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ELMER VASQUEZ

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  • "Have you told Miss Wood?" inquired the bishop. The eyes of the bridegroom fell, and the bishop's face grew at once more keen and more troubled. Then the bridegroom raised his eyes again, and the bishop almost loved him. He touched his arm, like a brother. "This is hard luck," he said.
    • ELMER VASQUEZ
       
      More similarities with the virginian and high noon molly much like amy are denied the truth
  • The bishop did know. Never before in all his wilderness work had he faced such a thing. He knew that Trampas was an evil in the country, and that the Virginian was a good. He knew that the cattle thieves--the rustlers--were gaining, in numbers and audacity; that they led many weak young fellows to ruin; that they elected their men to office, and controlled juries; that they were a staring menace to Wyoming. His heart was with the Virginian.
    • ELMER VASQUEZ
       
      Now we get a sense of abousolute goodness and evil because the bishop feels it in his heart
ELMER VASQUEZ

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  • "A man don't get married every day," apologized McLean. "We'll just run him out of town for yu'." "Save yu' the trouble," urged Wiggin. "Say the word." The proprietor now added his voice. "It'll sober him up to spend his night out in the brush. He'll quit his talk then." But the Virginian did not say the word, or any word. He stood playing with the nickels. "Think of her," muttered McLean. "Who else would I be thinking of?" returned the Southerner. His face had become very sombre. "She has been raised so different!" he murmured. He pondered a little, while the others waited, solicitous. A new idea came to the proprietor. "I am acting mayor of this town," said he. "I'll put him in the calaboose and keep him till you get married and away." "Say the word," repeated Honey Wiggin.
    • ELMER VASQUEZ
       
      Like before there is an uncanny similarity between high noon and the virginian, many of his friends are telling him to leave but he doesn't want to
  • "This country knows well enough," said one fool, who hungered to be important, "that you don't brand no calves that ain't your own." The saturnine Virginian looked at him. "Thank yu'," said he, gravely, "for your indorsement of my character." The fool felt flattered. The Virginian turned to his friends. His hand slowly pushed his hat back, and he rubbed his black head in thought.
ELMER VASQUEZ

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  • He made an oblique start. He did not say to her: "I'll tell you about this. You saw me get ready for Trampas because I have been ready for him any time these five years." He began far off from the point with that rooted caution of his--that caution which is shared by the primal savage and the perfected diplomat.
    • ELMER VASQUEZ
       
      there is a similarity between high noon and the virginian the 5 year hatred when trampas meet the the virginian and how mooly married the virginian and how molly does not much about the past of the virginian
ELMER VASQUEZ

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  • "I see you're looking at my topaz," she had said, as he returned them. "If I could have chosen, it would have been a ruby. But I was born in November."
    • ELMER VASQUEZ
       
      The Virgian and Mrs. Henry are talking
ELMER VASQUEZ

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  • "No," said she, holding firmly his rein and quickening her step. "A gentleman does not invite a lady to go out riding and leave her."
    • ELMER VASQUEZ
       
      she is guing an excuse but she nows that if he just left him she would not live with herself
  • His eyes lost their purpose. "I'll cert'nly take you home. That sorrel has gone in there by the wallow, and Judge Henry will understand."
    • ELMER VASQUEZ
       
      The virginian knows that he cant argue with her and knows that he would face certain death if he went back
  • As he grew more fluent she hastened still more, listening to head off that notion of return, skilfully inventing questions to engage him, so that when she brought him to her gate she held him in a manner subjected, answering faithfully the shrewd unrealities which she devised, whatever makeshifts she could summon to her mind; and next she had got him inside her dwelling and set him down docile, but now completely wandering; and then--no help was at hand, even here.
    • ELMER VASQUEZ
       
      In order to make sure he is still alive she asked him questions when she got to the gate she had a hard time to get him in because he is heavy.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • She had made sure of aid from next door, and there she hastened, to find the Taylor's cabin locked and silent; and this meant that parents and children were gone to drive; nor might she be luckier at her next nearest neighbors', should she travel the intervening mile to fetch them.
    • ELMER VASQUEZ
       
      Molly cannot find the taylors and her other neighbor is 1 mile away
  • With a mind jostled once more into uncertainty, she returned to her room, and saw a change in him already. Illness had stridden upon him; his face was not as she had left it, and the whole body, the splendid supple horseman, showed sickness in every line and limb, its spurs and pistol and bold leather chaps a mockery of trappings.
ELMER VASQUEZ

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  • It was a long while since her lord had addressed her as "ma'am." As she looked at him in growing apprehension, he turned Monte and would have ridden away, but she caught the bridle.
    • ELMER VASQUEZ
       
      Molly manage to catch the mussle before the virginian wonder of to die
ELMER VASQUEZ

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  • "How do you like them?" she had then inquired; and he had smiled slowly at her. "You haven't read them!" she exclaimed. "No." "Are you going to tell me there has been no time?" "No." Then Molly had scolded her cow-puncher, and to this he had listened with pleasure undisguised, as indeed he listened to every word that she said. "Why, it has come too late," he had told her when the scolding was over. "If I was one of your little scholars hyeh in Bear Creek schoolhouse, yu' could learn me to like such frillery I reckon. But I'm a mighty ignorant, growed-up man."
    • ELMER VASQUEZ
       
      there is a sense of anger towards molly by the virginian he is trying not to say anything
  • But she shut her lips and looked away. On the desk was a letter written from Vermont. "If you don't tell me at once when you decide," had said the arch writer, "never hope to speak to me again. Mary Wood, seriously, I am suspicious. Why do you never mention him nowadays? How exciting to have you bring a live cow-boy to Bennington! We should all come to dinner. Though of course I understand now that many of them have excellent manners. But would he wear his pistol at table?" So the letter ran on. It recounted the latest home gossip and jokes. In answering it Molly Wood had taken no notice of its childish tone here and there
  • "Hyeh's some of them cactus blossoms yu' wanted," said the Virginian. His voice recalled the girl with almost a start. "I've brought a good hawss I've gentled for yu', and Taylor'll keep him till I need him."
ELMER VASQUEZ

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  • The picture was her final treasure waiting to be packed for the journey. In whatever room she had called her own since childhood, there it had also lived and looked at her, not quite familiar, not quite smiling, but in its prim colonial hues delicate as some pressed flower
    • ELMER VASQUEZ
       
      While watching an old picture that seemed to show a subtle but beautiful at the same time
  • Till yesterday a Crow Indian war-bonnet had hung next it, a sumptuous cascade of feathers; on the other side a bow with arrows had dangled; opposite had been the skin of a silver fox; over the door had spread the antlers of a black-tail deer; a bearskin stretched beneath it. Thus had the whole cosey log cabin been upholstered, lavish with trophies of the frontier; and yet it was in front of the miniature that the visitors used to stop.
    • ELMER VASQUEZ
       
      there were many ornaments that filled the walls, the shelves, game heads all from the frontiers, with spoils of war from the 'injuns'
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      The crow Indians have one of the largest resevation from Southern Montana to the border of wyomi
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      The war-bonnet is the head pice that is stereotype with the indians usually belong to the chief or medicine man, along with the bows & arrows is more than likely that the items were obtained through a battle.
  • Its pale oval, of color blue and rose and flaxen, in a battered, pretty gold frame, unconquerably pervaded any surroundings with a something like last year's lavender.
    • ELMER VASQUEZ
       
      The portrait seems to have memorized the virginian
  • ...2 more annotations...
    • ELMER VASQUEZ
       
      Even with all these ornaments and decorations it was always the picture that got people's attention
    • ELMER VASQUEZ
       
      Miniature is a small portrait
  • And as Molly Wood's eyes fell upon her ancestress of Bennington, 1777, there flashed a spark of steel in them, alone here in the room that she was leaving forever. She was not going to teach school any more on Bear Creek, Wyoming; she was going home to Bennington, Vermont.
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