Death Comes for the Archbishop

Death Comes for the Archbishop

by

Willa Cather

Bishop/Archbishop Term Analysis

A bishop is a high-ranking member of the Catholic clergy. A bishop is placed in charge of a diocese, or a series of geographically proximate churches and parishes. The primary difference between a bishop and an archbishop is the territory they are responsible for; archbishops oversee archdioceses, which are generally larger and more politically important than other dioceses. In the novel, Latour, Ferrand, and later Vaillant are all bishops.

Bishop/Archbishop Quotes in Death Comes for the Archbishop

The Death Comes for the Archbishop quotes below are all either spoken by Bishop/Archbishop or refer to Bishop/Archbishop. For each quote, you can also see the other terms and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Spirituality vs. the Material World Theme Icon
).
Book 1: The Bishop Chez Lui Quotes

“Think of it, Blanchet; in all this vast country between the Mississippi and the Pacific Ocean, there is probably not another human being who could make the soup like this.”

“Not unless he is a Frenchman,” said Father Joseph. He had tucked a napkin over the front of his cassock and was losing no time in reflection.

“I am not deprecating your individual talent, Joseph,” the Bishop continued, “but, when one thinks of it, a soup like this is not the work of one man. It is the result of a constantly refined tradition. There are nearly a thousand years of history in this soup.”

Related Characters: Jean-Marie Latour (speaker), Joseph Vaillant (speaker)
Page Number: 26
Explanation and Analysis:
Book 2: The White Mules Quotes

Soon after breakfast Father Vaillant departed, riding Contento, with Angelica trotting submissively behind, and from his gates Señor Lujon watched them disconsolately until they disappeared. He felt he had been worried out of his mules, and yet he bore no resentment. He did not doubt Father Joseph’s devotedness, nor his singleness of purpose. After all, a Bishop was a Bishop, and a vicar was a vicar, and it was not to their discredit that they worked like a pair of common parish priests. He believed he would be proud of the fact that they rode Contento and Angelica. Father Vaillant had forced his hand, but he was rather glad of it.

Related Characters: Jean-Marie Latour, Joseph Vaillant, Manuel Lujon
Related Symbols: Angelica and Contento
Page Number: 43
Explanation and Analysis:
Book 3: The Wooden Parrot Quotes

“At Ácoma,” [Father Jesus] said, “you can see something very holy. They have their portrait of St. Joseph, sent to them by one of the Kings of Spain, long ago, and it has worked many miracles. If the season is dry, the Ácoma people take the picture down to their farms at Ácoma, and it never fails to produce rain. They have rain when none falls in all the country, and may have crops when the Laguna Indians have none.”

Related Characters: Father Jesus (speaker), Jean-Marie Latour, Baltazar Montoya, Garcia Maria de Allande, Father Ferrand
Page Number: 59
Explanation and Analysis:
Book 3: Jacinto Quotes

The Bishop seldom asked Jacinto about his thoughts or beliefs. He didn’t think it polite, and he believed it to be useless. There was no way in which he could transfer his own memories of European civilization into the Indian mind, and he was quite willing to believe that behind Jacinto there was a long tradition, a story of experience, which no language could translate to him.

Related Characters: Jean-Marie Latour, Jacinto
Page Number: 62
Explanation and Analysis:
Book 3: The Rock Quotes

The rock, when one came to think of it, was the utmost expression of human need; even mere feeling yearned for it; it was the highest comparison of loyalty and love and friendship. Christ Himself had used that comparison for the disciple to whom he gave the keys of His Church. And the Hebrews of the Old Testament, always being carried captive into foreign lands,—their rock was an idea of God, the only thing their conquerors could not take from them.

Already the Bishop had observed in Indian life a strange literalness, often shocking and disconcerting. The Ácomas, who must share the universal human yearning for something permanent, enduring, without shadow of change—they had their idea in substance. They actually lived upon their rock; were born upon it and died upon it.

Related Characters: Jean-Marie Latour
Related Symbols: Stones and Rock Formations
Related Literary Devices:
Page Number: 66
Explanation and Analysis:
Book 4: The Night at Pecos Quotes

Among the Indians measles, scarlatina and whooping-cough were as deadly as typhus or cholera. Certainly, the tribe was decreasing every year. Jacinto’s house was at one end of the living pueblo; behind it were long rock ridges of dead pueblo,—empty houses ruined by weather and now scarcely more than piles of earth and stone. The population of the living streets was less than a hundred adults. This was all that was left of the rich and populous Cicuyé of Coronado’s expedition. […]

As Father Latour sat by the fire and listened to the wind sweeping down from the mountains and howling over the plateau, he thought of these things; and he could not help wondering whether Jacinto, sitting silent by the same fire, was thinking of them, too.

Related Characters: Jean-Marie Latour, Jacinto, Clara
Page Number: 82
Explanation and Analysis:
Book 5: The Old Order Quotes

[Martínez’s face] was so unusual that he would be glad to see it again; a high, narrow forehead, brilliant yellow eyes set deep in strong arches, and full, florid cheeks,—not blank areas of smooth flesh, as in Anglo-Saxon faces, but full of muscular activity, as quick to change with feeling as any of his features. His mouth was the very assertion of violent, uncurbed passions and tyrannical self will; the full lips thrust out and taught, like the flesh of animals distended by fear or desire.

Father Latour judged that the day of lawless personal power was almost over, even on the frontier, and this figure was to him already like something picturesque and impressive, but really impotent, left over from the past.

Related Characters: Jean-Marie Latour, Antonio Jose Martínez
Page Number: 94
Explanation and Analysis:

The swarthy Padre laughed, and threw off the big cat which had mounted to his shoulder. “It will keep you busy, Bishop. Nature has got the start of you here. But for all that, our native priests are more devout than your French Jesuits. We have a living church here, not a dead arm of the European church. Our religion grew out of the soil, and has its own roots. We pay a filial respect to the person of the Holy Father, but Rome has no authority here. We do not require aid from the Propaganda, and we resent its interference. The Church the Franciscan Fathers planted here was cut off; this is the second growth, and it is indigenous. Our people are the most devout left in the world.”

Related Characters: Antonio Jose Martínez (speaker), Jean-Marie Latour, Joseph Vaillant, Marino Lucero
Related Literary Devices:
Page Number: 97
Explanation and Analysis:
Book 5: The Miser Quotes

[Death] was not regarded as a moment when certain bodily organs ceased to function, but as a dramatic climax, a moment when the soul made its entrance into the next world, passing in full consciousness through a lowly door to an unimaginable scene. Among the watchers there was always the hope that the dying man might reveal something of what he alone could see; that his countenance, if not his lips, would speak, and on his features would fall some light or shadow from beyond. The “Last Words” of great men, Napoleon, Lord Byron, were still printed in gift books, and the dying murmurs of every common man and woman were listened for and treasured by their neighbors and kinsfolk. These sayings, no matter how unimportant, were given oracular significance and pondered by those who must one day go the same road.

Related Characters: Jean-Marie Latour, Joseph Vaillant, Marino Lucero
Page Number: 111
Explanation and Analysis:
Book 6: Don Antonio Quotes

Bishop Latour had one very keen worldly ambition: to build in Santa Fé a cathedral which would be worthy of a setting naturally beautiful. As he cherished this wish and meditated upon it, he came to feel that such a building might be a continuation of himself and his purpose, a physical body full of his aspirations after he had passed from the scene.

Related Characters: Jean-Marie Latour, Antonio Jose Martínez, Marino Lucero
Related Symbols: Stones and Rock Formations
Related Literary Devices:
Page Number: 115
Explanation and Analysis:
Book 8: Auspice Maria! Quotes

Yes, [Vaillant] reflected, as he went quietly to his own room, there was a great difference in their natures. Wherever he went, he soon made friends that took the place of country and family. But Jean, who was at ease in any society and always the flower of courtesy, could not form new ties. It had always been so. He was like that even as a boy; gracious to everyone, but known to a very few. […] But God had his reasons, Father Joseph devoutly believed. Perhaps it pleased Him to grace the beginning of a new era and a vast new diocese by a fine personality. And perhaps, after all, something would remain through the years to come; some ideal, or memory, or legend.

Related Characters: Jean-Marie Latour, Joseph Vaillant
Related Literary Devices:
Page Number: 167
Explanation and Analysis:

“I did not mean to interrupt you, Joseph, but do you intend to take Contento with you to Colorado?”

Father Joseph blinked. “Why, certainly. I had intended to ride him. However, if you have need for him here—”

“Oh, no. Not at all. But if you take Contento, I will ask you to take Angelica as well. They have a great affection for each other; why separate them indefinitely? One could not explain to them. They have worked long together.”

Father Vaillant made no reply. He stood looking intently at the pages of his letter. The Bishop saw a drop of water splashed down upon the violet script and spread. He turned quickly and went out through the arched doorway.

Related Characters: Jean-Marie Latour (speaker), Joseph Vaillant (speaker)
Related Symbols: Angelica and Contento
Page Number: 168
Explanation and Analysis:
Book 9: Chapter 4 Quotes

There is always something charming in the idea of greatness returning to simplicity—the queen making hay among the country girls—but how much more endearing was the belief that They, after so many centuries of history and glory, should return to play Their first parts, in the persons of a humble Mexican family, the lowliest of the lowly, the poorest of the poor,—in a wilderness at the end of the world, where the angels could scarcely find Them!

Related Characters: Jean-Marie Latour, Kit Carson, Father Junipero
Related Symbols: The Cruciform Tree
Related Literary Devices:
Page Number: 186
Explanation and Analysis:
Book 9: Chapter 6 Quotes

After [Eusabio] was gone, the Bishop turned to Bernard; “My son, I have lived to see two great wrongs righted; I have seen the end of black slavery, and I have seen the Navajos restored to their own country.”

For many years Father Latour used to wonder if there would ever be an end to the Indian wars while there was one Navajo or Apache left alive. Too many traders and manufacturers made a rich profit out of that warfare; a political machine and immense capital were employed to keep it going.

Related Characters: Jean-Marie Latour (speaker), Eusabio, Bernard Ducrot
Page Number: 193
Explanation and Analysis:
Book 9: Chapter 7 Quotes

It was [Latour’s] own misguided friend, Kit Carson, who finally subdued the last unconquered remnant of that people; who followed them into the depths of the Canyon de Chelly, whither they had fled from their grazing plains and pine forests to make their last stand […] This canyon had always before proved impenetrable to white troops. The Navajos believed it could not be taken. They believed that their old gods dwelt in the fastnesses of that canyon; like their Shiprock, it was an inviolate place, the very heart and center of their life.

Carson followed them down into the hidden world between those towering walls of red sandstone, spoiled their stores, destroyed their deep-sheltered corn-fields, cut down the terraced peach orchards so dear to them. When they saw all that was sacred to them laid waste, the Navajos lost heart. They did not surrender; they simply ceased to fight.

Related Characters: Jean-Marie Latour, Eusabio, Manuelito, Kit Carson
Related Symbols: Fruit Trees, Stones and Rock Formations
Related Literary Devices:
Page Number: 194
Explanation and Analysis:
Book 9: Chapter 8 Quotes

[Latour] continued to murmur, to move his hands a little, and Magdalena thought he was trying to ask for something, or to tell them something. But in reality the Bishop was not there at all; he was standing in a tip-tilted green field among his native mountains, and he was trying to give consolation to a young man who was being torn in two before his eyes by the desire to go and the necessity to stay. He was trying to forge a new Will in that devout and exhausted priest; and the time was short, for the diligence for Paris was already rumbling down the mountain gorge.

Related Characters: Jean-Marie Latour, Joseph Vaillant, Eusabio, Marino Lucero, Magdalena
Page Number: 198
Explanation and Analysis:
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Bishop/Archbishop Term Timeline in Death Comes for the Archbishop

The timeline below shows where the term Bishop/Archbishop appears in Death Comes for the Archbishop. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Prologue: At Rome
Colonialism, Industry, and Loss Theme Icon
It’s 1848, and three cardinals are hosting a missionary bishop from America in Rome. As the sun sets, the churchmen admire the dome of St.... (full context)
Humanity’s Relationship with Nature Theme Icon
Maria de Allande argues that there is already a bishop in Durango, Mexico, who is technically responsible for the area Ferrand wants to organize. But... (full context)
Spirituality vs. the Material World Theme Icon
Memory, Death, and Afterlives Theme Icon
Though the bishop of Durango has his own favored candidate for the new vicariate, Ferrand is firm that... (full context)
Spirituality vs. the Material World Theme Icon
Colonialism, Industry, and Loss Theme Icon
Ferrand stresses that this new bishop will have a difficult job: there will be shortages of food and water, not to... (full context)
Spirituality vs. the Material World Theme Icon
...might have been destroyed. Still, Maria de Allande cannot help but hope that the new bishop will keep an eye out for this painting. Ferrand will not promise that Latour will... (full context)
Book 1: The Cruciform Tree
Spirituality vs. the Material World Theme Icon
Colonialism, Industry, and Loss Theme Icon
Though Jean-Marie Latour was made a bishop a year ago at Cincinnati, he still has yet to establish his vicariate. First, no... (full context)
Colonialism, Industry, and Loss Theme Icon
...Santa Fé, the priests there refused to accept his authority, insisting they reported to the bishop of Durango. To prove his legitimacy, Latour had to go down to Durango himself, and... (full context)
Book 1: Hidden Water
Spirituality vs. the Material World Theme Icon
...ago, led by Father Martínez, the Spanish priest at Taos. Under Latour’s hand, the new bishop thinks to himself, this “tyranny” is almost over. (full context)
Book 1: The Bishop Chez Lui
Friendship and Compromise Theme Icon
...trip to Durango, with all the documents he needs to prove his authority as a bishop. Meanwhile, Father Vaillant has endeared himself to the people, putting the old former priest’s adobe... (full context)
Book 1: A Bell and a Miracle
Colonialism, Industry, and Loss Theme Icon
Memory, Death, and Afterlives Theme Icon
...church in the very spot where she’d appeared. But when the boy told the local bishop, the bishop doubted his story. Dejected, the boy went home to care for his sick... (full context)
Book 8: Auspice Maria!
Friendship and Compromise Theme Icon
...Denver. While Latour respects Vaillant for his willingness to go wherever the work calls, the bishop cannot help but feel hurt by his friend’s eagerness to leave. Indeed, when Vaillant declares... (full context)
Book 9: Chapter 1
Friendship and Compromise Theme Icon
Humanity’s Relationship with Nature Theme Icon
Memory, Death, and Afterlives Theme Icon
When Mother Superior Philomène dies, her letters include a message from Archbishop Latour, dated 1888; in it, Latour reflects on his friend Vaillant’s death, musing that this... (full context)
Book 9: Chapter 2
Spirituality vs. the Material World Theme Icon
Friendship and Compromise Theme Icon
...old study, right in the heart of Santa Fé, even though his successor (the new archbishop) has taken up residence there. (full context)
Book 9: Chapter 5
Friendship and Compromise Theme Icon
Colonialism, Industry, and Loss Theme Icon
...forming a land company and getting caught up with dishonest brokers. When Vaillant, then first bishop of Colorado, was summoned to Rome, it was hard for him to explain his financial... (full context)
Book 9: Chapter 8
Friendship and Compromise Theme Icon
At last, Latour is dying. On his death bed, he is attended by the new archbishop, Eusabio, Magdalena, Bernard, Fructosa, and Tranquilino. Bernard struggles to understand Latour’s last words, but they... (full context)
Spirituality vs. the Material World Theme Icon
Friendship and Compromise Theme Icon
Colonialism, Industry, and Loss Theme Icon
Memory, Death, and Afterlives Theme Icon
...their knees, while Eusabio goes off to tell his people. The next day, “the old archbishop lay before the high altar in the church he had built.” (full context)