The Profile (short story)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Profile is a short story by Willa Cather. It was first published in McClure's in June 1907[1].

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

At an Impressionists's club, painters are arguing over the seriousness of art, prompting Dunlap to leave the room. Later in Paris, he meets Mr Gilbert and starts making a portrait of his daughter Virginia. They soon get married and have a child, Eleanor. However, Virginia shows no feeling of affection for her, being too busy with the vagaries of fashion and throwing parties. Her cousin Miss Vane stays with them and looks after the baby daughter. Dunlap grows tired of his wife's superficiality, and once holds Miss Vane's hands inappropriately, which throws her, and seems to vindicate his wife's jealousy. He eventually proceeds to make a crass remark about a scar Virginia bears. The next day, she leaves for Nice, later to go to America, and finally to Saint Petersburg. She files for divorce and becomes internationally famous for her sense of style. Dunlap marries Miss Vane.

[edit] Characters

  • Aaron Dunlap, a portrait painter. He grew up in West Virginia and was apprenticed as a cobbler by his grandfather subsequent to his mother's death soon after he was born.
  • Mr Gilbert, Virginia's father.
  • Mrs Eleanor Gilbert, Virginia's mother.
  • Miss Virginia Gilbert
  • Eleanor, Virginia's baby, named about her grandmother.
  • Madame de Montebello, a friend of Virginia's.
  • Miss Eleanor Vane, Virginia's cousin.
  • The maid
  • The butler

[edit] Allusions to other works

[edit] Literary significance and criticism

It has been argued that the story is characteristic of 'the author's strange abhorrence for physical defect'[2].

[edit] References

  1. ^ Willa Cather's Collected Short Fiction, University of Nebraska Press; Rev Ed edition, 1 Nov 1970, page 135
  2. ^ Elizabeth Shepley Sergeant, Willa Cather: A Memoir, Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1963, page 71

[edit] External links