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Mountain Masculinity: Fourteen: The Guide Knows Everything

Mountain Masculinity
Fourteen: The Guide Knows Everything
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Acknowledgements
  3. Foreword
  4. Introduction
  5. One: Fifth Avenue Pilgrims Amid the Goats
  6. Two: This Guiding Game
  7. Three: The Last Great Buffalo Drive
  8. Four: “William, Prepare My Barth”
  9. Five: Us Winter Sports
  10. Six: Rams
  11. Seven: Tepee Tales
  12. Eight: An Early Ski Attempt on Mt. Ptarmigan
  13. Nine: Pipestone Letters No. I
  14. Ten: An’ All We Do Is Hunt
  15. Eleven: The Latest From Pipestone
  16. Twelve: Dried Spinach or Moose Steak?
  17. Thirteen: Tex Reads His Permit
  18. Fourteen: The Guide Knows Everything
  19. Fifteen: Tex: Gentleman’s Gentleman
  20. Sixteen: It’s Good to Be Alive
  21. Seventeen: Tex Takes a Trophy
  22. Eighteen: Sawback Cleans a Laker
  23. Nineteen: Sawback Changes His Mind
  24. Twenty: Tex Tangles With Horribilis
  25. Twenty-One: Navigatin’ for Namaycush
  26. Twenty-Two: What’s in a Name?
  27. Twenty-Three: Sawback and the Sporting Proposition
  28. Twenty-Four: The Wild Goose Chase by ‘Ramon Chesson’
  29. Twenty-Five: It’s a Woman’s World
  30. Appendix A: Tex Vernon-Wood
  31. Appendix B: A Gift from Grandad Vernon-Wood
  32. Index

FOURTEEN

Fourteen THE GUIDE KNOWS EVERYTHING

The tender tone of this late story is quite different from the rough-and-tumble of such earlier pieces as “The Last Buffalo Drive,” with its coarse and violent mischief. Tex’s regard for Father Moriarty shows that although hunting or fishing prowess was a crucial requisite of true mountain masculinity, ethical qualities and practices were equally important, and perhaps too an appreciation of philosophical and religious values (at least as they applied to animals): Tex cites with quiet approval and no irony the Father’s Platonic or rather neo-Thomist sermon to the fish he releases. The core values of Tex’s mountain masculinity are emphasized by the contrast between the priest’s body (“a paunchy little priest”) and his gentleness (“gentle as a woman”) and his ability with a fly and a rod. The literary allusions to the fisherman apostles, Izaak Walton’s The Compleat Angler and Grey of Fallodon’s Fly Fishing1 once again betray the broad reading and culture of the author. The story lampoons the tendency of guides to think or behave as if they know everything, ending with another tender moment between Tex and his son Bill.

—AG


1. Edward Grey, First Viscount Grey of Fallodon, published Fly-Fishing (London: Dent and Sons, 1899) in the British Empire, then in the United States under the title Recreation (Boston: Houghton Mifflin and Company, 1920).

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