Villette (Charlotte Brontë, 1853)

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General notes

Vol I

  • 15 Lucy's "overheated and discursive imagination" vs Paulina
  • Paulina's monomania - Nelly says heathcliff is a monomaniac in Wuthering
  • 17 "cup did not foam up" when Paulina and father reunited --CB dampening melodramatic expectations as in first chapter of shirley
  • 20 Graham to Paulina: "I reckon on being able to get out of you a little of that precious commodity called amusement"
  • 23 graham threatening to cut up the engraving Paulina likes to light candles
  • 34 race and missionary English identity in Paulina's book
  • 38 "We should be friendly to all, and worship none."
  • 39 "the nightmare"; metaphorizing her depression (?) as falling overboard
    • 41 mourning dress - gradual revelation
  • 42 second time she's mentioned "character study," first Paulina and now Mrs Marchmont
  • 43 disease heralded by atmospheric change?
  • 49 vision instigated by Aurora borealis
  • 62 vision of Europe followed by school copybook disavowal
  • 71 "fate and providence" leading her to Madame Beck's pensionnat
  • 82-3 compare description of school and pedagogy to Lowood in Jane Eyre
  • 96 serial character studies structure: Paulina, Marchmont, Beck, Ginevra
  • 106 fate again with reconnecting to Dr John
  • 107 "he laid himself open to my observation" -- narration as espionage, which is explicitly thematized or represented through Mdme Beck
  • 117 ghost story about nun - gothic tale irruption -- connect to description of Beck as ghostly on her first night
  • 118 another natural reverie
  • 121 again her nervous sensitivity to weather
  • 132 "complicated, disquieting thoughts" as a threat to her identity
  • 173 her despair in the vacation, faced with open time and abandoned space
  • weather sensitivity again
  • 177 ghostly white beds
  • 178-80 LS's confession and rejection of Catholicism after
  • 181 lost in villette "I got immeshed in a net-work of turns unknown" - early (?) use of this metaphor?

Vol II

  • 185 direct continuation of reflecting on swoon she just narrated -- dissociation from her soul
  • tangling image clusters together: hearing returns like thunder, "I should have understood what we call a ghost, as well as I did the commonest object"
  • 186 really interesting that her dissociation is first externalizef thrrough object relations
  • i 'fell on sleep' - derivation? And the untraced allusion on 167?
  • 196 "I had preferred to keep the matter to myself" - unreliable narrator
    • but why doesn't Mrs Bretton recognize her? Or does she and LS misrepresents it?*205 add SSRIs and you've got modern psychiatric treatment
  • 220 john's original conversation preferred to "stealing from books"
  • 222 ekphrastic reminder of nature contemplation from vol 1 in gallery
  • 238 in describing the king hypochondria/melancholi/depression and its "ghostly" appearance connects that image cluster to that theme
  • 255-6 moving description of the affective experience of anxiety (what she calls Reason Freud would've call the superego)
  • 273 LS Sees the ghost of the nun after reading John's letter
  • 277 "material terrors"
  • 278 "no mockery in this world ever sounds to me so hollow as that of being told to 'cultivate' happiness."
  • 281 "a new creed became mine - a belief in happiness" - don't both Caroline H and Jane E also will a change? No - I'm thinking of Maggie in Mill
  • 282 writing 2 letters, feeling and reason
  • 295 "whose lives have fallen amid the seclusion of schools Or of other walled-in or guarded dwellings"
    • puts in mind of enclosures - must be a way to connect space affect and text
  • 304 grown up Paulina Bassompierre described as "winter spirit"
    • and again ff. associated imagistically with material furniture
  • 310 description of women's imaginations "waiting at lonely gates and stiles" for men to come
  • 328-9 LS's ceremonial burial of her letters from John (b/c of Madame's, and or someone else's, spying) -- and then seeing the nun again
  • 330 her nature as "overcast"
  • 341 LS describes herself as "perhaps a personage in disguise"

Vol III

  • 401 her entombed but undead(?) feelings for John
  • 403-5 Paul's surveillance of the alleyway
  • 406-7 Paul asking about the ghost
    • she then appears on 408
  • 414 now Paulina's letter from John to parallel Lucy's
  • 429 again her fear of storms, "that exertion if strength and use of action I always yield with pain"
  • 436 the "handful of loose beads" of her day, looking for the clasp - metafictive
  • 454 "Life is so constructed, that the event does not, cannot, will not, match the expectation."
    • again dampening expectations but also that tension with the gothicism of Mrs Walraven's house
  • 469 "Graham had a wealth of mirth by nature; Paulina possessed no such inherent flow of animal spirits"
  • 482 "Is there, indeed, such happiness on earth?" and following - lovely
  • 487n. specifies that the plantations Paul goes to manage in Guadeloupe are slave plantations - as in WH (cf. Sneidern 1995 and JE (cf. Freedgood 2006), slavery undergirds the economy of the realist novel
  • 497 another vision, this time a dream one opiate induced, of Villette at night
  • 500 voyeurism/surveilling the Bassompierres on her midnight walk
  • 513 Justine Marie
  • 519 seeing the nun on her bed

Theme Tracking

Reading/writing

Materiality

Shakespeare allusions

  • 78 "the head and front of her [Mrs Sweeny] offending" Othello
  • 116 "that hag disappointment...all hail" Macbeth greeted by witches
  • 137 "pearl of great price" othello again
  • 199 Graham/John "I am sure thereby hangs a tale" Taming of the Shrew
  • 208 John says Mrs B reminds him of Titania when napping, she him of Bottom - Midsummer Night's Dream
  • 260 Ginevra calls LS Timon, again 264, 271
  • 311 Count de Bassompierre described as "grave and reverend signior" Othello
  • 318 "too too solid flesh" - Paulina - Hamlet
    • also horn-book is in Loves Labours Lost
  • 366 M Paul reading unnamed French translation of Shakespeare play
  • 460 M Paul talking to LS again "the vow 'more honored in the breach than in the observance" Hamlet