Chapter 3
The governess decides that
the charges against Miles must be absurd because the child is clearly so
innocent. He seems too fresh and sweet to have been reprimanded as a naughty
child would be. She decides not to say anything to him or to the master, and
Mrs. Grose agrees with her.
While the governess is out
for a walk one afternoon, she sees a man up on one of the house's two towers.
Since she had just been fantasizing about the master coming to the house, she
at first thinks it might be he. However, she realizes it is someone else. She
is shocked to see a man she does not know in the house. When she returns, no
one demonstrates any evidence of knowing about a strange man in the house, so
she keeps it a secret.
Chapter 4
Because of her strange
experience, the governess wonders if there is a secret at Bly, perhaps an
insane relative kept in confinement there. For several days, she ponders the
matter.
A few days later, she goes
into the dining room to fetch her gloves. When she goes in, she sees the same
man looking at her from outside the windows. She is shocked. When she goes
out to look for him, she is gone. She goes and stands where he had been at the
window and sees Mrs. Grose coming into the room. Mrs. Grose is as frightened
as the governess was when she saw the strange man at the window.
Chapters 3-4, Analysis
Other than a little dialogue
about Miles's dismissal, these two chapters are completely made up of the
governess's thoughts. She imagines seeing the master, she sees a strange man
and determines that there is a mystery about him, she thinks about how
wonderful the children are and how innocent they must be, she sees the man
again, she thinks she must go and stand where he stood, and she wonders why
Mrs. Grose is so frightened. The effect of this restriction to her internal
thoughts is twofold. On the one hand, there is a sense of mystery. It all seems
so terrifying and there is clearly something wrong. On the other hand, there
is doubt. There is no confirmation that any of this is happening outside of
the governess's mind.
The doubt about the veracity
of all the events partly stems from the fact that she has shown a clear
propensity for fantasy. She fantasizes about the master, imagines what the
house will be like, and assumes she can see people's character just by looking
at them. In fact, she decides Miles was wrongly accused because "If he had
been wicked he would have 'caught' it, and I should have caught it by the
rebound-I should have found the trace, should have felt the wound and the
dishonour. I could reconstitute nothing at all, and he was therefore an angel"
(27). This is the kind of evidence upon which she bases her conclusions, so
her judgment is somewhat suspect. On the other hand, it does all seem rather
spooky.
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