Peter arrives to fetch them because Pavel is very ill. Jim pleads with his grandmother to permit him to go along, and she humors him. At the Russiansâ log house, Pavel is bedridden and coughing blood.
When Pavel hears the howl of coyotes, he becomes distressed and whispers a long story to Mr. Shimerda about being attacked by famished wolves in Russia on the night of a friendâs wedding. The incident led Pavel and Peter to become outcasts in their town because they were the only members of the wedding party who returned alive. Later, Ăntonia translates the horrifying tale for Jim.
Pavel dies a few days after confessing his story to Mr. Shimerda. Peter sells all his possessions and leaves the region to work where other Russian immigrants are employed. Mr. Shimerda becomes even more depressed after the loss of his friends and often broods in their empty log house. Ăntonia and Jim never tell the shocking tale of the Russian wedding party to anyone else, but it haunts them.
The first snowfall arrives in early December. Otto makes a sleigh for Jim by attaching bobs to a wooden box, and Jim takes Ăntonia and Yulka on a sleigh ride. On their way back, Jim lends his wool comforter to Yulka. She forgets to return it, and Jim falls ill with a throat condition for almost two weeks. The Burdensâ basement kitchen seems like a cozy refuge from the winter cold; Jim admires âthe cheerful zest with which grandmother went about keeping us warm and comfortable and well-fedâ (66). When the men return from working outside, Jim wonders how they can do the chores so devotedly, despite never earning more than a dollar or two per day: The hired hands, Otto and Jim, are âalways ready to work overtime and to meet emergencies. It was a matter of pride with them not to spare themselvesâ (68).
The Burdens do not hear from the Shimerdas for several weeks after the sleigh ride. One night, Jake says that Ambrosch showed him three prairie dogs he had shot and asked if they would be edible. Grandmother Burden is alarmed that the Shimerdas have been reduced to eating prairie dogs: She orders Jake to kill a rooster and pack a hamper of provisions to take to the Shimerdas. When Jake, Jim, and Grandmother Burden arrive at the Shimerdasâ place, Mrs. Shimerda cries and looks at them accusingly. She shakes an empty coffee-pot at them and shows them a barrel of rotting potatoes. When Jake brings in the food hamper, Mrs. Shimerda breaks down. Jim has never seen Ăntonia look so âcrushedâ (74).
Mr. Shimerda describes how he had saved over a thousand dollars but lost the money on the New York stock exchange. If they can make it through to springtime, he plans to buy a cow and chickens, build a new house, and plant a garden. Before the Burdens depart, Mrs. Shimerda gives a teacup full of brown shavings to Grandmother Burden, saying they are very good to eat. At home, when Grandmother Burden opens the gift from Mrs. Shimerda, she cannot tell what it is, so she throws it out. Many years later, Jim learns that the brown chips were dried mushrooms, probably gathered in the Bohemian forest.
In the novelâs Introduction, Willa Cather uses the literary technique of a frame story, which provides important information about how to read the subsequent narrative. An unnamed narrator, who is never identified or referred to again in the novel, introduces Jim Burden and his present-day life in New York. The narrator, who shares childhood memories with Jim, adds a sense of believability to the main narrative, confirming Jimâs perception of Ăntoniaâs specialness and the distinctiveness of growing up on the Nebraskan prairie.
Cather introduces the theme of nostalgia, looking back at the past to oneâs childhood, in the frame story as she does in the novelâs epigraph by the ancient Roman poet, Virgil: âOptima dies . . . prima fugitâ (âThe best days are the first to fleeâ). The introduction emphasizes the bond between people who possess shared memories, in this case, of the Nebraskan prairie. Catherâs strong sense of place is conveyed through lyrical sensory language: They experience âburning summers . . . green and billowy,â as well as âblustery wintersâ (ix). The theme of The Impact of the Prairie Environment on Jim Burden is indicated by his passion for the country and through his work for the railroad. Cather also introduces the central figure of Jimâs childhood memories, Ăntonia, and the importance of his recently renewed friendship with her to his life.
The primary story consists of Jim Burdenâs first-person narrative. Cather describes Jimâs experience in a way that parallels the European immigrant experience of Ăntonia, using phrases such as trying âour fortunes in a new worldâ (3), pointing out that Jim is on board the same train as Ăntoniaâs family and headed to the same destination. Ăntonia and Jim ride to their destination in farm wagons that follow one another, signifying that though their origins are different, their experiences will be typical of pioneers. Still, the Shimerdas face unique challenges, given their foreign status. The theme of The Plight of Immigrants on the Nebraskan Frontier is briefly introduced by Jakeâs fear of foreignersâ diseases, the fact that the Bohemian family rides in the trainâs cheapest âimmigrant car,â and the familyâs ignorance of the English language.
In addition, to the novelty of foreign immigrants on the frontier, Jim is introduced to a real-life cowboy, Otto Fuchs, his grandfatherâs hired hand, who sports a sombrero and high-heeled boots and seems to have stepped right out of the pages of the outlaw biography, The Life of Jesse James, that Jim enjoys reading. However, it is the prairie landscape that initially makes the biggest impression on Jim: Nebraskaâs size and lack of development make it a land of both isolation and possibility. He has to adjust to Nebraskaâs differences from Virginia: the sod houses of the few neighbors, the extremely large cornfield, and, most of all, the endless tall, red grass of the prairie. Jimâs imaginative disposition enables him to view the landscape as a living, moving creature, like herds of galloping buffalo. In the daytime, he experiences a new lightness and freedom on the prairie. His immersion in nature gives him a feeling of complete happiness.
Cather conveys Jimâs attitude toward the Shimerdas though the adjectives used to characterize Jimâs first impressions. Mrs. Shimerda and her oldest son Ambrosch have âlittle eyesâ that are âshrewd,â or âslyâ (22), and they seem unlikable. In contrast, Ăntonia, is described as having big, warm eyes that are âfull of light, like the sun shining on brown pools in the woodâ (23). Ăntoniaâs bond with Mr. Shimerda makes a favorable impression on Jim as he begins to see the family as a unit rather than a collection of strangers.
In Chapter 7, the issue of gender arises in the childhood friendship between Ăntonia and Jim. Despite his younger age, Jim feels that a girl should not take a superior, protective attitude towards him because he is a boy. When Jim kills a large rattlesnake, despite his feelings of fear and repulsion, Ăntonia is pleased that he has performed the traditional male role of protector. She treats Jim more respectfully and encourages him to adopt a triumphant attitude. These gender roles typify those found among frontier families, with the men facing the dangers of the wilderness while the women perform supporting roles.
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