"I would almost rather see you dead. " Bobert S.
Cassatt, a leading banker of Philadelphia, shouted when his twenty-year-old
eldest daughter announced that she wanted to become an artist. In the 19th
century, playing at drawing or painting on dishes was all right for a young
lady, but serious work in art was not. And when the young lady’s family racked
among the best of Philadelphia’s social families, such an idea could not even be
considered. That was how Mary Cassatt, born 1844, began her
struggle as an artist. She did not tremble before her father’s anger, she
opposed him with courage and at last made him change his mind. Mary Cassatt gave
up her social position and all thoughts of a thousand and a family, which in
those times was unthinkable for a young lady. In the end, after long years of
hard work and perseverance, she became America’s most important woman artist and
the internationally recognized leading woman painter of the time. What do we know about Mary Cassatt’s marriage
A. Her marriage failed because she never gave a thought to her husband and
family.
B. She never married because she did not want to be just a wife and
mother.
C. After marriage she decided to give up her husband rather than her
career.
D. She did not marry because for a lady of her social position to marry
below her was unthinkable.