Antiquarian, that certainly would cause a stir, seeing dead lady floating into town!
Thanks Dark Muse, the end of that poem is really beautiful. I still do feel this has relevance to our story, in that Winifred might see Coutts more clearly, but he does not truly see Winifred, as she would want him to percieve her. Well, that is just a thought off the top of my head.
I have been working on this offline today:
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Now Coutts tries to leave but knows she will detain him with her music. Note his voice changes to one of laughter as he acknowledges this fact; but right after his true feelings are of suffering deep down and he is conscious of this pain. Later in the passage it again speaks of suffering but now he is dimly aware of it after sitting quietly and observing physically Winifred. With this line “..he was aware of the approach of her throat towards her breast.” – guess our man, Lawrence was also a throat, breast man afterallAll was silent. At last, opening his eyes again, he said: "I shall have to be going directly, Winifred; it is past eleven . . ." Then the appeal in his voice changed to laughter. "Though I know I shall be winding through all the Addios in 'Traviata' before you can set me travelling." He smiled gently at her, then closed his eyes once more, conscious of deep, but vague, suffering. She lay in her chair, her face averted, rosily, towards the fire. Without glancing at her he was aware of the white approach of her throat towards her breast. He seemed to perceive her with another, unknown sense that acted all over his body. She lay perfectly still and [b]warm in the fire-glow.[b] He was dimly aware that he suffered.
"Yes," she said at length; "if we were linked together we should only destroy each other.". It seems as she is sitting there gazing into the fire, reflecting the fire and warmth he is ultimately charmed by her and actually now neither of them are speaking but quite – says “she is perfectly still and warm in the fire-glow.” This seems to be also a ‘foreshadowing’ device, for what will soon occur with the lamp/fire, deciding the fate of this situation for good. Her last line admitting they would “destroy each other”, if linked together begins to break this magical spell I think.
This further enforces that point; this time it is said admitted by Coutts, and stating ‘he was so sure’. I think this is the first time in the story Coutts is actually ‘sure’ of something.He started, hearing her admit, for the first time, this point of which he was so sure.
This small part reminds me of the passage in the very beginning of “Women in Love” when Ursula and Gudrun (the two sisters) are debating the merits of getting married. Of course this discourse is only brief but now she seems to think if he marries why shouldn’t she. Is this to strike back at him and to hurt him? He is acting very sure of himself that he indeed does want to be harnessed and bridled and driven – thus his concept of marriage. He does not fight her having made this comment, so rather but admits he would make a “good, repectable trotter” (husband, as he sees it, at this point in his young life). She expresses the fact she is “not so sure” of that and he says once again that he does “think so”. Again first time he has felt sure of it – why now?"You should never marry anyone," he said.
"And you," she asked in irony, "must offer your head to harness and be bridled and driven?"
"There's the makings of quite a good, respectable trotter in me," he laughed. "Don't you see it's what I want to be?"
"I'm not sure," she laughed in return.
"I think so."
Now that it is “silent”, I find these two images and perhaps contrast(?) of light interesting in this one single statement – “the white lamp…as moonlight”…then “red fire like sunset”…the sunset image takes us right back to Coutts alightening from the train and observing the sunset – the new moon going down and the evening star; both seemingly, so symbolic, at the time for Coutts. Now I see the two images as of Winifred’s once white moon-like face and the warm light of the fireplace upon it, transforming it. Motionless as well as silent, with “no stir or flicker”. This is sort of like ‘the calm before the storm’ to me.They were silent for a time. The white lamp burned steadily as moonlight, the red fire like sunset; there was no stir or flicker.
Ok, another interesting passage with the use of words/images of “jetsam” and “flotsam”….flotsam left lying stranded and representing Winifred, if Coutt’s marries. So she is saying he will be like the wreckage of a ship floating on the surface and she will have been the cargo that was thrown overboard, to lighten the ship's load (in hopes of saving it) before it is ultimately destroyed by storm or whatever, altogether. So he replies with the last line. “Nay, when were you wrecked?” I think that line "I shall lie stranded" plays in nicely with that 'Lady of Shallot' image."And what of you?" he asked.
She crooned a faint, tired laugh.
"If you are jetsam, as you say you are," she answered, "I am flotsam. I shall lie stranded."
"Nay," he pleaded. "When were you wrecked?"
I just love this line “a tinkle of tears”….good alliteration, poetic and also poignant…at this point I do feel a sympathy for Winifred. That “tingle of tears” makes me think of rain for some reason. Somehow it fits in with the idea of a ship wreck and a storm.She laughed quickly, with a sound like a tinkle of tears.
Now she has drawn his attention by her breakdown with the tears and he feels for her. Here s the “invocation” with her arm moments and her look between them of her fact which had been hidden and now revealed “dark, uncanny eyes”….witch-like eyes? His breast lifts up her uptilted arms, so now they are quite close and yet he holds “himself rigid”. Now again the arms move – they drop heavily but it only says he hears them do so. I take that as a sign of despair on her part."Oh, dear Winifred!" he cried despairingly.
She lifted her arms towards him, hiding her face between them, looking up through the white closure with dark, uncanny eyes, like an invocation. His breast lifted towards her uptilted arms. He shuddered, shut his eyes, held himself rigid. He heard her drop her arms heavily.
Even thought he does try and break away, and leave her, this puts him into quite a state, which is so well described/expressed in this last line. It is taking all is will-power, to pull away from her now, and to resist her spell."I must go," he said in a dull voice.
The rapidly-chasing quivers that ran in tremors down the front of his body and limbs made him stretch himself, stretch hard.
Now that final gesture that Michael Black points out in his book, as being a ritual, and part of the charm, the spell. But then it says:"Yes," she assented gravely; "you must go."
He turned to her. Again looking up darkly, from under her lowered brows, she lifted her hands like small white orchids towards him.
Without knowing; is this like subconsciously? Also, it seems he is actually hurting her with that grasp if the pressure is as described. The grasp seems to be full of anger, but I think more towards himself than actually towards Winifred.Without knowing, he gripped her wrists with a grasp that circled his blood-red nails with white rims.


. It seems as she is sitting there gazing into the fire, reflecting the fire and warmth he is ultimately charmed by her and actually now neither of them are speaking but quite – says “she is perfectly still and warm in the fire-glow.” This seems to be also a ‘foreshadowing’ device, for what will soon occur with the lamp/fire, deciding the fate of this situation for good. Her last line admitting they would “destroy each other”, if linked together begins to break this magical spell I think.
"It's so mysterious, the land of tears."
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What do you think he's alluding to.
