Victorians! discussion
Archived Group Reads 2011
>
"Daniel Deronda" by George Eliot - Ch. 1-10
message 1:
by
Silver
(new)
Oct 15, 2011 12:30PM

reply
|
flag

I loved this book. I'm loving it even more on the re-read. No spoilers, but it is well worth reading the first two chapters carefully. It is clear Eliot had the whole plot worked out in her mind when she started. The second time through you can see how remarkably and subtly she introduces the themes that will resonate throughout the book.
I'm not a fan of time-lines that jump around in general but I thought the movement from those first two chapters to the long flashback works brilliantly here.




What am I missing? I don't see the flashback to which you refer.

Yes that is true though sometimes her spoiledness does cause her to carelessly and unthinkingly wound her mother or neglect in some ways. Her concern and love for her mother is quite genuine and I believe she does truly wish she could help her mother and spare her her suffering and unhappiness.


We are told in the first two Chapters that Gwen had not met Daniel Deronda before seeing him in the casino. Eliot ingeniously establishes some kind of connection between Gwen and Daniel early on.


Thank you Bea and Silver for setting me straight on this. I wonder if I would have figured this out once she returns to the Casino....

This book is full of character development. However, I must admit that I detested Gwendolen in the first few chapters. One of my notes calls her "despicable and selfish wretch!". This is when she is thinking about staying on a few days at the Casino after her mother has begged her to come straight home.
But at least in the Casino chapters, Daniel's glances and possible actions have made Gwendolen a bit uneasy. So she has at least the potential for some shame and humility.
In Chapter 3-10, I think she is even worse. She looks down on her other sisters and judges all her other acquaintances on her assessment of what they can do for her. Her stepfather having just died, her mother is on a fixed income. Yet she presses for a horse and gets it. She has complete confidence in herself and not a little conceit.
Don't get me wrong. She is drawn in such a way that I want to know what will happen next. She's a little like a higher-class Becky Sharp at this point in the book, I think.

I have to admit I liked her from the first moment she appeared. The very fact that we were presented with the picture of this woman gambling at a time when such was considered to be somewhat of a scandalous or at least questionable activity for a woman to do, made me instantly intrigued by her and the spark of rebellion is something I can relate to.
Though I do not approve of all of her actions, and I did think it was wrong of her to insist upon the horse when her uncle could not afford one for his own daughter, yet there is something admirable to me in her great self-confidence and her determination.
There are part of her that remind me a bit of Lily Bart from The House of Mirth and well I have to confess that I also did rather like Becky Sharp.

Eliot makes a couple of observations about marriage that I highlighted, feeling they were worth noting:
"No, child, certainly not. Marriage is the only happy state for a woman, as I trust you will prove."
"I will not put up with it if it is not a happy state. I am determined to be happy--at least not to go on muddling away my life as other people do, being and doing nothing remarkable. I have made up my mind not to let other people interfere with me as they have done. ..."
and later
That she was to be married some time or other she would have felt obliged to admit; and that her marriage would not be of a middling kind, such as most girls were contented with, she felt quietly, unargumentatively sure. But her thoughts never dwelt on marriage as the fulfillment of her ambition; the dramas in which she imagined herself a heroine were not wrought up to that close. To be very much sued or hopelessly sighed for as a bride was indeed an indispensable and agreeable guarantee of womanly power; but to become a wife and wear all the domestic fetters of that condition, was on the whole a vexatious necessity.
It seems we see Gwendolyn imagining herself in many dramas by this time in the novel. I have barely gotten past this section, but she was certainly imagining herself being pursued by Grandcourt at the archery meet!

I like Gwen's views on independence, and marriage but find her to be "snarky" to use a modern word. I'm thinking it may be some sort of defense mechanism but her pride in being able to ridicule others bothers me.

I found that Anna seemed to be a bit overly affectionate of her brother and it to me her little plan that the two of them should move to Canada together, where she would ultimately end up playing a wifely role for him was a bit disturbing. Paticularly after she declared that neither of them would marry anyone else, but that the two of them would live together forever while she cooked and cleaned and kept house for him.


It seems in many Victorian novels they also have these somewhat disturbing relationships between daughters and fathers in which the daughter does end up acting almost like a wife like figure to her father. This scene with Anna and Rex made me think of Little Dorrit in which Amy Dorrit (I think her name was) did not wish to marry anyone else so she could look after her father and take care of him.


"
Bea,
I love your comparison with Vanity Fair's Becky Sharp! I agree - she seems manipulative and uncaring, but at the same time, I admire her for her independence and spirit.
I'm also really enjoying this book! Looking forward to the discussion.

I'm also really enjoying this book! Looking forward to the discussion..."
But than considering the time period I think it was necessary for a woman to be mercenary if she wanted to avoid falling into that trap of domesticity and wanted to achieve more in her life than being regulated to becoming the wife of a man whom could cliam complete control over her, and having her life consist solely of having kids and keeping house.
In order to try and break from the bounds of social, class, and gender conventions, the rules themselves needed to be bent and a woman could not afford not to put her own goals, and desires ahead of everything else.
The need to be a bit ruthless, self-serving, manipulative is an act of self-preservation in a world in which everything is structured agasint you.

Sort of amazing there were happy marriages. (And yes, sarcasm intended.)

Very well said and I agree 100%.

Excellent point, Silver! I think Eliot's portrayal of Gwen is more realistic of how women had to survive in the Victorian era. But, don't you think that many of the Victorian heroines are portrayed as being gentle and selfless? More like Amy Dorrit? Most heroines seem to only have 'good' qualities - kind, compassionate, putting themselves last, even the ones who are spunky or show great determination and perseverance. Gwen seems like an unusual heroine for Victorian literature - a bit more complex. She'll be a fun character to discuss.


Yes, that is quite true. In most Victorian works, at least that I have read it seems that the heroines, even when they are portrayed as being strong willed, independent, and in many regards agasint the typical convention of the Victorian woman, are still portrayed with predominantly positive qualities and are seen as being gentle natured, kind, giving, and with a selfless nature (even if not altogether willing to sacrifice themselves.)
The character of Gwen does break the rules a bit in being more realistic and less romanticized by acknowledging some of the flaws of her personality and showing that balance in her between tendencies of goodness, as seen with her unexpected tenderness and love for her mother, while at the same time showing the more disfavorable aspects of her, in the ways in which she does ridicule others and set herself above those around her.

Don't forget that Amy Dorrit was portrayed by Dickens, whereas Gwen is being written by Eliot. Now, what would I say if comparing her with one of Glaskell's heroines -- well, I could make some arguments on both sides of the fence, I think. But I do think male writers did tend to portray women the way they wanted or perceived them from their perspectives as in male "best interests" -- some attributes to be held in esteem, others to be disparaged.

Good point, Lily! It appears from Eliot's Wikipedia biography that she was unconventional and quite an independent thinker. She lived with a married man for over twenty years as well as being publicly alienated from the church. Quite a woman of her times!

(might be a great topic to discuss the strong female characters in the Victorian age writings.)

Certainly there must be a few books and dissertations on the topic. Any suggestions from anyone here? (Incidentally, among my favorites are the ladies in Cranford!)

I see Eliot as setting Gwen up to take a big fall. She seems destined to be admired, sort after, beguiling on the outside, but with that personality that draws in men, she ultimately can repulse women and in that she will miss the friendship and companionship of those who might help and warn her about upcoming dangers and pitfalls.

I don't see her using her feminine wiles for any purpose. She assumes people will love her and do everything to curry her favor, which she may choose to bestow - or maybe not to choose to bestow.

I don't see her using her feminine wiles for any purpose. She assumes peopl..."
Yes, I think we can add another adjective to describe Gwen - naive.

I thought that I didn't understand because I'm not mothertongue and I'm listening and not reading the book!!!
I do agree with all of you that find Gwen a positive character; I'm sure she'll develop into something really interesting; I'm waiting for Daniel to come out a bit better!!! Making easy enough parallel, I find Gwen more like Dorothea Brooke than Rosamond Vincy, talking about spoilt femal characters...

I don't see her using her feminine wiles for any purpose. She assumes peopl..."
I agree that Gwen does not desire to marry, but it seems to me as if she has some awareness that it is not something which can be easily avoided, and so if she must marry she will take care in whom she chooses to wed and not rush into it.
I do not think that she simply is out to set her sights on someone with money, though she does desire to have that kind of luxurious lifestyle for herself, but she also wishes to find someone of whom she believes she could manipulate and control so she may still keep some of her independence and freedom.

I'm enjoying this aspect of her as well.

Excellent point, Silver! I thi..."
This is a first reading of the book for me, and I'm not sure when Eliot wrote this - basically where she was in her own life at the time of writing. I do think it would be well to remember that Eliot herself was unconventional in her actions and belief systems for the time.

From Wiki: "She is the author of seven novels, including Adam Bede (1859), The Mill on the Floss (1860), Silas Marner (1861), Middlemarch (1871–72), and Daniel Deronda (1876)..." Marian, as she was also known, lived from 1819 to 1880, so this is certainly a novel from her maturity. (She would have been in her mid-fifties when she wrote it, if she wrote immediately prior to publication. Eliot lived to only 61 years of age, dying of complications from an underlying kidney ailment and a throat infection shortly after returning to England from her honeymoon with John Cross.)

Well, certainly, but also, maybe. From Wiki (I had forgotten this, but have read similarly before): "John Cross was a rather unstable character, and apparently jumped or fell from their hotel balcony into the Grand Canal in Venice during their honeymoon. Cross survived and they returned to England. The couple moved to a new house in Chelsea...."

Well, certainly, but also, maybe. From Wiki (I had forgotten this, but have read similarly before): "John Cross was a rather unstable character, and ..."
Suggesting that she might have been unhappy with Cross... Well, her biography suggests that she had a happy relationship with George Lewes for 26 years before she met Cross. In fact, her relationship with Lewes mirrors that of Mrs. Glasher and Grandcourt in several ways.

I do think Gwen is naive, and while this is my first read I tend to agree that there’s a fall coming up for her – or at least that her pride and, well, spoiledness, is going to get her into some trouble and a few unhappy predicaments. And, like others, I both like and dislike her, and asking for that horse, in the circumstances, bugged me as well, which I suppose was the point. Besides that, though, she's positively vibrant, and seems very charismatic. What really bugs me is how she doesn't care that her actions affect other people. Then again, she doesn't particularly seem to want other peoples' actions or decisions to affect her, either, so I suppose she's being fair there...
As for the first ten chapters, I’m finding I like Eliot. I find the descriptions of Gwen and how she’s shown through the eyes of the other characters a neat way of revealing character and place in the household. Once I understood the chronology, I liked the brief flash-forward. I do plan on going back and re-reading the first two chapters again to see the setup more closely now that I know more about what’s going on.


I also. I am reading on Kindle, where it's hard to go back and check things, so it was awhile before I figured out that we had gone from the first two chapters into a long flashback.

I can't say I detested her, but I did think she was a product of too much wealth and too little parental guidance. I think the "spoiled" that Eliot uses for her, though, is a bit strong for me. She does have decided ideas, but they aren't all selfish or self-serving; she is more thoughtful than most spoiled people.
Consider, for example, this passage from Chapter 4:
To be very much sued or hopelessly sighed for as a bride was indeed an indispensable and agreeable guarantee of womanly power; but to become a wife and wear all the domestic fetters of that condition, was on the whole a vexatious necessity. Her observation of matrimony had inclined her to think it rather a dreary state in which a woman could not do what she liked, had more children than were desirable, was consequently dull, and became irrevocably immersed in humdrum. Of course marriage was social promotion; she could not look forward to a single life; but promotions have sometimes to be taken with bitter herbs—a peerage will not quite do instead of leadership to the man who meant to lead; and this delicate-limbed sylph of twenty meant to lead. For such passions dwell in feminine breasts also. In Gwendolen's, however, they dwelt among strictly feminine furniture, and had no disturbing reference to the advancement of learning or the balance of the constitution; her knowledge being such as with no sort of standing-room or length of lever could have been expected to move the world.
That strikes me as a something beyond spoiled.

I love your comparison with Vanity Fair's Becky Sharp! I agree - she seems manipulative and uncaring, but at the same time, I admire her for her independence and spirit. "
Hmmm. I see her quite differently from Becky Sharp. I don't think, for example, that Gwen would ever throw the sort of fit that Becky did in flinging down the dictionary. And she certainly isn't pursuing wealth with the passion that Becky pursued first Jos and then Rawdon. I agree that they are both somewhat more feisty than Victorian young women were supposed to be, but Gwen seems much more laid back than Becky. Perhaps this is because she was raised with wealth and so never had to fight for survival the way Becky did. But I do see quite a difference between their approaches to life and to men.

If what you mean is that she wished there was some way to fulfill her desires outside of marriage, I see your point. If what you mean is that she had an aversion to marriage, I think the passage from Chapter 4 that I quoted above, and the text around it, clarify that she expected (intended?) to get married because that was a necessary course to achieve the life of influence which she desired. (Interesting, Eliot's own life shows that this was not necessary; she had great influence even though not married. But Gwen doesn't seem to contemplate that sort of life; I think she is conventional enough to accept that marriage is necessary for the course of life she wants to follow.)


Although I think both girls were of the same type, I think how the authors presented them was different. Austen would show her characters' faults and you could still feel distant enough from them to judge and dismiss them. While with Eliot, we were allowed so far into her characters' inner motivations and habits of thought (not to mention the blatant pleading she does on their behalf not to dismiss them so readily), that it was hard to not feel a kinship with them and think back to your own selfishness and blindness.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Way We Live Now (other topics)The Woman in White (other topics)
The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne (other topics)
Little Dorrit (other topics)
The House of Mirth (other topics)