![]() ![]() ![]() In this chapter, Cather continues her attempt to humanize Latour and, thus, makes him a multidimensional character who feels loneliness and doubt as he experiences what St. After she departs, Latour realizes that his need has been as great as hers, and that his moment of crisis has ceased. When Sada refuses to keep his cloak, Latour gives her a small silver medal. ![]() As they pray together, the bishop receives new hope. Latour prays with Sada, who tells him that she prays the rosary every night. She tells Latour it has been nineteen years since she seen the altar. Latour leads her into the church, and Sada falls to her knees to kiss the floor. On this evening, the Smiths have put Sada in the woodshed, and she has found the courage to escape and come to the church. In the sacristy of the church is Sada, a slave of the Protestant-American Smith family, who is prejudiced against Catholics and will not allow her to attend Mass or see a priest. At first, he shrinks from the cold, but then he covers himself in an old cloak lined with squirrel. On one sleepless night, he goes to the church to pray. By December, Latour has succumbed to a crisis of faith and doubt. Full Glossary for Death Comes for the Archbishop.Death Comes for the Archbishop as a Catholic Novel.Major Themes in Death Comes for the Archbishop.Jacinto, Eusabio, Benito, and Manuelito.Philomene, Magdalena, and Inez Olivares.Padre Gallegos, Fray Baltazar Montoya, Padre Marino Lucero, and Antonio Joseph Martinez. ![]()
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