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The Woman in White Summary

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The Woman in White Summary Walter Hartright, a young drawing teacher who lives in London, needs a job and an escape from the city for the autumn months. One night he goes to visit his mother and sister, Sarah, and is surprised to find his friend Professor Pesca, a cheerful Italian whom Walter once saved from drowning, waiting for him at the Hartright’s family home. Pesca tells Walter that he has found a job for him teaching art to a pair of young ladies in Cumberland, at a place called Limmeridge House, in the employment of a man named Mr. Fairlie. Walter is somewhat uneasy about the job but accepts. On his last night in London, Walter visits his mother’s house to say goodbye and walks home across Hampstead Heath. On the road he meets a young woman dressed head to toe in white clothes. She asks him the way to London and walks with Walter to the city. On the way, she asks Walter if he knows many powerful men there, and mutters something about a certain Baronet. Walter tells her he is only a drawing master and does not know anyone of rank. He tells her that he has just taken a job at Limmeridge House and is surprised to learn that the woman has been there and that she speaks fondly of the late Mrs. Fairlie. The woman asks Walter if he will help her find a cab once they get to the city; Walter agrees, and he finds one quickly when they reach London. As the cab drives off, another carriage passes Walter, and the man inside leans out and shouts to a nearby policeman. He asks him if he has seen “a woman in white,” as this woman has recently “escaped from an asylum.” "My students can't get enough of your charts and their results have gone through the roof." -Graham S.

Walter travels to Limmeridge House to start his job. He does not like Mr. Fairlie, who is a pretentious man, but gets on well with his pupils, Marian Halcombe and Laura Fairlie. Immediately, Walter notices that Laura reminds him of someone. He also tells Marian about the woman in white, as Marian is the late Mrs. Fairlie’s daughter, and Marian looks through her mother’s letters to see if she can find any reference to this woman. One night, when Walter and Marian are in the drawing room and Laura is outside, Marian discovers that one of her mother’s letters describes a little girl who came to the school at Limmeridge, where Mrs. Fairlie taught. Mrs. Fairlie’s letter notes that she thought this girl, Anne Catherick, was strange but very sweet and gave her some white dresses to wear. At this moment, Laura comes inside from the garden, and Walter suddenly realizes that Laura looks like the mysterious woman in white. Walter and Laura begin to fall in love. This seems to make Laura very sad, and one day, Marian takes Walter aside and tells him that Laura is engaged to marry a Baronet named Sir Percival Glyde. She kindly tells Walter that he should leave Limmeridge because Sir Percival is expected to arrive in the next few days to make plans for the wedding. Walter is heartbroken but reluctantly agrees. While they are talking, a maid summons Marian back to the house because Laura is very upset— she has received an anonymous letter warning her not to marry Sir Percival. Marian and Walter ask around in the village to see if anyone knows who sent the note, and they discover a woman in white has been seen near Mrs. Fairlie’s grave. Knowing this must be Anne Catherick, Walter decides to hide in the churchyard that night so he can speak to her if she comes back to Mrs. Fairlie’s grave. His plan works, and he manages to speak with Anne, but she becomes extremely angry when Walter mentions Sir Percival’s name. Unable to calm her, Walter leaves Anne with her companion, an older woman named Mrs. Clements, and the next day he returns to London. Sir Percival Glyde comes to Limmeridge House to arrange his wedding. Laura is reluctant to marry him, but she has promised her father on his deathbed and feels too guilty to break the engagement. Sir Percival seems charming and considerate,

but Marian still does not like him. She finds him bad tempered with the servants, and Laura’s friendly dog always barks at him, which seems to be a measure of his character. Hoping to get out of the engagement, Laura tells Sir Percival that she does not love him, and that she loves someone else, and offers him the chance to break off the engagement; however, Sir Percival delights in her honesty, confesses his undying love for her, and the wedding goes ahead as planned. In the days that follow, Mr. Gilmore, Laura’s lawyer, arranges the marriage settlement. This settlement states that, if Laura dies without an heir, Sir Percival will receive twenty thousand pounds and Limmeridge House, while Laura’s aunt, Madame Fosco, will receive ten thousand pounds. After the wedding, Laura and Sir Percival set off on their honeymoon to Europe, where they plan to meet up with Laura’s aunt and her Italian husband, Count Fosco. Marian arranges to meet the newlyweds on their return at Sir Percival’s house at Blackwater, where she will live with them. Many months later, Laura and Sir Percival arrive home at Blackwater with Sir Percival’s friend Count Fosco and his wife. Marian and Laura both deeply dislike the Count and are very afraid of him. His wife behaves suspiciously too and submissively does everything the Count says. Marian also finds that Sir Percival’s demeanor has completely changed; instead of the charming (albeit off-putting) man who sauntered around Limmeridge declaring his undying love for Laura, Sir Percival is now extremely irritable and bad tempered, especially toward his new wife. At one point, he tries to force Laura to sign a document without telling her what it is (he has folded the paper so that only the signature line is visible), and becomes aggressive when Laura refuses to sign. Sir Percival’s combative mood is made worse when he hears that Anne Catherick is in the area, and he becomes determined to find her. One day, on a walk to the boathouse near the lake in the grounds, Laura meets Anne Catherick, who tells her that she knows a secret about Sir Percival. Laura agrees to meet Anne the next day. When she tries, however, Sir Percival follows her, drags her home, and locks her in her room. He tries to force her to sign the document again but Count Fosco stops him. Meanwhile, Marian has become deeply suspicious about Sir Percival and Count Fosco’s motives towards her sister. She

tries to write to Mr. Fairlie and Mr. Kyrle (the girls’ new lawyer) for help on several occasions, but Madame Fosco intercepts the letters. One night, Marian overhears Sir Percival and Count Fosco in the garden and hears them discuss plan to murder Laura for her fortune. Unfortunately, Marian gets soaked in a rain shower while crouching on the roof to listen and becomes ill with typhus. While Marian is ill, Count Fosco and Sir Percival continue their hunt for Anne Catherick. One day, the housekeeper, Mrs. Michelson, sees Count Fosco come in from a walk and Sir Percival asks if he has found her, at which Count Fosco smiles. Sir Percival sends Mrs. Michelson away to look at seaside houses for him to rent and, when she returns, she is told that Marian has been sent to Limmeridge, and that Laura will follow suit the next day. All the servants are to be dismissed, and the house is to be shut up. Mrs. Michelson is shocked but takes Laura to the station and sees her off on the train to London. When she arrives back at Blackwater, she discovers that Marian is still at the house and that Laura has been tricked. When Laura gets to London, she is taken to stay with Count Fosco, but dies the next day from heart failure. Several months later, Marian hears that Anne Catherick has been returned to the asylum and goes to visit her to see if she can find out about Sir Percival’s secret. When she arrives, she discovers that it is not Anne in the asylum but Laura, who has been disguised against her will as Anne. Marian breaks her sister out of the asylum, and they return to Limmeridge, but find that everyone there believes that Laura is dead. In the churchyard, where Anne has been buried in Mrs. Fairlie’s tomb, they meet Walter Hartright, who has returned to mourn for the woman he loves. Marian and Walter move to London, and Walter decides to investigate Sir Percival Glyde to see if he can uncover his secret. He visits Mrs. Clements, and she tells him that it has something to do with his being caught “in the vestry of the church” in Welmingham with Mrs. Catherick. Walter then visits Mrs. Catherick, Anne’s mother, and, when he mentions the vestry to her, can see from her reaction that the secret is in fact hidden there. He goes to Welmingham and finds that the church

marriage register has been forged: Sir Percival’s parents were never married, making him an illegitimate child, and he is not a Baronet at all. Walter runs to the nearby village to check this information in the second copy of the marriage register, and the forgery is confirmed. When he returns to the church that night, Walter is startled to find that it is on fire, and that Sir Percival, of all people, is trapped inside. He has accidentally set the church alight while trying to destroy the forgery and is killed in the blaze. After Sir Percival’s death, Mrs. Catherick writes to Walter and tells him that Anne never knew the secret, but that Sir Percival locked her in the asylum just in case she did know it. In the midst of all of this chaos, Walter and Laura marry. Now that Sir Percival is dead, Walter goes after Count Fosco. He tracks him down one night at the opera and takes Pesca with him to see if Pesca, who was once involved in Italian politics, recognizes the Count. Pesca does not, but the Count recognizes Pesca instantly and flees the opera house in fear. He is followed by a foreign man who had been watching Walter and Pesca carefully during the opera. Walter questions Pesca and Pesca confesses that he was a member of a secret political organization in Italy in his youth and suspects that the Count is a traitor to this same organization. That night, Walter writes Pesca a letter with Count Fosco’s address and tells him to come to this address and kill Count Fosco if he does not hear from Walter before the morning. Walter then goes to the Count’s house and blackmails him into writing a confession of the conspiracy against Laura. The Count agrees to do this if Walter will let him go and intercept the letter to Pesca. The Count then writes a confession which proves that Laura is the real Laura Fairlie, and that Anne Catherick is the woman who died at his house. The Count promptly leaves London, and Walter returns to Laura and Marian with his proof. They can now restore Laura’s identity and prove to her relatives that she is alive. Some months later, Walter gets a job which takes him to Paris. While he is there, he passes the Paris Morgue and sees Count Fosco’s body there. He has been stabbed by the foreign man who saw them at the opera, who is a member of the political organization Count Fosco betrayed.

Walter and Laura have a son and, when Mr. Fairlie dies, they move back to Limmeridge House and Walter’s son becomes the heir to the property.

Summary and analysis

The Woman in White Irony Count Fosco's death (situational irony) Count Fosco's death in Paris is an example of situational irony in that he avoids punishment for his participation in the scheme against Laura, only to then be killed in retribution for his betrayal of the Italian brotherhood. His punishment does not come in the form that a reader would expect it to. This irony shows Fosco meeting a violent end but does not implicate any of the major characters in this death. The irony is important because it suggests that the crimes of villainous characters will eventually catch up with them, even when it seems like they have gotten away with everything. The irony of Fosco being killed in revenge, but not by anyone related to Laura Fairlie, also keeps the violence linked to Continental, European characters, reinforcing the theme that the British characters are more rational and humane.

Walter and Percival's social positions (situational irony) The contrasting social positions of Walter and Sir Percival at the start of the novel create an example of situational irony. Walter is a member of the middle class who has to work to earn a living and who does not own any property. Sir Percival seems to be wealthy, sophisticated, and the owner of a large estate. On the surface, it would seem like Walter is the suitor who might pose the risk of marrying Laura for her money because he has so much less income than she does. It turns out, however, that Percival, the man who seems to be far wealthier, is the one who is scheming and plotting to get his hands on Laura's fortune. Walter, on the other hand, loves Laura faithfully even when she has no income or social position in the second half of the novel. This irony offers a critique of the upper-class preoccupation with gaining as much money as possible.

Sir Percival’s death (dramatic irony) Sir Percival's death functions as an example of dramatic irony. He believes that he can protect his secret by destroying the relevant portion of the marriage register. However, the outcome

of what he hopes to achieve and what the reader ends up observing are very different, and in fact directly contradict one another. Sir Percival thinks he is going to save his reputation and his wealth, but he ends up losing his life. This irony shows that a preoccupation with maintaining social status and position can lead to destructive outcomes. It is also ironic that while the reader has expected it might be Anne Catherick or Laura who will die so that the secret can be concealed, it ends up being Percival himself who pays the price to protect his secret.

Mrs. Catherick's scandal (dramatic) Jane Catherick's scandal is an example of dramatic irony because readers are aware that she is indeed guilty of a sexual transgression, but also that it is not the one most people think she is guilty of. Mrs. Catherick was seen having an intimate conversation with Sir Percival when she was a young woman. Her husband and everyone in her neighborhood falsely believed Percival to be Jane’s lover. Percival perpetuated this false belief because it helped to protect his own secret. However, Mrs. Catherick's scandalous secret is actually that she slept with Philip Fairlie and then hastily married Mr. Catherick to cover up her illegitimate pregnancy. Despite Jane Catherick's clever attempts to cover up her previous sexual transgression, she ends up being socially condemned for an affair she is not guilty of. This irony suggests that characters will always end up having to pay a price for social transgressions, in one way or another.

The Woman in White Symbols, Allegory and Motifs Frederick Fairlie’s art collection (symbol) Mr. Fairlie is the owner of a vast art collection. He is surrounded by expensive art pieces and spares no money in acquiring new ones. However, the owner of this huge art collection is an invalid who cannot stand any mental exertion or external stimuli. He spends his days shut away in his private quarters and is incapable of any productive activity. It is rather ironic that a person with rapidly declining physical and mental health should display such zeal and vigor in acquiring ornamental objects. Frederick Fairlie’s art collection is a symbol of his selfabsorbed character and his distorted values. He neglects the important things in life and focuses all of his energy upon these useless ornaments. Furthermore, he does not acquire art pieces out of a professional interest in art, but rather to use his collection as a means of flaunting his wealth and status. The acquisition of material things is the sole purpose of his life. Apart from this, he displays little interest in the events unfolding around him, and he shows little concern for the welfare of his nieces. The Fairlie household becomes almost dysfunctional under his guardianship. His art collection is a symbol of his selfishness, vanity and greed. His art collection fails to surround him with an artistic aura; it only emphasizes his self-absorbed and obnoxious character.

Anne Catherick's white dress (symbol) Anne Catherick prefers to dress entirely in white clothes whenever possible. She does so to honor the memory of Mrs. Fairlie, who told her that she looks nice in white. The white dress symbolizes her purity and innocence; throughout the novel, Anne is repeatedly victimized even though she has done nothing wrong, and it is even finally revealed that she never even knew Percival's secret. Emotionally and mentally, Anne is childish, in both her innocence and

the way she clings to the memory of Mrs. Fairlie. The white dress also symbolizes Anne's enigmatic nature. Especially at the start of the novel, it is not clear what her history is, and whether she might be sinister or not. In fact, Anne's white garments in her mysterious first encounter with Walter even suggest that she might be some sort of supernatural figure.

Blackwater Park (symbol) The setting of Blackwater Park is very significant. The house is an ancient mansion with five hundred years of history behind it. The house is surrounded by thick foliage which casts long shadows and blocks the view. The lake of Blackwater Park is shallow, still, and devoid of life. The old mansion, the thick foliage, the long shadows and the still water produce a threatening atmosphere charged with a sense of deadened suffocation. The threatening atmosphere of Blackwater Park is symbolic to the plot. Not only does the place house two criminals, but it is also in this place that the most evil scheme will be plotted against Laura Fairlie. The suffocating foliage symbolizes the imprisonment that the sisters will endure at this place. The threatening appearance of Blackwater Park provides the perfect backdrop for the conspiracy which will take place here.

Count Fosco’s mice (motif) Count Fosco’s mice are frequently mentioned in the book. Count Fosco has a penchant for pets, especially mice. He treats his mice as his best friends and allows them to crawl over his body. Fosco’s fondness for mice serves to heighten his eccentricity. By repeatedly describing Fosco’s playing with his mice, Marian seeks to set him apart from no-nonsense Englishmen and to emphasize his foreignness. Fosco’s fondness for mice, his exuberant manners and his Napoleonic features turn him into an exotic spectacle. The frequent mentioning of his mice serves to remind the readers of his foreign origins and exotic manners. Fosco’s foreignness may both inspire mistrust and curiosity among the readers. It is important for the readers to focus their attention on Fosco, for he is the most fascinating male character of the novel, and will play a decisive role in shaping the development of the plot.

Count Fosco (allegory) Count Fosco is an allegory for continental European culture. In Victorian Britain, people liked to cherish the belief that the continental Europeans are culturally sophisticated but morally decadent. On the other hand, the Victorians believe that English people possess plainer taste, but are more virtuous and upright in their character. Count Fosco’s person is a living allegory of what the Victorians believed to be the European culture. Fosco is culturally sophisticated. He is well versed in arts and masters many languages. He is well travelled and boasts a broad experience in many matters and subjects. The Victorians believed the Europeans to be more decadent in their lifestyle than the English. Fosco has extravagant taste. His fine taste in clothes is portrayed through his expensive and highly decorative waistcoats. Fosco also stands for the image of the scheming and morally corrupt European. He engages in the practices of spying, lying, conspiring and poisoning: all secretive behaviors despised by Victorian Englishmen. By inventing this sophisticated, exuberant and dangerous character, the author creates a convincing allegory for what the Victorians believed to be continental European culture. Fosco embodies all the classic Victorian stereotypes of the European man.

The Woman in White Imagery

Count Fosco's foreign features The appearance of the arch villain Count Fosco is described in very colorful and vivid language. Fosco is described as being extremely fat, with Napoleonic features. He has a fondness for animals such as canaries and mice, and enjoys having mice crawling about him. The image of Fosco is decidedly "foreign." It is not surprising that the author would wish to cast the villain in a foreign mold. In Victorian literature, the villain is often a foreigner with dubious morals who comes to corrupt a morally virtuous English society. By portraying Fosco with the facial features of one Britain’s most hated enemies, Napoleon Bonaparte, the author places him in the mold of the suspicious foreigner and enables the Victorian reader to develop an instant mistrust towards him.

Marian Halcombe's masculine features The appearance of Marian Halcombe is also worth noting, because it totally defies the conventional Victorian female image. Marian is described as having a feminine physical form, but she also possesses very masculine features. She is described as having a “large, firm, masculine mouth and jaw,” with “almost a mustache." When Walter first encounters Marian’s face, he is surprised and amazed. This is because her masculine facial features are totally at odds with her graceful feminine figure. This discrepancy has great significance and sheds light on Marian’s character. It shows that Marian has a woman’s body but a man’s head. Although she is trapped in a woman’s body and confined to the limitations of a woman’s life, she possesses the characteristics of a Victorian man. In the story, Marian exhibits all the conventionally masculine qualities by being brave, determined and resourceful in her attempts to defend the weak and self-effacing Laura.

Laura Fairlie's delicate appearance Laura’s physical image is also highly significant. She possesses highly feminine characteristics. She is described as having delicate features, gentle charms, and light coloring in her eyes and hair. She is fair and delicate with an innocent and truthful expression in her eyes. Laura is also described as being an expert musician, a highly prized talent in Victorian ladies. In short, Laura is painted in a highly feminized manner, and is presented as the contrasting character to the strong and masculine Marian. Laura’s feminine physical form serves to prepare the readers for her highly feminine character, which results in her being unable to advocate for herself or make decisions. Her femininity is both what inspires characters like Walter and Marian to be protective of her, and what leaves her in need of that protection.

Anne Catherick's mysterious image Anne is dressed from head to toe in white. Her appearance in the story is always sudden and of a short duration. Anne’s repeated appearances as the mysterious woman in white gradually increases the suspense of the story. Her emotional distress and distracted manners give her an aura of unfathomable mystery. She haunts Blackwater Park like a ghost, making the sinister setting of Blackwater Park all the more uncanny. Anne’s ghostly image haunts the story and instills it with an aura of suspense, tension and enigma.

The Woman in White Asylums and Lunacy in the Victorian Era

In the time just before Collins wrote The Woman in White,  England was gripped with "lunacy panic." The fear was not that madmen and madwomen were roaming the streets. Rather, people became increasingly afraid that healthy and sane individuals were being wrongly imprisoned in lunatic asylums, where they were stripped of their rights, freedoms, and sometimes their property. Concerns about regulation and documentation of the conditions under which someone could be admitted to an insane asylum dated back to the 1700s. At this time, there was no regulation of private "madhouses," which were run on a for-profit basis, and there was very little association with medical treatment. In the 1750s and 60s, several cases were brought forward in which an individual raised concerns that a friend or family member was being wrongly detained. Investigations led to their release, and also to increasing calls to reform and restrict the admission process. In 1774, the British Parliament passed the Act for the Regulation of Private Madhouses (the Madhouses Act). The Act required that all residences housing more than one lunatic be subject to licensing and inspection. A patient could also only be accepted into a private asylum if a certificate was obtained from a medical professional testifying to their mental instability. However, despite this new regulation, concerns about asylums persisted. While private patients (those whose care was being paid for) had to be certified, so called "pauper lunatics" could also be sent to private asylums if their local region decided to cover the costs out of their charitable budget, and these patients did not need documentation by doctors. The certification itself was unreliable; there was nothing to restrict individuals with a conflict of interest (for example, a doctor who was also paid by the asylum) from signing certificates and many individuals, even with dubious credentials, were qualified to sign. Even if someone seemed legitimately to be in need of full-time care, there were persistent reports of abuse and terrible conditions in both public and private asylums. Between 1807 and 1827, four separate government committees met to hear evidence about bad conditions and the possibility that individuals were being wrongfully admitted. In 1828, a new act was passed with stricter admission requirements, requiring a private patient to have two certificates from two different doctors, who could not have any association with an asylum. However, scandals about wrongful detainment continued. In particular, there were fears that wealthy individuals (who could be either men or women) would be wrongfully detained so that greedy relatives could access their money, or that vindictive husbands would have their wives institutionalized to effectively get rid of them in an era where divorce was still very hard to obtain. The latter concern was publicized by a wide spread scandal in the late 1850s in which the well-known writer, Edward Bulwer Lytton, attempted to declare his wife Rosina insane and have her institutionalized. Because it was well-known that the two had a very volatile marriage and were involved in a bitter custody dispute, it was largely believed that Rosina did not need to be kept in an asylum. The case, along with others in 1858-1859, led to widespread media coverage. Collins drew on this interest to animate the plot of his novel, adding sensational and Gothic elements.

The Woman in White Literary Elements Genre Sensation novel with Gothic elements.

Setting and Context England in the early 1850’s. Most events take place in old English country estates including Limmeridge House and Blackwater Park. Some events take place in London.

Narrator and Point of View The novel is written in epistolary form, comprising various first-person narrators. Important narrators include Walter Hartright and Marian Halcombe. Several peripheral characters are also narrators, such as Mr. Gilmore, Frederick Fairlie, Mrs. Catherick, the doctor and the housekeeper. However, three important characters, including Laura Fairlie, Anne Catherick and Sir Percival are not narrators.

Tone and Mood The tone and mood of the novel is mysterious, uncanny, suspenseful, and unsettling. The entire plotline is charged with tension and readers are never sure what is going to happen next, or what new information is going to be received. There is the sense that characters are usually being threatened with some sort of danger and can never be entirely at ease.

Protagonist and Antagonist Laura Fairlie and Marian Halcombe are the female protagonists. Walter Hartright is the male protagonist. Sir Percival and Fosco are the male antagonists.

Major Conflict Walter and Marian try to protect Laura’s property and legal identity, while Sir Percival and Fosco try to usurp Laura’s wealth. Anne Catherick threatens to expose Percival’s secret, while Percival tries to silence and discredit her by placing her in the asylum.

Climax Although Laura Fairlie has been pronounced dead, she appears as a living person while Walter Hartright is visiting her supposed grave.

Foreshadowing Anne Catherick’s anonymous letter foreshadows Laura Fairlie’s unhappy marriage. Marian Halcombe dreams of Walter Halright suffering from pestilence and shipwreck, all of which Walter eventually encounters.

Understatement Anne and Laura’s imprisonment in the asylum are understated. The readers are not provided with detailed description of their sufferings in the asylum.

Allusions “I came, saw and conquered”: Count Fosco visits Frederick Fairlie and tricks him into writing an invitation for Laura Fairlie. By doing so, Count Fosco is able to lure Laura Fairlie away from Blackwater Park and into his control. As Fosco describes the success of his trickery over Frederick Fairlie, he uses the famous expression “I came, saw and conquered Fairlie”. This is an allusion to Julius Caesar’s famous utterance “veni, vidi, vici.” This expression is used to describe a rapid and conclusive victory over the enemies. By borrowing an expression from the legendary Caesar, Fosco brings out the proud swagger of his character. It shows that a dull invalid like Frederick Fairlie stands no chance against the calculated schemes of a sophisticated criminal like Fosco. This allusion is in perfect keeping with Fosco’s expressive rhetoric and exuberant personality. The allusion to sirens of ancient mythology: Walter Hartright compares his love for Laura Fairlie to the the siren’s song luring him to destruction. This allusion refers to the beautiful female sirens of Greek mythology, who use their seductive singing to distract sailors, causing them to shipwreck their boats. By comparing his love for Laura with the destructive sirens' songs, Walter expresses his deep feelings for Laura and the impossibility of their love. Marrying outside of one’s class was not an easy affair during the Victorian period. Walter is acutely conscious of the fact that the socially privileged Laura could not marry an impoverished drawing teacher like himself. This allusion shows that Walter is a sensible man, who understands and respects the rigid restrictions of Victorian hierarchy. Despite his genuine feelings for Laura, he is conscious of the impossibility of this relationship, and is careful not to take advantage of Laura.

Imagery Count Fosco's appearance is painted through a vivid description. He has Napoleonic features, wears extravagant waistcoats, plays with mice and boasts of eccentric manners. The author uses highly colorful languages to describe his unique appearance and manners. He is described as a man with an exuberant personality and a fascinating character. He is an exotic spectacle and a fascinating image to behold.

Paradox When Marian informs Walter of Laura’s betrothal to Sir Percival, she says that she must give him pain in order to be kind to him. This is a paradox,

because it seems impossible to be cruel and kind and the same time. However, this statement is true. Although Walter’s knowledge of Laura’s engagement may cause him pain, such knowledge is beneficial to him because it compels him to disengage himself from a romance which has no future.

Parallelism Laura Fairlie and Anne Catherick are described as parallel figures. Their striking physical resemblance turns them into each other’s doubles. Walter first meets Anne, but but falls in love with Laura. Even though Walter does not acknowledge this, it is possible that he first develops feelings for Anne, and revives this romantic feeling in Laura. Anne’s emotional suffering and imprisonment in the asylum foreshadow the suffering and imprisonment Laura will soon endure, thus making Anne the perfect double for Laura. Anne’s imprisonment in the asylum indicates that Laura’s marriage is also a form of imprisonment which can turn a healthy woman into an emotionally deranged person. Laura’s intense suffering at the hands of her husband’s persecution indeed turns her into an emotionally disturbed woman. Laura loses part of her wit and memory after her imprisonment in the asylum. In the story, Laura endures all the sufferings which Anne had been subjected to. The final revelation that Laura and Anne are actually half-sisters clarifies their physical resemblance to each other, and why they have shared parallel experiences. At the same time, Laura's fate eventually turns out to be happy because she is born legitimate, and therefore entitled to wealth, privilege and education. Anne's fate is much more grim because she grows up in poverty and has no one to help or protect her.

Metonymy and Synecdoche When Marian expresses her resentment about having been condemned to "patience and petticoats" for life, she uses the rhetorical device of metonymy. A petticoat is a female garment which cannot literally rule over anyone. When Marian says that she is a slave to petticoats, she means she is a slave to the conventional gender role which forces women to wear petticoats. Petticoats are also a synecdoche, because the wearing of petticoat is only a part of the Victorian gender expectation. Apart from petticoats, Victorian women are also subjected to many other restrictions on their lives, such as the lack of education and career opportunities.

Personification Count Fosco's mice are described as his best friends. The mice are attributed with human qualities. The mice seem to possess human minds and are able to understand Fosco’s orders and wishes. The mice are very obedient and crawl all over him like his children.

Evidence and Law Theme Analysis

The law is presented as a flawed institution in Wilkie Collins’ novel The Woman in White. In the novel, Walter Hartright, a young drawing teacher who is in love with Laura Fairlie, tries to expose her husband, Sir Percival Glyde, and his accomplice Count Fosco, for trying to steal Laura’s inheritance. The case also concerns the mystery of the “woman in white,” a young woman named Anne Catherick who has escaped from an asylum and who strongly resembles Laura. When Anne dies, Count Fosco confines Laura in the asylum under Anne’s name, in order to fake her death and lay claim to her fortune. Although Walter uses certain legal methods, such as the compilation of written evidence, to build his case against Sir Percival, the law itself is depicted as a limited institution that is easily influenced by powerful individuals. Therefore, law is presented as a force that can easily be abused and used against vulnerable people like Laura and Anne. In Collins’ novel, it is the effort of individuals like Walter, rather than the institution of the law itself, that discovers the truth and triumphs over corruption and conspiracy. The structure of The Woman in White suggests that the collection of written evidence is an effective way of reaching a fair verdict in a court of law—at least in theory. The story of The Woman in White is presented to the reader as a series of documents

collected by Walter, which narrate the events of the story from the perspective of several witnesses. In this sense, the novel deliberately mimics the process of providing evidence to a jury in order to ascertain the facts of a case. Walter states that he will only describe the events for which he was present; the rest will be told through the written testimony of others, through letters, diaries, and legal documents. Walter’s disclaimer mimics the objectivity that is achieved when evidence is set before an unbiased jury. By distancing himself from parts of the narrative, Walter is unable to influence the opinion of his readers, who will play the role of the “judge” in examining the case of the conspiracy. Walter believes that the reader will be able to compare the different written accounts of events and successfully decide which characters are innocent and which are guilty in the story. A comparison of written evidence further aids Walter in the novel when he is able to compare Sir Percival Glyde’s forged copy of the church register with the unbiased one kept by a clerk, which does not include the entry of Sir Percival’s parents’ marriage (because they were never married) and proves that Sir Percival is not really the Baronet of Blackwater as he claims to be. This incident, and the overarching structure of the novel, suggests that the legal structure of a court case, in which evidence is presented to an unbiased jury, can be an effective method of judging guilt in a crime. However, although Collins suggests that legal methods work well in theory, in reality the law is not unbiased, and the characters in the novel are repeatedly let down by the legal system. Walter acknowledges that the case he has carefully compiled is never put before a court. Although he is convinced that a jury would support his case, “the machinery of the Law” is still “the pre-engaged servant of the long purse.” This suggests that people with money wield the most legal power in nineteenthcentury England. This is demonstrated when Walter approaches Mr. Kyrle, the Fairlie’s lawyer, with the evidence he has compiled. Mr. Kyrle will not help Walter take his case against Sir Percival and Count Fosco to court because he knows that —without Laura’s inheritance, which has been stolen—Walter will not have enough money to fund a lengthy trial. This demonstrates that poor people like Walter and Laura do not get a fair hearing in the justice system as lawyers are unlikely to take

on poorer clients. This is further implied by the fact that the narrative contains no evidence from either Anne or Laura’s perspective. Those who are poor and vulnerable like Anne, or socially vulnerable like Laura (who is a woman and has fewer legal rights and protections than men), are voiceless in the nineteenth-century justice system, revealing the legal system to be ineffective and flawed. Rather than helping vulnerable individuals, the law and legal evidence can be used against them by powerful individuals, such as Sir Percival Glyde, who are able to gain the support of the law, or defy it entirely, because of their money and privilege. For instance, Sir Percival Glyde marries Laura because he knows that he can legally claim her fortune if he can convince her to sign it over to him before her death, which he and Count Fosco conspire to fake. Although Marian, Laura’s half-sister, appeals to her lawyer, Mr. Gilmore, to help Laura break her engagement to Sir Percival, Mr. Gilmore is easily won over by Sir Percival’s charming facade and reputation as a wealthy and noble man. Although Mr. Gilmore feels sympathetic towards Laura, he does not (at first) suspect Sir Percival. Mr. Gilmore’s inaction suggests that powerful individuals like Sir Percival cannot easily be stopped as they are able to use their wealth to bring the law round to their side. When Count Fosco succeeds in his plan to fake Laura’s death, both the legal evidence of Laura’s death certificate and the written testimony on the tombstone, which bears Laura’s name, legally bar Laura from retrieving her identity or inheriting her fortune, which goes to Sir Percival and is split with Count Fosco instead. This situation—and the novel as a whole—reveals that while examining written evidence can be a reliable system of fathoming truth, the system of judging this evidence must be unbiased, otherwise it will be exploited by powerful individuals and wielded against those who are poor or vulnerable.

Morality, Crime, and PunishmentTheme Analysis Themes and Colors

LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in The Woman in White, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.

Justice is self-regulating in The Woman in White, as the characters who commit crimes are fittingly punished, while the virtuous characters receive suitable rewards in exchange for their efforts. The characters in The Woman in White are morally nuanced, however, and “good” characters are often willing to commit immoral or illegal acts if they are necessary to protect their loved ones, while “bad” characters sidestep punishment for long periods of time. Collins uses Walter and Marian to highlight how one can break the law while still being good and virtuous—what matters most is the intention underpinning the crime, and if one’s intentions are good, then they aren’t worthy of punishment. Meanwhile, if one commits a crime with malicious intent—like Count Fosco and Sir Percival do, on several accounts— those crimes are not only worthy of punishment but actually bring about their own punishment. Although the virtuous characters are rewarded for their behavior, they are not passively virtuous throughout the action of the plot. Instead, they actively strive to do what’s morally right, even if they must break the law in the process. For instance, Marian breaks the law to free Laura from the asylum, where she has been unjustly imprisoned by Count Fosco under the identity of Anne Catherick. Marian’s actions are done with good intentions, to free her sister from false imprisonment, rather than for personal gain, which is why her law-breaking is positioned as virtuous rather than immoral. Walter is also willing to break the law to protect Laura and Marian. He is prepared to violently assault or murder Sir Percival before he finds that Sir Percival is trapped by a fire inside a church. Walter also blackmails Count Fosco into providing him with a full confession of the conspiracy that he concocted to steal Laura’s inheritance. However, like Marian, Walter’s seemingly immoral behavior reflects his

good intentions and his willingness to act daringly and bravely to achieve justice and to see those who have committed crimes punished. By rewarding Marian and Walter at the end of the novel, Collins sharply distinguishes between behavior that is selfserving and corrupt—such as the behavior practiced by the Count and Sir Percival— and behavior that is noble and necessary, even if the only distinguishing feature between these two behaviors is the reason that underpins it. Although Walter is prepared to commit these well-intentioned crimes if necessary, Collins spares him the necessity of doing this to demonstrate that crimes bring about their own punishment, and that morally corrupt people who commit crimes knowingly for personal gain, like Count Fosco and Sir Percival, often bring about their own demises. During a conversation at Blackwater, Count Fosco makes fun of Laura and Marian for suggesting that “crimes cause their own detection.” Count Fosco, who has lived a long life of crime without being punished, is complacent in his ability to evade punishment and feels that Laura and Marian are naïve in their belief. However, Count Fosco is proven wrong, and both he and Sir Percival Glyde unwittingly destroy themselves—Count Fosco by becoming too complacent and failing to disguise himself properly to evade the detection by the political organization he betrayed, and Sir Percival by becoming paranoid about his crimes and seeking to destroy evidence. Although it is Walter who helps bring about the men’s destruction—he leads his friend Pesca (who used to be caught up in the same dangerous political organization that Fosco betrayed) to the opera and reveals Fosco to his pursuers, and he fans Sir Percival’s paranoia by investigating him—the punishments the two antagonists receive are in fact the direct result of their crimes, and not the result of Walter’s direct intervention. Walter, therefore, is active in destroying the Count and Sir Percival, but is saved from having to commit violence and evade the punishment of the law himself. In The Woman in White, virtuous characters strive against crime and injustice to aid in its detection. Collins suggests that these actions, taken by people with good intentions, such as Walter and Marian, support both the capture and punishment of criminals and support systems of natural justice, in which “crime causes its own detection” and criminals bring about their own demise.

By the end of The Woman in White, most of the characters have arrived in situations that reflect their respective behaviors throughout the novel. Those who have acted with good intentions, like Walter and Marian, are rewarded for their morality, while characters who have acted with evil intentions, like Sir Percival and Count Fosco, are punished. Sir Percival causes his own death in a fire while trying to destroy the evidence of a forgery he has committed and which he has unlawfully used to claim inheritance and borrow money. Meanwhile, Count Fosco is murdered by the Italian political organization that he swore allegiance to and then promptly betrayed. These punishments fit the nature of the men’s crimes and support Collin’s central message that “crimes cause their own detection.” Walter, Marian, and Laura, in contrast, end the novel happily because their intentions have been moral throughout the novel. Laura and Marian have been victims in the conspiracy of Sir Percival and Count Fosco, while Walter has acted consistently with the Fairlies’ best interests in mind. Even Anne Catherick, who seems to have been punished, through her untimely death, meets a fate that is fitting for her character. Anne is a tragic figure, who has been outcast and mistreated by society her whole life. Her fondest memory is her time spent with Mrs. Fairlie at Limmeridge—a time she dreams of returning to. After Sir Percival and Count Fosco switch Anne and Laura’s identities, Anne’s wish is tragically fulfilled, as she is buried in Mrs. Fairlie’s tomb, because everyone thinks she is Laura. The resolution of the novel, in a way which reflects the behavior and degrees of virtue among the characters, is very typical of the nineteenth-century novel, in which virtue is richly rewarded and malevolence aptly punished.

Identity and AppearanceTheme Analysis Themes and Colors LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in The Woman in White, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.

Identity and external appearance are presented as fluid and deceptive in The Woman in White, which centers around a mysterious and deadly case of switched identities. In the novel, identity is closely bound up with public recognition, to the point where loss of public identity is equated with a total loss of self. It is also implied that people develop their identities based partly on how society treats them because of their external appearance. Collins criticizes a society in which public appearance and social identity are viewed as essential aspects of a person’s character. Collins argues instead that external appearances do not necessarily align with or reflect a person’s character. In The Woman in White, there are sharp contradictions between the way that people look and the way that they behave, revealing that external appearances can be deceiving and do not necessarily offer insight into someone’s personality. When Walter Hartright first meets Marian, for instance, he remarks upon her “graceful” figure. When Marian turns around, however, Walter is shocked because he finds her “ugly.” This undermines the reader’s expectation that Marian will be the beautiful heroine. Marian’s character contradicts this description of her as “ugly”; when Walter gets to know her, he discovers that she is a brave and intelligent woman and does not have an “ugly” personality. Through this discrepancy between Marian’s internal character and external appearance, Collins implies that Marian is far more than she appears to be. The deceiving nature of appearances is especially true of Count Fosco and Sir Percival Glyde, who deliberately present themselves in a certain way to disguise their true characters and identities. The Count, who is a huge, intimidating man, makes a show of caring for vulnerable animals like mice and birds to disguise the fact that he is ruthless and malicious. Sir Percival, who is very handsome, similarly presents himself as charming and polite but is secretly brutish and cruel. Collins repeats this pattern of contradiction between internal character and external appearance to emphasize that a person may not be who they claim or

pretend to be, and that deciding a person’s character based off of their appearance can be extremely dangerous. Although appearances do not necessarily reflect character, identities are closely connected with reputation within society. Collins highlights how reputation is just as unhelpful and misleading in discerning one’s true character as appearances are. For instance, Sir Percival Glyde has concealed his true identity because he is an illegitimate child and not really a member of the nobility, as he pretends to be. He has created a false identity for himself as a Baronet, and as far as anyone in society knows, he is a Baronet. It is only through the discovery of “the Secret” of the forged marriage register that Sir Percival’s identity can be challenged. Sir Percival assumes the appearance of a charming and polite nobleman to create an identity which is far from the truth. Through Sir Percival’s false claim to nobility, Collins critiques those who tie their identity to their name or reputation, arguing that reputation does not adequately reflect one’s real character. Furthermore, Sir Percival’s desperation to protect his constructed identity, and his terror that the secret will be discovered, implies that the loss of public identity is a significant loss in nineteenth-century society. Without his name and reputation as a nobleman, Sir Percival will be reduced to a poor, nameless nobody and will lose the privileges enjoyed by the aristocracy. Sir Percival’s anxieties reveal that he’s not the only one who tries to center his identity around reputation; in the nineteenth century, British society was largely based on reputation and social status. Sir Percival’s use of a false identity—and the fact that few people question the validity of his identity—suggests that nineteenthcentury society is easily taken in by the external appearance of rank and importance, even though those things aren’t adequate markers of one’s true character. Furthermore, identity is presented as something that is not only important to society but is partly formed based on societal expectations. This is demonstrated by Mrs. Catherick’s determination to retain her public identity as a respectable lady, although the community knows Anne’s father was not Mrs. Catherick’s husband. By steadfastly maintaining her appearance as a respectable woman, though, Mrs. Catherick begins to be treated as such by the people in the town. When the minister

bows to Mrs. Catherick as he passes by her house, it becomes clear that people in the town now perceive Mrs. Catherick as a respectable woman even if the reader knows that, by nineteenth-century standards, she is not. It is a shift in the public’s perception of Mrs. Catherick that remade her public image, and thus it doesn’t reflect a change in her underlying personality. Similarly, when Count Fosco places Laura in the asylum, everyone around her treats her as though she really is Anne Catherick. By the time Marian frees Laura, Laura has picked up traits that belonged to Anne and is barely distinguishable from Anne in her physical appearance. This change in Laura’s appearance is brought on by the emotional strain of being confined in the asylum, rather than a change in her own nature; it is the expectations of people at the asylum that change Laura’s character. The idea that people will develop similar personality traits if they are treated in the same way suggests that society is partly responsible for forming the habits of individuals and that, if society is too preoccupied by the external appearance of virtue and nobility, rather than with evidence of it through actions, it can easily be fooled by individuals who construct their identities in order to bend to and benefit from social expectations. This ultimately supports Collins’ belief that public identity is constructed, relies on performance, and does not necessarily communicate anything about the internal nature of a person or how they behave in private.

Marriage and GenderTheme Analysis Themes and Colors  

 

 

 

 

LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in The Woman in White, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.

Marriage is presented as a great risk for women in The Woman in White. Women in nineteenth-century Britain had fewer rights than men because of the societal belief that women were inferior to men. It was still very difficult for women to challenge their husband’s authority or to maintain control over their own assets once married. Throughout the novel, Collins is critical of marriage, as the female characters in the novel stand to lose everything by it, while the male characters stand to gain from marriage and use this to their own advantage. While marriage for love is still depicted as a favorable outcome when it is based on mutual love and respect—like Laura and Walter’s marriage at the end of the book—many of the marriages in The Woman in White highlight the unfair balance of power between men and women in the nineteenth century. In the novel, marriage is presented as something that is potentially dangerous to women because it strips them of their rights, power, and individual freedoms. Laura’s marriage to Sir Percival Glyde threatens her identity, fortune, and even her life. Although Laura is a wealthy woman, she has had little say in the distribution of her inheritance; if Laura dies, her fortune will go to her husband and to her aunt, Madame Fosco, who is conveniently married to Sir Percival’s coconspirator, Count Fosco. This situation seals Laura’s fate, as it gives her future husband a financial incentive to murder her. Furthermore, like many wealthy women in the period, Laura has no say over who she marries. Before his death, Laura’s father selected Sir Percival for her, and Laura feels that she must obey her father’s

dying wish. This gives the reader the impression that Laura has no power over her situation and is emotionally pressured into marrying Sir Percival, whom she does not love (let alone even like), by nineteenth-century conventions, which stated that women must obey the wishes of their male relatives. Once Laura is married to Sir Percival, she loses whatever personal freedoms she previously enjoyed. She must ask Sir Percival’s permission for her sister, Marian, to live with her and must live in Sir Percival’s house at Blackwater. Sir Percival is also physically aggressive towards Laura and tries to keep her locked up against her will. Although Marian reminds Sir Percival that there are laws to protect women against brutal treatment, Laura is effectively powerless against the plots of her husband because of her lack of agency —a situation that firmly positions marriage as a severe danger to women. The novel highlights that while women lose power through their marriages, men become more powerful through marriage. This increases the risk of marriage for women, as men are incentivized to marry women who are likely to receive a large inheritance; the husbands of these women will be able to control this inheritance, as they have more financial rights than their wives. Sir Percival stands to gain enormously from his marriage to Laura; if she dies, her will leaves 20,000 pounds and Limmeridge House to Sir Percival, who is heavily in debt. Although the novel presents an extreme scenario—that Sir Percival is willing to murder Laura in order to access her fortune—Collins suggests that marriage leaves women vulnerable to predatory forces because of their lack of rights in Victorian society, and incentivizes men to prey on wealthy women for their fortunes, which marriage gives them access to. Similarly, Count Fosco has benefitted from his marriage to Madame Fosco. Once an outspoken young woman who “advocated for the Rights of Women,” Madame Fosco has been transformed into an obedient and unquestioning accomplice for the Count. The Count has destroyed her independent spirit and sense of self to the point where she is like an extension of the Count with no will of her own. Count Fosco also stands to benefit financially through Sir Percival’s marriage as, if Laura dies, he will be in control of the 10,000 pounds that his wife, Laura’s aunt, is set to inherit. The descriptions of Madame Fosco as a young woman mirror Marian in her

outspokenness and determination to be treated like a man. However, while Madame Fosco’s marriage quashes her spirit, Marian does not plan to marry and describes herself as a “confirmed spinster.” This supports Collins’ criticisms of marriage as an institution that stamps out the potential of bright, outspoken women who strive to be treated as equal to men. However, the novel doesn’t present marriage as entirely bad. In certain cases, marriage can create a fulfilling bond between two people, like with Walter and Laura, as long as these people are equals and are committed to each other through love and respect. Walter’s marriage to Laura is the happy conclusion of The Woman in White. Although Walter, as a lower-middle-class man, stands to gain financially by marrying Laura, he proves that he is interested in her and not her wealth through his unwavering dedication to her throughout the novel. At one point in the novel, Walter leaves Limmeridge for Honduras, even though he is deeply in love with Laura, because he wants to give Laura the chance to be happy with her new husband and to forget Walter, even though she is in love with him too. When he returns from South America and finds that Laura is changed by her time in the asylum and that she has lost her fortune, Walter remains faithful to her and does not pressure her to marry him while she is emotionally fragile. Instead Walter supports Laura financially and works tirelessly to help restore her identity and fortune, even though he believes this effort will come to nothing. Ultimately Walter’s marriage to Laura supports the idea that marriage can be a happy occurrence when a man has earned the trust and respect of the woman he wants to marry. However, Walter’s devotion to Laura is treated as a rare occurrence in the novel and Collins suggests that, despite this oneoff happy ending, most marriages are a dangerous trap for nineteenth-century women and often result in them losing what little financial, legal, and social power that they have.

Class, Industry, and Social PlaceTheme Analysis

Themes and Colors  

 

 

 

 

LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in The Woman in White, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.

Collins’ novel The Woman in White praises industry, hard work, and the “self-made” man. Nineteenth-century British society was rigidly organized by class, but social mobility was made possible through the rise of the middle class and the self-made man, meaning a man without family connections or land who became wealthy through his own efforts. The Woman in White reflects British, middle-class values of the nineteenth century: the virtuous, hard-working protagonist, Walter Hartright, triumphs over dishonest social climbers like Sir Percival Glyde. However, Walter is only able to transcend his class because of his noble character and industrious efforts. The conclusion of the novel—the marriage between Laura Fairlie and Walter —blends what many Victorians believed to be the inherently noble qualities of the upper classes (virtue, refinement, and an interest in culture) with the industry and innovation of the self-made man, who was encouraged to better himself and grow wealthy in order to emulate the noble classes.

Although nobility is implicitly linked with virtue in the novel, some upper-class characters like Count Fosco and Mr. Fairlie are associated with laziness and duplicity. Mr. Fairlie presents himself as frail and incapable; an affectation common among the aristocracy of the eighteenth century that was meant to demonstrate their extreme delicacy and genteelness of character through their physical helplessness. Mr. Fairlie ignores Marian’s pleas for help throughout the novel and is a parody of aristocratic pretensions and eccentricities, which had fallen out of fashion by the mid nineteenth century among the British public. Count Fosco, similarly, presents himself as affectedly genteel and sensitive. Like Mr. Fairlie, Count Fosco cultivates a love for the arts—such as the opera, which he attends at the novel’s close—and uses this presentation of himself to suggest that he has an unusually refined and aristocratic temperament. Mr. Fairlie and Count Fosco have a lot in common and even get on fairly well when they meet in person because of these shared affectations. Mr. Fairlie represents the other extreme of Count Fosco: he is utterly useless in his excess, while Fosco is wildly corrupt in his. Collins suggests that Mr. Fairlie and Count Fosco are not examples of true nobility, as they use outdated affectations to show off their rank in society and, underneath this, are self-serving and corrupt. In contrast, the novel celebrates hardworking, middle-class characters, like Walter, who earn the right to transcend their place in society, which potentially makes them more deserving than those born to nobility. The novel contains first-person accounts from several servants, such as Mrs. Michelson, and middle-class people like lawyers, as well as the perspective of the upper-class characters like Marian and Mr. Fairlie. By placing the testimony of people from various classes alongside one another, Collins suggests that people of all ranks contribute to society and showcases the social mobility and mixing between classes which was beginning to take place in nineteenth-century society. Professor Pesca, who is an Italian friend of Walter’s and is revealed to belong to the same political organization that Count Fosco has betrayed, represents Count Fosco’s opposite, or foil, within society. While the Count is untrustworthy, Pesca is warm, loyal, and industrious. Although Collins demonstrates a tendency towards distrusting foreigners in his novel, which reflects

his nineteenth-century values of British exceptionalism, he undermines this tendency in his presentation of Pesca as an asset to British society because of his hardworking personality and enthusiastic embrace of British values. Sir Percival Glyde is also presented as the opposite of Walter; while Walter is a hardworking, middle-class man, who values industry and activity over wealth and rank, Sir Percival Glyde tries to evade work by forging his parents’ marriage certificate in order to inherit a fortune that he is not entitled to. While Walter is rewarded for his hard work, Sir Percival Glyde is punished for attempting to exceed his social rank without earning this privilege through industry. This demonstrates Collins’ belief in the superiority of “self-made men” like Walter over those who seek titles and rank for their own sake through dishonest means. Despite its praise for hardworking middle-class characters, the novel’s resolution supports the nineteenth-century belief that the upper classes are an important and aspirational part of British society. It is never questioned that Laura is entitled to and deserving of her inheritance. She is presented from the beginning to the end of the story as a virtuous person and an innocent victim of Count Fosco and Sir Percival Glyde, who wish to steal her rightful place in society. This suggests that Collins, and his middle-class audience, generally supported the social order that the class system imposed in the nineteenth century. Walter, for his part, is motivated to work hard, and to pursue the mystery of the woman in white for himself because he cannot afford to pay a lawyer. He feels that his poverty has been a good thing in this sense because “the law never would have obtained an interview with Mrs. Catherick,” which is the key to discovering Sir Percival’s secret. Collins therefore feels that a certain level of poverty is beneficial in society as it incentivizes people to work harder and allows new ways of thinking to enter the establishment. While Sir Percival is punished for trying to transcend his social position undeservingly, Walter is rewarded because he has not tried to achieve upward mobility dishonestly but instead has earned his elevated status (by marrying Laura) through his own efforts and virtue. Although the class system was changing in the nineteenth century, there was a

general sense among the middle class that, despite the benefits of these changes, some type of social order should still be preserved.

The Woman in White Themes The oppression of women in the Victorian era The Woman in White is the story of distressed damsels who are suffering from the abuse and persecution of men. Laura Fairlie and Anne Catherick are the damsels in distress who endured great physical and psychological pain under the tyranny of patriarchal society. Most people around them are indifferent to their suffering and plight. Laura’s uncle is unwilling to safeguard Laura’s property and marital happiness while Anne’s mother is indifferent to her daughter’s imprisonment in the asylum. The story shows that women have little power to shape their lives to their liking. Laura and Marian are denied the chance of a higher education and must content themselves with learning the feminine subjects of painting and music. They cannot venture outside of their house and seek useful employment in the wider world. They are secluded in the domestic sphere under the guardianship of men, such as their uncle and their solicitor. They cannot freely choose their marital partners and have to comply with the wishes of their domineering fathers and uncles. Their mobility and freedom are constrained by the cumbersome Victorian-style dresses consisting of numerous petticoats, tight corsets and wide skirts. However, this world order arranged by men is totally dysfunctional. By obeying the wishes of men, Laura becomes trapped into the most disastrous marriage imaginable. Upon entering this wretched marriage, she is subjected to physical abuse, poison, imprisonment and the loss of her legal identity. In the story, Marian repeatedly rails against the injustice women suffer at the hands of men. Marian believes that women have to take matters into their hands to defend their interests, since the men around them are mostly dysfunctional, careless and cruel. Marian is a proto-feminist who deeply resents the tyranny and the injustice of the patriarchal order.

The emergence of the “New Woman” This story was published in early 1860s. At that time, the idea of the “new woman” was yet to be formed. Most middle- and upper-class women in the 1860s were still confined to the domestic sphere, their main activities consisting of bearing child, educating children, organizing the household, and socializing with friends. Women at that time were denied the chance to have a higher education. The New Woman was an unconventional figure who emerged at the end of the 19th century, and who defied the oppressive patriarchal world order. The new woman challenged the conventional gender expectation and embraced many activities and characteristics that were previously reserved for men. Marian Halcombe is thus a proto-feminist who perfectly embodies the characteristics which later would become the definition of the “New Woman.” She is acutely conscious of the injustice of patriarchy. She cares deeply about women’s rights and uses her courage, resolution and wit to protect women’s interests. Her masculine facial features, her “piercing and resolute” eyes and her “bright, frank, intelligent” expression challenge the characteristics of the conventional Victorian women. In short, she is a woman who possesses agency and power. Marian is not daunted by the rigid restrictions of the patriarchal system. She believes that a woman in possession of courage and strength could not be easily awed and oppressed by the men around them.

The decadence of civilization The Victorian era was marked by great advancement in industry, science and aesthetic pursuit. In the 1860s, the Victorians were increasingly concerned about the decadence and the over-refinement of their society. The image of Mr. Frederick Fairlie perfectly embodies this anxiety. Mr. Fairlie is a wealthy man who idles away his days as an invalid. His sole interest is an obsessive appreciation of the aesthetic, which is reflected in his impressive collection of artwork. His character shows that wealth and civilization can lead to indolence, idleness and decadence. It shows that when civilization reaches its advanced stage, it threatens to waste itself away through extreme refinement in taste. Obsessive aesthetic pursuit among well-to-do people can be harmful because it is not socially productive.

The mistreatment of mentally disabled people during the Victorian era Anne Catherick is described by many people in the story as being mentally underdeveloped and strange in her conduct. Mrs. Fairlie, Mrs. Clemens and Laura Fairlie all believe that there is something slightly abnormal in Anne’s emotional state. When Percival suspects that Anne is in possession of his secret, he takes advantage of Anne’s disturbed emotional state and imprisons her in the asylum. However, Walter Hartright believes there is nothing wild in her conduct, and thus that she should not be imprisoned in the asylum. Anne has suffered much in her life. She is an illegitimate child born to a tyrannical mother who does not care for her. She has suffered wrongful imprisonment in the asylum and great emotional tribulation. It is possible that Anne is emotionally unstable, but her unstable mind might also be caused by her lifelong suffering and happiness, rather than any inherent mental illness. In the story, most people are too quick to dismiss Anne as mentally ill, and thus fail to account for the factors of her unfortunate experience and upbringing. During the Victorian era, psychiatry had not yet been fully developed. During this period, society was cruel to people who manifested the symptoms of emotional unbalance. There were few attempts to understand the causes of these people’s suffering. Victorian society was eager to imprison these people in the interests of public security. The Victorians often tend to dismiss the emotionally distressed and the mentally underdeveloped as insane, and use the means of imprisonment to seclude them from society, and thus reduce what might otherwise be seen as broad social problems to mere individual and unfortunate "insanity." As Walter observes, there is in fact nothing abnormal and wild in Anne’s behavior; her speech is coherent, her manners are almost ladylike. Anne is distressed and nervous because she is in constant fear of persecution by Percival; she is unhappy because she is cast out of her home and leads a rootless existence. Her anxiety is thus perfectly understandable, and has nothing to do with insanity. Even Laura Fairlie, who was in a perfectly sound mental state before her marriage, suffers a total mental breakdown after her imprisonment in the asylum. This shows that Anne’s emotional disturbance can be explained by her external environment, for example abuse, unhappiness and imprisonment, rather than some inherent flaw in her mind.

The celebration of middle-class values So-called middle-class values were highly celebrated qualities during the Victorian period. Queen Victoria and her husband Prince Albert were fierce proponents of middle-class values. They believed that the aristocratic unproductiveness, indolence, vice and wantonness are not conducive a healthy society and a powerful country. The middle-class values are classified as industry, hard-work, honesty, modesty, and prudery. The Woman in White discredits the upper class by creating three despicable upper-class characters, namely Sir Percival, Count

Fosco and Mr. Frederick Fairlie. These three men are characterized by their laziness, unproductiveness, cruelty, vice, and dishonesty. Sir Percival fakes his parents’ marriage and usurps his father’s property. Count Fosco betrays his organization and uses various means of deception to achieve his evil ends. Mr. Fairlie is a lazy invalid who wastes his time through useless aesthetic pursuit; apart from amassing artwork, he can do nothing else. On the contrary, the characters of Walter Hartright and Marian Halcombe are middle-class figures. They are not in possession of great fortune or grand estates, but they are brave, resolute, capable, hard-working and virtuous. Walter and Marian are the saviors of Laura Fairlie. Most of the courageous undertakings in the book have been accomplished by these two characters. Walter’s marriage to the wealthy heiress Laura shows that the middle-class virtues bring their rewards. The fact that Percival, Fosco, and Frederick Fairlie have all died by the end of the book shows that the indolent aristocratic lifestyles bring about their own punishment. Neither of the three men ever fathers children, which also suggests that their way of life is dying out, and will not continue on to future generations.

Travel Many of the characters in the novel move around a great deal, both inside and outside of England. When Collins wrote the novel, it was becoming more and more feasible for people to travel rapidly, particularly due to the expansion of the railroad. The railroad also made it possible for women to travel more independently. Both of these trends are important in the novel: the plot of The Woman in White would not be possible if characters could not get rapidly and discreetly from one location to another. Transportation allows for free movement, and thus makes possible newly complex plots; for example, in Fosco's confession, when he describes how the conspiracy unfolded, he makes reference to the number of times both he and the Countess had to travel back and forth between Blackwater Park and London. While relatively rapid transportation opened new possibilities, the fact that it is mostly used in the novel for nefarious purposes also reveals the suspicions with which it was viewed. If people could move around freely, and without others being able to easily trace where they were, it was harder to control behavior or have clear knowledge of other people's actions. Much of the scheming and conspiracy in the novel stems from a lack of clarity around who was where at precisely what time, and more free travel increases this uncertainty. It also meant there were more likely to be strangers entering into contact with one another, and these individuals were often viewed with suspicion. For example, Walter is lucky to be able to post bail after being arrested; other than Dr. Dawson, no one else in the town knows him, or would be able to vouch for him.

Documents The narrative of the novel is presented to the reader as being composed of many different documents, including retrospective narratives, journal entries, interviews, reports, and even the writing on a gravestone. Many of the plot events are also linked to the existence, manipulation, or disappearance of different documents: for example, the marriage register with the forged record of Percival's legitimacy, or the letter confirming the date of Laura's departure and thus showing that she could not be the same woman who had died the previous day. Documents are shown to be tools for achieving truth and accuracy, and as very important to the legal record. At the same time, the events of the novel also show that they can be damaged, altered, or faked. A reader should not necessarily assume that a written document is reliable. For a work of literature to show the theme of written documents as being unstable and possibly untruthful is interesting, because it may prompt a reader to think about his or her relationship to the fictional text they are reading. Despite the outrageous and

improbable plot events, the use of multiple documents by different narrators creates the impression of careful accuracy and objectivity in the novel as a whole.

The Woman in White Character List Walter Hartright A drawing teacher, aged twenty-eight, Walter Hartright is from a middle-class background. However, Walter is not financially well-off and is living in rather strained circumstances. He is out of work at the beginning of the novel, and only secured a position as a drawing teacher under the recommendation of his Italian friend Pesco. Walter is the embodiment of the typical Victorian middle-class man. He is brave, industrious, truthful, diligent, resourceful, kind-hearted, and possesses a high degree of integrity. He often displays the Victorian male’s patronizing attitude towards woman, as is exemplified by his infantilizing treatment of Laura Fairlie. Walter’s love and eventual marriage with the wealthy heiress Laura challenges Victorian class prejudices, in which a middle-class person climbs the social ladder by marrying into the upper class and inheriting a huge property. In the story, he acts as the male protector of the weak and self-effacing Laura. He truly takes Laura’s interests to heart and successfully destroys the evil plots of Sir Percival and Fosco. He is also the confidant of Laura’s half-sister Marian Halcombe. Walter is the narrator and the editor of the story. His role as the main narrator of the story gives him an important position in the storytelling of this novel. His views, beliefs, attitudes and prejudice play an important role in shaping the readers’ perception of the narrative.

Laura Fairlie An exceptionally beautiful twenty-year-old heiress. She is the main heroine of the story who undergoes many trials and tribulations before achieving happiness at the end. Laura is the typical damsel in distress figure. In the story, she endures unhappiness, heartbreak, imprisonment, poison, physical abuse, the loss of her legal identity and her social position. Laura is an orphan who lives under the guardianship of her invalid uncle Frederick Fairlie. She also lives in the company of her half-sister Marian. Laura Fairlie embodies the qualities and the virtues of a Victorian upper-class lady. She is kind-hearted, truthful and obedient. Her facial features are delicate and soft, her demeanor quiet and unassuming, and her bearing is always dignified and graceful. Laura is an accomplished musician and is fond of painting. Her penchant for white dresses, flowers and music turns her into a living symbol of docility, beauty and grace, which are highly prized female characteristics in the Victorian era. Laura’s extreme femininity makes her self-effacing and weak. She is incapable of defending her interests without the protection of Walter, Marian and her lawyer. Laura falls in love with her drawing teacher but is compelled to marry the middle-aged baronet Sir Percival Glyde. After her marriage, Laura is completely under the control of her husband and his co-conspirator Fosco and her happiness and vitality are completely destroyed by her unhappy marriage. She is unable to resist the evil devices of her enemies without the protection of Marian and Walter. She is drugged by Fosco and is incarcerated in an asylum under the name of Anne Catherick. She briefly loses her wits under the influence of drugs and incarceration. Laura eventually regains her social position after the evil plots of her enemies are overturned. She marries Walter, and her son inherits Limmeridge House after Frederick Fairlie’s death.

Marian Halcombe Marian Fairlee, Laura's half-sister, is one of Victorian literature’s most memorable and powerful heroines. Marian and Laura are contrasting characters. Laura is beautiful, artistically talented, self-effacing and weak; while Marian is physically plain, strong-willed, resolute, brave and strong. Marian possesses a beautiful feminine form but has very masculine facial features. Unlike the wealthy Laura, Marian has no fortune of her own, and displays little inclination to get married. Marian is Laura’s chief protector; she continues to live with Laura even after her marriage. She is fiercely devoted to her sister and is resolved to undertake every measure to protect Laura’s interests and to frustrate the designs of Laura’s enemies. Marian challenges the Victorian gender expectation which requires women to be meek and compliant towards men. Marian is not only a powerful woman, she is often described as being more powerful than many of the male characters. Her bravery and intelligence are such that even her arch enemy Fosco is impressed by her. Marian’s sudden illness in the middle of the story robs Laura of her only protector.

Frederick Fairlie Frederick is the uncle and the guardian of Laura Fairlie and Marian Halcombe, and also the head of Limmeridge House. He completely fails in his obligations as Laura's guardian and protector. He does not take Laura’s interests to heart and is unwilling to arrange a favorable marriage settlement for Laura. He is totally blind and indifferent to the fact that Sir Percival only wants to marry Laura out of mercenary motives. Even with knowledge of Laura’s unwillingness to contract the marriage, he still insists that the marriage should go ahead as planned. Frederick Fairlie is an extremely selfish, self-absorbed man. He is portrayed as a useless invalid who is a bundle of nerves. He is effeminate and cannot withstand any external stimuli and shock. He is extremely sensitive to sound, light and physical exertion. He is wealthy and has amassed a huge collection of paintings and artwork. He has taste in artwork and hires Walter to instruct his nieces in sketching. Overall, he is a caricature of the wealthy upperclass man whose only ability lays in his appreciation of the aesthetic. Through his character, Collins pokes fun at the idle Victorian aristocrats who are obsessed with aesthetics, but are incapable of any useful labor and socially-productive activity. At the end of the novel, Frederick Fairle dies, and his property passes on to Laura, Walter, and their newborn son.

Anne Catherick Anne Catherick is the mysterious "woman in white" whom Walter meets in the middle of the night at the beginning of the novel. She always dresses from head to toe in white clothing. Unbeknownst to her, she is the illegitimate child of Laura’s father. It is therefore not surprising that, as Laura’s half-sister, she bears a striking physical resemblance to Laura. Anne’s mysterious appearance in the middle of the night, her white dress, and her resemblance to Laura endow the storyline with an uncanny atmosphere, in keeping with the Gothic literary style of the novel. Anne is the most pitiable character of the story. She is the unloved and unwanted child of Jane Catherick and Laura’s father. Unloved by her mother, fleeing from the persecution of Percival and suffering from a fatal heart illness, Anne has endured great hardship in her short life. As Walter observes, the mark of unhappiness and suffering is deeply stamped in her face. Laura’s mother was ignorant of Anne’s true parentage and enrolled Anne in her school. Mrs. Fairlie was extremely kind and attentive to Anne, and gave her a white dress. Anne resolves to always wear white as a token of gratitude and affection towards Mrs. Fairlie.

Anne is described by many people as being mentally underdeveloped and queer in her conduct. But as Walter Hartright observes, there is nothing wild and deranged in her demeanor. Anne is incarcerated by Sir Percival in the asylum because he fears that she has discovered his faking of his parents’ marriage registrar. Anne cares for Laura’s happiness and tries to warn her about the dark side of the man to whom she is engaged. Anne suffers from a heart disease and dies while attempting to visit Laura in London. Percival and Fosco take advantage of Anne’s resemblance to Laura and bury her under the name of Laura Fairlie, which enables them to inherit Laura’s property. The portrayal of Anne’s mistreatment in the mental asylum acts as an indictment of the mistreatment of mentally unstable people during the Victorian era.

Jane Catherick Jane is Anne Catherick’s mother. She was once an extremely beautiful woman. Young, lively and flirtatious, she caught the eye of Laura’s father and had an affair with him, resulting in the birth of Anne. Jane is a vain, strong-willed, ambitious woman who lusts after riches and luxury. She embodies the image of the scheming, unscrupulous social climber of the Victorian era. In Jane’s own words, she has the “taste of a lady”. She takes great delight in the expensive gifts which rich men showered on her. The readers only know that the late Mr. Fairlie was her lover, but it is possible that Jane had other rich lovers in her life. Sir Percival succeeds in bribing her to obtain the key to the church registrar, because her husband was a church official. Her husband abandons her after he wrongly suspects Percival to be her lover. Jane finds out about Percival’s illegitimacy and his faking of his parents’ marriage record. Percival pays Mrs. Catherick a handsome annuity, which enables her to live in dignity and comfort. Jane Catherick’s riches have restored her respectability in the eyes of her neighbors. She takes great pride in her social position and the fact that even the clergyman bows to her. Mrs. Catherick’s high position in her neighborhood shows that money could buy one’s dignity and respectability in Victorian era, even if that person’s past had been sinful and scandalous.

Sir Percival Glyde Percival is Laura Fairlie’s husband, and one of the two important villains of the story. He is the lesser villain in comparison to Fosco. Percival is not shy about committing crimes, but he lacks the sophisticated criminal skills of Fosco. He relies on Fosco to plot and execute his evil schemes. Percival is the illegitimate child of the late Sir Percival and a woman of low rank. Percival fakes his parents’ marriage record and usurps the possession of the baronetcy and the grand estate of Blackwater Park, neither of which he is entitled to. Percival is heartless, brutal, unscrupulous and completely without human compassion. He marries Laura out of purely mercenary motives and treats her in a disgraceful manner after the marriage by subjecting her to physical abuse, poisoning and imprisonment. He is the embodiment of the scheming illegitimate child who craves wealth and social position. His mistreatment of Laura sheds light on the mistreatment and abuses of women during the Victorian era. Percival is also an accomplished dissembler. He assumes the most pleasing manners during his courtship with Laura. Both Laura and Marian are deceived by his dissembling facade. Percival’s twofaced behavior shows that the civilized and polished Victorian manners often conceal the most hideous human character. Percival tries to destroy the faked marriage record by fire, and is burnt to death in the flames. His death frees Laura from this horrible marriage and enables her to marry her true love.

Count Fosco He is an Italian exile, who was a member of an Italian secret organization dedicated to destroying tyranny and oppression. Fosco was unfaithful to the organization and fled abroad

to escape persecution by it. He lives in constant fear of being assassinated by a member of this organization. Fosco has Napoleonic features and is extremely fat. He is a brilliant villain and a fascinating character. He is intelligent, cultured, worldly, sophisticated, well-travelled and well versed in different languages and culture. He is skillful in the use of poison, and is responsible for drugging Laura. He is a consummate dissembler who assumes the most pleasing manners, such that even the perceptive Marian is briefly blinded to his real character. Fosco holds English morality in contempt and considers himself to be free from the restriction of English bourgeois morality. He is the embodiment of the culturally sophisticated but morally dubious European, who stands in sharp contrast to the virtuous English gentleman such as Walter Hartright. Fosco is assassinated by a member of the secret Italian organization at the end of the novel.

Professor Pesca An Italian who makes a living by teaching Italian in England. He is high-spirited and carefree. Pesca was saved from drowning by Walter and becomes his best friend. At the start of the novel, Pesca secures for Walter a teaching position in Limmeridge House. Pesca is also a high-ranking member of the Italian secret organization. He is deeply devoted to Walter and plays a key role in helping him to overturn Fosco’s evil plot.

Eleanor Fosco Eleanor Fosco is Laura Fairle’s aunt, and the sister of the late Philip Fairlie. She was a highspirted, vivacious and flirtatious woman who once advocated for women’s rights. However, she is completely tamed by her husband Fosco and becomes a compliant woman who is unconditionally devoted to her husband. Her marriage to Count Fosco causes her to fall out with Laura’s father. She is entitled to inherit ten thousand pounds should Laura fail to produce an heir.

Mrs. Clements A middle-aged woman who is Anne Catherick’s best friend and companion. Mrs. Clements is deeply devoted to Anne and sympathizes deeply with her misfortune and suffering. Mrs. Clements takes great pain to protect Anne and keep her safe from Percival's persecution.

Mr. Gilmore Mr. Gilmore is the solicitor for the Failie family. Like Walter Hartright, Mr. Gilmore also embodies Victorian middle-class virtues. He is industrious, responsible and takes a keen interest in Laura’s welfare. He is determined to negotiate a more favorable marriage settlement for Laura and tries to warn Frederick Fairlie of Percival’s mercenary motives in his forthcoming marriage.

Sarah Hartright Walter's sister. She is unmarried and lives with her mother in Hampstead.

Mrs. Hartright Walter's widowed mother.

Mrs. Vesey Laura's governess, who continues to live at Limmeridge House and act as a companion to Laura and Marian. Mrs. Vesey is very calm and placid. While good-intentioned, she is also ineffective and doesn't provide protection or good advice to Laura, leaving her vulnerable.

Jacob Postlewaithe The young schoolboy who claims to have seen a woman in white in the graveyard at night, and believes her to have been the ghost of Mrs. Fairlie.

Mr. Dempster The town schoolteacher

Mrs. Todd A relation of Mrs. Clements who lives on a farm near Limmeridge House. She allows Mrs. Clements and Anne to stay with her after Anne's escape.

Mr. Merriman A lawyer who works as Sir Percival Glyde's solicitor. He is involved in negotiating the marriage contract with Mr Gilmore and advocating for Sir Percival's interests.

Margaret Porcher A servant at Blackwater Park; she is stupid, insolent, and greedy. Because she can readily be manipulated, she is one of the only servants allowed to remain as Fosco and Sir Percival put their conspiracy into action.

Fanny Laura's personal maid during her time at Blackwater Park. She is dismissed by Sir Percival when he becomes paranoid that his wife knows his secret. Marian gives her letters to convey to London about the dangerous circumstances but Fanny is drugged by the Countess and the letters are tampered with.

Mrs. Eliza Michelson The housekeeper at Blackwater Park; she is the wife of a clergyman, and very concerned with social appearances and her reputation. She is suspicious of some of what she observes happening as Fosco and Percival put their plot into motion, but does little to interfere.

Mr. Dawson The local doctor who treats Marian during her illness. He is antagonized by Count Fosco and eventually stops treating Marian as a result of this conflict. Later, he stands bail so that Walter can be set free after his arrest.

Mrs. Rubelle A woman hired by Count Fosco to serve as a nurse during Marian's illness. It is later revealed that she is a co-conspirator in the plot.

Hester Pinhorn A cook who is hired in London to work at Count Fosco's house. She contributes part of the narrative by explaining what happened after Lady Glyde (Anne) arrived in London.

Mr. Goodricke The London doctor who attends Lady Glyde (Anne) after she falls ill at Count Fosco's house. He is with her when she dies, and registers the death himself, leading to the record that contradicts the dates between Laura's departure and the supposed death of Lady Glyde.

Jane Gould The woman who prepares the body of Lady Glyde (Anne) for burial.

Mr Kyrle A lawyer who is the assistant to Mr. Gilmore who takes over during Mr. Gilmore's long absence, thus becoming involved in advising about many of the details of Laura's case.

Mr. Wansborough A lawyer who also has a role in keeping the parish records. It is at his office that Walter locates the duplicate copy of the marriage register, establishing Sir Percival's forgery.

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