The Possessed Child It is not surprising that Henry James’ “The Turn of the Screw” could be considered a decidedly unsettling novella. The main narrator of the story, the governess, is constantly placed into situations where, coming from her point of view, appear to be fantastic and unnatural. Apparitions, mysterious deaths, and unlikely events begs the question of what really might be happening at the Bly estate. Flora’s act of being able to row the boat by herself to the opposing shore infers that Flora is superhuman, and quite possibly, a child that is possessed by a supernatural being. Shortly before the governess discovers Flora’s disappearance, she is distracted by the prowess Miles displays while playing the piano as he “played as he had never played,” and how she was left with “a strange sense of having literally slept at [her] post” (James 367). At this point in the novella, the governess has been bewitched into a sort of trance, missing Flora’s departure and essentially delaying the governess’ search for her. While searching for Flora’s whereabouts, the governess believes Flora may be near the banks of the Sea of Azof. Without proof, she ostensibly believes that Flora took the boat across the water, and when she is challenged with the disbelief that the child does not have the physical …show more content…
While Flora behaves and is likened to be an innocent child, she has an unworldly presence about her. The governess clearly acknowledges that, for being a child, Flora has unnatural characteristics, which underlines the confidence in the governess’ belief that Flora took the boat across the water. A child such as Flora should not be able to move the boat on her own; clearly she needs assistance, and she seemingly has it of the supernatural
As the story begins, we are first introduced to Mrs. Freeman, a hired hand on the Hopewell farm. At first glance Mrs. Freeman appears to be simple “good country people,” but that is not the case. It is very ironic that Mrs. Hopewell refers to her as a “lady and that she was never ashamed to take her anywhere or introduce her to anybody that they might meet” (452.) In reality Mrs. Freeman is a busybody and harbors secret fascination with the macabre. She has “a special fondness for the details of secret infections, hidden deformities, assaults upon children. Of diseases she preferred the lingering or the uncurable" (455). Her secret fascination and penchant for gossip is quite different from what one would think “good country people” let alone a “lady” would be interested in. Mrs. Freeman never hesitates to share the details of her daughters' lives with Mrs. Hopewell. One gets the impression that Mrs. Freeman will divulge
Meanwhile, Seth disobeys the rules and goes off into the woods. On his adventure, he spots an old shack covered in ivy and vines. He notices an old women that is gnawing on a rope that she is tied to. She asks Seth if he would come inside and share a cup of tea with her. Seth asks if she is a witch, then she becomes very furious and puts a curse on him. He sprints of like a cheetah and runs away from the “witch”. The next morning, their grandpa asks them “What do you suppose makes people so eager to break rules?’’ He keeps his eye on Seth. Seth explains to his grandpa that he was just very curious and that he met a creepy old lady. His grandpa nods and changes the subject. They are given some milk (the magical one) by Lena she said that it would give them the power to see “what is really out there.” Seth shows Kendra a hidden pond with gazebos, a boardwalk, and a boathouse. Grandpa explains that his yard is not a place for endangered animals, but for mystical creatures such as fairies, trolls, and imps. This land is known as Fablehaven and it is owned by lots of people, passed down every few centuries. He also explains that the old woman in the forest was actually a real witch. Her name is Muriel Taggert and the knots were her punishment for trying to put a curse on Fablehaven. After meeting
Each of the characters carries with them a small ‘history’ which, in return becomes part of a complicated series of stories. Samson Fish Lamb, the favourite son of Lester and Oriel Lamb, is intellectually handicapped due to a drowning accident “not all of Fish Lamb had come back”, uses descriptive and poetic language makes this symbolic and momentary event create emphasis on the impact this momentary death had on the beliefs of the Lamb family not only as a whole, but individually as well. Fish is now stuck half-way through a metaphysical window; spiritual and physical evident in the absence of speech marks. He is the dominant narrator and the only one who can see the ghosts of Cloudstreet, and lives a tortured experience recognising the spirits that haunts the house. He longs for the reunion of his other self, confused with trying to obtain his place in
The townspeople seemed to almost pity the poor woman and as a result the Mayor at the time Colonel Sartoris, granted her immunity from taxation for eternity; while never actually documenting this act, by developing a story so tall that ...only a man of that time could have invented such a story, and only a woman could have believed it. (Faulkner 74) She began to provide china-painting lessons to the grandchildren of the town-elders to make ends meet. Nevertheless, just as time stood still to her, the community was growing up, and the great mayor Colonel Sartoris died followed shortly by the end of her tutoring days. The grandchildren of the town she once taught, no longer sent their children to her residence. The women in town were convinced no man could attend to the rituals of the home, and were not necessarily surprised by the dirty and dusty dank smell that emanated from her residence as a result.
Within the novel characters act in selfish and unsympathetic manner in order to perceive a good reputation towards others. Reverend Parris stumbled across his daughter Betty and the other girls dancing in the woods conjuring the devil. Betty faints when Parris sees them,
The novel begins at Gateshead where Jane is a young, ten year old, orphaned child who is miserable and unwanted by her aunt and cousins. At first, Jane allows her family to taunt and tease her without ever retaliating. When John Reed, one of Jane’s
Later she explains that there is something off about the house; “That spoils my ghostliness, I am afraid; but I don't care—there is something strange about the house—I can feel it.” I feel this house is metaphor for her life. From the outside it seems rather beautiful but there is something odd and strange about her life. There is also the fact of where the house is located. Three miles outside the village, a part of the village but at the same time, not a part of the village. She refers to it as “quite alone” and “standing well back from the road”. This is the way she is living her life, behind mental hedges and walls, the wife of the village physician so she is part of the village but she doesn’t allow herself to truly fit in, she keeps herself removed.
Ambiguity in The Turn of the Screw The Turn of the Screw, is a tale about two young children who live under the care of their newly hired governess out in the countryside at Bly. Shortly after the governess’s arrival, two ghosts sporadically appear to her, but it is not long before she realizes that they are not there to see her. “On the spot there came to me the added shock of certitude that it was not for me he had come there. He had come for someone else” (James 34). Also, it just so happened that the people who the ghosts decided to come for, where the children she would now be looking after.
As she burrowed her face into his chest, she inhaled his familiar scent of perspiration and spicy bay rum. Shifting around, she nestled her back into Asa’s solid chest and shoulder. When he wrapped his arms around her, and she could feel the rhythmic beating from his heart. Moored work boats filled the glassy, calm harbor, many of them on their way to the Northeast after a winter in the South and the Caribbean. Since land and sea were in a constant tussle for wind in Nell’s coastal town, it was unsettling to her when it died. When Asa began to caress her arm, a haunting penny
The Governess’s psychology state of mind plays a role to understanding whether the ghost manifests the children, or whether The Governess is nevertheless, mentally ill. Gender Role is also a huge element of “The Turn Of The Screw” as The Governess, being a woman, fills the role of a mother to mile’s and Flora. The children’s innocence and actions are nevertheless questionable, as they seem to hold a secret that they do not disclose. Nevertheless, the perception of The Governess is questionable since she seems to be the only one that visually sees the ghost.
The governess is insane because her aggressive nature brings harm to the children. For example, the governess has a mental breakdown on the lake and accuses Flora of lying about seeing
A person with a low status can fantasize about how luxurious his or her life could become. Wealth and hierarchy can affect a person’s perception of the world. A sudden gain of authority can make a person to sing his or her own praises and becomes reckless with it. Dream of this new life can affect a person’s reliability in how they perceive the world. Henry James’s novella “The Turn of the Screw” explores the idea of the narrator’s madness in particular through her irrational treatment of the children, her employer, and herself.
Her mother who was a doctor, midwife, fought ghosts and told stories to Kingston, her daughter, which were called talk-stories that described horrifying stories such as Kingston’s aunt giving birth to her vast alone in a pigsty. Her mother was a very complicated character she was loving but also told stories that put her views towards women contradict herself because of Chinese culture. Kingston in the book has problems with that because Brave Orchid, her mother, is supposed to be the most important woman in her life but would submit to the traditions of Chinese culture against women on how they would be forgotten and shunned for having a child with another man other than their husbands, which causes tension between Kingston and her mother. But over some time they began to become close to one another again set aside their differences. Also in chapter four titled “At the Western Palace” talks about a human who left behind his wife in China to go move to America to be with another woman. Kingston’s aunt named Moon Orchid is left in China where her sister encourages her to go to America and claim what is hers but she cannot speak any English and when her sister leaves her in America alone to fend for herself she ends up going crazy and dying in a California state mental
In Henry James’ The Turn of the Screw, the governess’ mental status is not known for certain. Throughout the novel, the reader is led to wonder if the specters she sees are real or fabricated by her own mind. This has sparked a lot of debate on the issue of the governess’s sanity and continues to be a controversial topic in the literary community. However, the governess is found to be insane through the points of her chronic stress, her obsession over Miles and Flora, and the lack of evidence behind her visions.
The Turn of the screw by Henry James is regarded as one of the most fascinating psychological thrillers of all time. Published in the late nineteenth century, this novella sets up a narrative story of a young lady who appears to have seen the ghost of the former dead employers of the place where she was working. In this novella Henry James combined drama, suspense, and mystery to make it one of the most preferred stories among the readers of all generations. The Turn of the Screw raises many questions, however: Is the governess going crazy? Is she really seeing the phantoms of those dead former state workers? Is she innocent? Is she the villain or the heroine of