- The Garden Lodge
The Garden Lodge is a
short story byWilla Cather . It was first published inThe Troll Garden in 1905 [Willa Cather's Collected Short Fiction, University of Nebraska Press; Rev Ed edition, 1 Nov 1970, page 197]Plot summary
One day, Howard asks his wife if she would agree to tear down their garden
lodge and built a new summer house there instead. She grows nostalgic as she remembers spending fond times there withtenor Raymond d'Esquerre when he was visiting. Although a moderate and no-nonsense woman, the singer rekindled her passion for music during his stay. She had had to let go of it after her lazy brother killed himself and her father was crippled with debts. She then proceeds to go to the garden lodge and plays a piece ofopera that she played with the tenor the previous summer. However, after a night's sleep she comes around and tells her husband she agrees the lodge should go.Characters
*Raymond d'Esquerre, a tenor.
*Caroline Noble, the protagonist.
*Howard Noble, Caroline's husband, a businessman fromWall Street .
*Heinrich, Caroline's brother, a painter. He shot himself at age twenty-six.
*Auguste, Caroline's father, a music teacher.
*Caroline's mother. She remains unnamed. She married her music teacher inGermany and they later moved to America together. She dies after her son'ssuicide .Allusions to other works
*
Freya is mentioned.
*Caroline's father liked to talk aboutSchopenhauer .
*Caroline playsRichard Wagner 's "Die Walküre " at the piano in the garden lodge. Moreover, Wagner's "Parsifal " is mentioned with Kingslor's garden [John H Flannigan, 'Issues of Gender and Lesbian Love: Goblins in "The Garden Lodge"', Susan J. Rosowski, "Cather Studies: Volume 2", University of Nebraska Press, 1993, page 29] .Literary significance and criticism
It has been suggested that the story deviates from normative gender roles: Auguste's romantic longing would seem more feminine, Caroline's strong-mindedness more masculine; further, Raymond seems doomed to playing the part of Kundry, 'a weary woman' in "Parsifal" [John H Flannigan, 'Issues of Gender and Lesbian Love: Goblins in "The Garden Lodge"', Susan J. Rosowski, "Cather Studies: Volume 2", University of Nebraska Press, 1993, page 26] .
References
External links
* [http://libtextcenter.unl.edu/examples/servlet/transform/tamino/Library/cather?&_xmlsrc=http://libtextcenter.unl.edu/cather/writings/cat.0006/cat.0006.xml&_xslsrc=http://libtextcenter.unl.edu/cather/xslt/cather.xsl#garden Full text]
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