Chapter 9
The governess notices that
her relationship with Miles and Flora is even closer and more affectionate than
ever. She tries to convince herself that this is a result of their mutual
fondness for each other, but she cannot help feeling that maybe they are trying
to hide something from her. One night, she goes out of the room she shares
with Flora and meets Quint on the staircase. Neither one says a word, but the
governess is convinced that he is "a living, detestable, dangerous presence."
After a prolonged moment, Quint turns around, descends the staircase, and
disappears.
Chapter 10
When the governess returns
to her room, Flora is missing. She finds the child hidden by the drapes and
Flora explains that she was looking out the window for the governess. Flora
says she was no one outside, but the governess does not believe her.
Some evenings later, the
governess sees an apparition of Miss Jessel sitting on one of the lower steps
of the staircase. In an instant, however, the vision vanishes.
Several nights later, Flora
disappears from her bed again. She is again looking out the window. The
governess goes to the window of a lower room to see what it is that Flora sees
out the window. There, in the garden, is Miles, looking up at something in a
higher room.
Chapters 9-10, Analysis
The governess is terrified,
but she also seems to be enjoying the mystery a little. She is very proud of
herself for facing down Quint and having the courage to walk by him. She talks
about the "thrill" of gaining an advantage over an opponent, but the question
remains just exactly who her opponent is. She seems to want to catch Flora
misbehaving because it is thrilling to think of this beautiful child being
evil.
When the governess toys with
the idea of going into Miles's room at night, it is ostensibly because she
wishes to see if he is there. She stands outside his door and listens, then
turns away in case he might be innocent. As he is an older child and male,
there is a sexual component to her considering entering his room late at
night. This leads to the supposition that she might be substituting the thrill
of "ghosts" for unfulfilled sexual desire. She could just be a very repressed
woman who looks for excitement and conquest wherever she can find them, which
is mostly in her imagination in a house with two small children. She could
also be a vigilant governess that wants to protect her charges; that Miles is
out of his room at night is a serious warning that he is not as angelic as he
seems.
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