Chapter 5
Mrs. Grose and the governess
discuss what she saw. When the governess insists that the man was not a gentleman,
that he was wearing someone else's clothes, and that he was handsome, Mrs.
Grose thinks she knows who he is. Quint was the master's valet, and he
sometimes stole the master's clothes. Quint is now dead, so if he is there, he
is a ghost.
Chapter 6
The governess and Mrs. Grose
go over together every aspect of what the governess has seen. The governess
has a sudden realization that Quint the ghost was looking for Miles, and she
wonders why the boy has never mentioned him, even though Mrs. Grose has told
her that Miles and Quint were friends. The governess resolves to protect Miles
and Flora, feeling that Mrs. Grose is holding something back from her out of
fear.
Another day, the governess
is down by the water with Flora. She is sure there is a person watching them
from the other side of the lake, but she does not directly look up. She is
sure that Flora is aware of this other person and is pretending not to see her.
Chapters 5-6, Analysis
The governess gives a rather
detailed description of the man she saw, and it is from this description that
Mrs. Grose thinks he is Quint. This is great evidence that, as long as Mrs.
Grose is not as flighty as the governess, he is really there. However, the
description is actually of a fairly stock evil character. The red hair, the
sharp eyes, and the thin lips are all the way evil people were supposed to
look. Nonetheless, it is hard to imagine that such a detailed description
would match so perfectly with the dead valet.
The governess assigns
meanings and interpretations to everything. She tells Mrs. Grose what she
assumes this woman is thinking. She assumes she knows what her friend knows
and thinks, and that these thoughts are consistent with her own thoughts.
Moreover, she relies on her intuition to determine fact. When Mrs. Grose asks
how she knows that Quint is looking for Miles, she says "I know, I know, I
know," finishing with, "And you know, my dear." As support for her
assertions, she points out "She didn't deny this, but I required, I felt, not
even so much telling as that" (35). In fact, it seems the governess requires
very little telling about anything, because she has decided her intuition is
correct and then takes what she thinks to be the case as proven fact.
|