Mrs. Marian Forester started her work as a person with the novel "A Lost Lady" until the end. And I saw the reader as an attractive person. She means more than just a woman marrying an old man who worked in the train business. She innovated a new type of woman who moved from the old world to the new world. She tried to be a loving, energetic, elegant and gentle young woman, but later she turned from a way of interpreting the whole book through Neil Herbert's eyes into a gold rush, an affair, a fraudulent woman.
LOST LADY, William Cather (1923) and Willa Attas' novel O Pioneer! (1913) And my Antonia (1918), a lost woman, a piece by Nouvelle length. It is related to the landscape of the western part of the United States. Lost Lady is in Sweetwater, Colorado's great plain, where the history of Marian Forester is spreading, primarily through the eyes of her young worshiper Neil Herbert. As well as the majority of Cather's work, as the deacons of the western US migrate from pioneers to speculators and developers, the tension that drives "lost women" also increases with value. From the beginning, I know that Prairie has two different social classes. Farmers and craftworkers who live there, and gentlemen ranking lordsmen who invest in money and development from the Atlantic coast. -Ten). Marian ยท omesby of 19 years old became a bride of Captain Trevor.
Facts about companions of American short story document, 2nd edition (literary series companion)
Comparing the world written by water chocolate Willa Cather and Laura Esquivel and lost women, there is little agreement. In various eras, various styles and cultures, water like Cather's A Lost Lady and Esquivel's chocolate seems to have nothing in common at first glance. - Many Shakespeare plays are very similar, but two of them are different and are common in many respects. A concrete and stable parallel line can be drawn between Shakespeare's play "Midsummer Night's Dream" and "Romeo and Juliet". The theme and character are very similar in many ways. First of all, the two theaters focus on the stereotype young lover - Hermia and Lysander of the "Midsummer Night's Dream", and Romeo and Juliet of "Romeo and Juliet".