The novel ,The Turn of the Screw ,writen by Henry James
, is a very ambiguous
ghost story. It involves a governess who is hired by the Uncle
to watch and take care of
two little children. The children's names are Flora and Miles.
When the governess
arrived she was greeted by Mrs. Grose , a servant , and Flora.
She described Flora "the
most beatiful child she has ever seen" ( James 6 ).
The first day the governess received a letter from Miles' school
stating that he had
been expelled. The governess was puzzled and couldn't understand
why Miles had
been expelled because when she first saw him he looked so innocent.
She states " He
was incredibly beatiful", she felt he had a " indescribable
little air of knowing nothing in
the world but love " ( James 17).
One day while taking a walk the governess sees a man
by two towers. A few days
later she sees the same man in the same place. She desribes
the ghost as " he has red
hair, very red, close-curling, and a pale face...with straight,
good features, and little,
rather queer whiskers...his eyebrows...look particularly arched...his
eyes are sharp,
strange...his mouth's wide, and his lips are thin...and he's quite
clean-shaven. He gives
me a sort of sense of looking like an actor" ( James 24 ).
Mrs. Grose, the maid, claims that the description is that of Peter
Quint, a former
worker of an Uncle of the children she added " Mr. Quint
is dead"( James 24 ). Several
days later she sees another ghost across the lake near where
Flora was playing. She a-
gain told Mrs. Grose about
the second spirit the governess desribed her as " horror
and evil: a woman in black, pale
and dreadful" ( James 31) and Mrs. Grose claimed it sounded
like that of Miss Jessel ,
the predessceor of the governess. She added that she, too,
was dead.
A few nights later, the governess saw Peter Quint again but he
disappeared
quickly. She went to look in the children's beds but soon realized
that they were outside
playing in the yard. She says " I felt sick as I made it
out" ( James 42 )- the figure on the
lawn was Miles The next Sunday after church the governess decided
to leave Bly
because of all the ghostly activities. While the governess was
packing, Miss Jessel
appeared for the second time. The governess decided it was time
to take control of the
situation. She wrote a letter to the Uncle and left it on the
table to be delivered.
One rainy day, Flora was unable to be found in the house.
The governess
searched outside for her only to find Flora on the other side
of the lake. The governess
questioned the child as to the whereabouts of Miss Jessel and
the young girl became
horrified and screamed " I don't know what you mean. I see
nobody. I see nothing. I
never have. I think you're cruel. I don't like you!"( James
73 ). The governess returned
to the house to learn that Flora was extremelysick and delusional
which made Mrs Grose
conclude that the ghost really existed.Flora was taken away in
order that Miles would
have a chance survive.
At dinner of that night, Miles admitted that he had stolen
the letter that the
governess had left for his Uncle. Peter Quint appeared in the
window and the
governess covered Miles' eyes. The boy asked if Miss Jessel was
there but recieved
no reply. The governess attempted to force the boy to say "Peter
Quint" and he said
"Peter Quint you devil" and died in the governess's
hands. The governess says " we
were alone with the quiet day, and his little heart, dispossessed
had stopped ( James 88 ).
As one can see, this story can have numerous interpretations.
James states in his
preface that the story is a fiction that involves a ghost
who really takes over the minds
of the two little children. Critics in fact disagree with Jones
himself and state that Jones
didn't know exactly what kind of work he wrote, or thought he
wrote.
The critics' opinion that I will discuss are those
of Edmund Wilson who says the
governess is sexually frustrated and everything that she sees
is because of this fact.
Charles G. Hoffman, who says that the ghost really appeared, is
the opinion that I
first saw upon reading the novel. The critic Leon Edel says
this was all because
the governess had a fear of working since this was her first job.
Upon reading this novel, I thought of the book as fiction
that involved real ghosts. In
the story the children are found to be playing games outside
in the middle of the night. I
In my opinion, the children were possessed by the ghosts thereby
being forced to play
outside in the middle of the night. The fact that Miles got in
so much trouble in school
related to the ghosts . I think the governess was able to describe
the ghost with such
detail because she in fact saw the ghost with her own eyes. In
the end when Miles dies,
it is because the ghost possessed him and killed him.
Charles G. Hoffman saw the same basic ideas as I did but
imbued more details
in his essay. Hoffman's first proof that this would be a real
ghost story is that Jones
usually deals with the problems of social conflict and therefore
in this novel Jones
is concerned with the existence of the devil. Hoffman sees nothing
wrong with the
governess being turned on by the Uncle whereas, Edmund Wilson
does. Hoffman
says Mrs. Grose plays a major role in the novel. He says she
is a realistic member
of the acutal world. Mrs. Grose believes in ghosts but she nevers
actually sees the
ghosts. She is the one who recognizes the first ghost as Peter
Quint. He says
the ghost really appear uses Jones as proof of it. In Jones'
preface the ghosts of Quint
and Jessel aren't ghost in white sheets and chains but demons.
They embody evil
can cause an atmosphere of evil. Jones concentrated on the effect
of the ghosts on the
characters in the novel. This is Jones' success in the work.
Hoffman then shows that the
involvement of the children delineates the nonsense of the evil
"theme". The
children are not really involved in the story at first. Through
images, beauty and
light for innocence, ugliness and darkness for evil, Jones presents
contrasts. Miles
is beautiful and brillant, totally opposite to the dusk that
surrrounds him. But there
is some darkness in Miles, for example in the questions that he
raises. The same
contrast exists within Flora. The governess receives a physchological
shock when she
sees the transformation from light and innocence to darkness and
evil in Flora after the
last appearance of Miss Jessel. At that point Miss Jessel has
won and Flora
has turned to evil ( Hoffman 20-22).
The governess then attempts to save Miles. Miles confesses
in order to be
saved. One can see that even though he is beautiful and innocent
there is a little
evil in him shown by the dismissal from school for bad behavior.
Flora is finally lost
because the governess forces her evil to be revealed . In the
case of Miles it is
his confesssion that he stole the letter from his Uncle which
causes Quint to appear.
Miles accepts that the ghost exists.. At that point, Miles confessed
and Quint has lost;
The governess has succeeded in saving Miles.. But the recogniton
of the evil causes
Miles to die ( Hoffman 23 ).
The final problem of whether good and evil exist outside
the person is never
answered in the story. It is left ambiguos. Evil can exist along
side good
according to the story ( Hoffman 23 ).
As one can see, I agree with Charles Hoffman in many different
aspects of the novel.
On the other hand, Edward Wilson totally disagrees with us.
Wilson, a famous critic, says that the governess who is telling
the story is suffering
from a neurotic case of sexual repression and that the ghosts
do not really exist but are
simply hallucinations she suffers. He follows the story very
carefully from the beginning
and points out that the governess looks for work and becomes completely
infatutuated
with the Uncle. After she receives a letter from the Uncle,
she is constantly thinking
about him. At this point, when she see Peter Quint, she convinces
herself he has come
to haunt the children ( Wilson 211).
Wilson says that there in no evidence that anyone else saw
the ghosts except
for the governess. The children become hysterical when the governess
tries to
force them to see the ghosts. Wilson is positive that there is
a Freudian significance to
the governess seeing a ghost while the little girl Flora is fitting
a stick of wood into
another piece of wood with a hole in it. Wilson says that the
governess was able to
describe the ghosts so well without really seeing them in because
she spoke to the
townspeople. He says that there is no evidence that he spoke
to them. This is also how
she found out how Quint died. Wilson also states that Miles died
because the
governess scared the boy to death by trying to force the child
to see the ghost ( Wilson 212-213).
Leon Edel also says the same basic ideas as Edmond Wilson.
He says that the
governess wa hallucinating and the ghosts really didn't exist.
Though Edel says that this
was caused because the governess had a fear of taking on a responsibiliy
fo caring
for young children. The tremendous fear caused the ghost to appear
to her. Wilson
reviews the confrontations with the ghosts. He examines in particular
the ending of
the story. Wilson concurs with Edel. They agree that the governess
frightened them
into believing that the ghosts were there because the she saw
them. She thought if
she saw them then everyone should have been able to ( Edel 425
).
Wilson says that this is the only way to read the story.
If we look at the governess,
who was the daughter of a poor parson, we can begin to understand
her sexual impulses
and the need she had to repress because of her background.
As one can see their are many di\fferent ways of interpreting
this novel. The book
was written with such ambiguity any one person can interpret the
story the way they feel
is right. After reading all the various interpretations it is
understandible how all the critics
came to their own conclusions.