Week 1 Discussion - Writing
2 pages double space MLA Your post should be about 600 words in length,Drawing on what youve learned about gothic literature this week, which two stories of the four that we read this week (“The Tell-Tale Heart, The Cask of Amontillado, A Rose for Emily, or A Romance of Certain Old Clothes) best exemplify the genre of gothic literature? Why? What specific elements of the gothic do these two stories contain? Finally, you must also explain why the other stories did not, in your opinion, fit the gothic genre as well. You should draw from our course lectures, the introduction to American Gothic Literature, and the Glossary of Literary Gothic Terms to develop your response. Make sure that your thoughts are well organized and demonstrate your best writing skills. Also, be sure to give quotations as evidence. To learn how to smoothly integrate quotations into your writing, click here (Links to an external site.).Structure:Your primary post should include an introduction that introduces the topic and ends with a clearly worded, 1-2 sentence thesis statement. Each supporting paragraph (there should be at least 3) should begin with a strong topic sentence and should incorporate evidence, including direct quotations from the short stories as needed to support your argument. Direct quotations should be incorporated using the quotation sandwich method and proper MLA in-text citations. The post should also contain a strong conclusion.Offer thoughtful feedback on at 2 of your classmates’ posts
the_tell_tale_heart.pdf
the_cask_of_amontillado___edgar_allan_poe_1.pdf
a_rose_for_emily_by_william_faulker_r.pdf
the_romance_of_certain_old_clothes_james.pdf
Unformatted Attachment Preview
“The Cask of Amontillado” by Edgar Allan Poe
from Charters, Ann, Ed. The Story and its Writer: An Introduction to Short Fiction. 6th Ed.
Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2003.
______________________________________________________________________
The Romance of Certain Old
Clothes
Henry James
Gothic Digital Series
@ UFSC
____________________________________________________________
FREE FOR EDUCATION
________________________________________________________________________________
The Romance of Certain Old Clothes
Henry James
(February 1868,
The Atlantic Monthly
)
I
TOWARDS the middle of the eighteenth century there lived in the Province of
Massachusetts a widowed gentlewoman, the mother of three children, by name Mrs
Veronica Wingrave. She had lost her husband early in life, and had devoted herself to
the care of her progeny. These young persons grew up in a manner to reward her
tenderness and to gratify her highest hopes. The first-born was a son, whom she had
called Bernard, in remembrance of his father. The others were daughters
– born at an
interval of three years apart. Good looks were traditional in the family, and this youthful
trio were not likely to allow the tradition to perish. The boy was of that fair and ruddy
complexion and that athletic structure which in those days (as in these) were the sign of
good English descent
– a frank, affectionate young fellow, a deferential son, a patronising
brother, a steadfast friend. Clever, however, he was not; the wit of the family had been
apportioned chiefly to his sisters. The late Mr William Wingrave had been a great reader
of Shakespeare, at a time when this pursuit implied more freedom of thought than at the
present day, and in a community where it required much courage to patronise the
drama even in the closet; and he had wished to call attention to his admiration of the
great poet by calling his daughters out of his favourite plays. Upon the elder he had
bestowed the romantic name of
Rosalind
, and the younger he had called
Perdita
, in
memory of a little girl born between them, who had lived but a few weeks.
When Bernard Wingrave came to his sixteenth year his mother put a brave face upon
it and prepared to execute her husband’s last injunction. This had been a formal
command that, at the proper age, his son should be sent out to England, to complete his
education at the university of Oxford, where he himself had acquired his taste for
elegant literature. It was Mrs Wingrave’s belief that the lad’s equal was not to be found in
the two hemispheres, but she had the old traditions of literal obedience. She swallowed
her sobs, and made up her boy’s trunk and his simple provincial outfit, and sent him on
his way across the seas. Bernard presented himself at his father’s college, and spent five
years in England, without great honour, indeed, but with a vast deal of pleasure and no
discredit. On leaving the university he made the journey to France. In his twenty-fourth
year he took ship for home, prepared to find poor little New England (New England was
very small in those days) a very dull, unfashionable residence. But there had been
changes at home, as well as in Mr Bernard’s opinions. He found his mother’s house quite
habitable, and his sisters grown into two very charming young ladies, with all the
1
accomplishments and graces of the young women of Britain, and a certain native-grown
originality and wildness, which, if it was not an accomplishment, was certainly a grace
the more. Bernard privately assured his mother that his sisters were fully a match for the
most genteel young women in the old country; whereupon poor Mrs Wingrave, you may
be sure, bade them hold up their heads. Such was Bernard’s opinion, and such, in a
tenfold higher degree, was the opinion of Mr Arthur Lloyd. This gentleman was a
college-mate of Mr Bernard, a young man of reputable family, of a good person and a
handsome inheritance; which latter appurtenance he proposed to invest in trade in the
flourishing colony. He and Bernard were sworn friends; they had crossed the ocean
together, and the young American had lost no time in presenting him at his mother’s
house, where he had made quite as good an impression as that which he had received
and of which I have just given a hint.
The two sisters were at this time in all the freshness of their youthful bloom; each
wearing, of course, this natural brilliancy in the manner that became her best. They were
equally dissimilar in appearance and character. Rosalind, the elder
– now in her
twenty-second year
– was tall and white, with calm gray eyes and auburn tresses; a very
faint likeness to the
Rosalind of Shakespeare’s comedy, whom I imagine a brunette (if
you will), but a slender, airy creature, full of the softest, quickest impulses. Miss
Wingrave, with her slightly lymphatic fairness, her fine arms, her majestic height, her
slow utterance, was not cut out for adventures. She would never have put on a man’s
jacket and hose; and, indeed, being a very plump beauty, she may have had reasons apart
from her natural dignity. Perdita, too, might very well have exchanged the sweet
melancholy of her name against something more in consonance with her aspect and
disposition. She had the cheek of a gipsy and the eye of an eager child, as well as the
smallest waist and lightest foot in all the country of the Puritans. When you spoke to her
she never made you wait, as her handsome sister was wont to do (while she looked at
you with a cold fine eye), but gave you your choice of a dozen answers before you had
uttered half your thought.
The young girls were very glad to see their brother once more; but they found
themselves quite able to spare part of their attention for their brother’s friend. Among
the young men their friends and neighbours, the
belle jeunesse of the Colony, there
were many excellent fellows, several devoted swains, and some two or three who
enjoyed the reputation of universal charmers and conquerors. But the homebred arts
and somewhat boisterous gallantry of these honest colonists were completely eclipsed
by the good looks, the fine clothes, the punctilious courtesy, the perfect elegance, the
immense information, of Mr Arthur Lloyd. He was in reality no paragon; he was a
capable, honourable, civil youth, rich in pounds sterling, in his health and complacency
and his little capital of uninvested affections. But he was a gentleman; he had a
handsome person; he had studied and travelled; he spoke French, he played on the flute,
and he read verses aloud with very great taste. There were a dozen reasons why Miss
Wingrave and her sister should have thought their other male acquaintance made but a
2
poor figure before such a perfect man of the world. Mr Lloyd’s anecdotes told our little
New England maidens a great deal more of the ways and means of people of fashion in
European capitals than he had any idea of doing. It was delightful to sit by and hear him
and Bernard talk about the fine people and fine things they had seen. They would all
gather round the fire after tea, in the little wainscoted parlour, and the two young men
would remind each other, across the rug, of this, that and the other adventure. Rosalind
and Perdita would often have given their ears to know exactly what adventure it was,
and where it happened, and who was there, and what the ladies had on; but in those
days a well-bred young woman was not expected to break into the conversation of her
elders, or to ask too many questions; and the poor girls used therefore to sit fluttering
behind the more languid
–
or more discreet
–
curiosity of their mother.
II
THAT they were both very fine girls Arthur Lloyd was not slow to discover; but it
took him some time to make up his mind whether he liked the big sister or the little
sister best. He had a strong presentiment
– an emotion of a nature entirely too cheerful
to be called a foreboding
– that he was destined to stand up before the parson with one
of them; yet he was unable to arrive at a preference, and for such a consummation a
preference was certainly necessary, for Lloyd had too much young blood in his veins to
make a choice by lot and be cheated of the satisfaction of falling in love. He resolved to
take things as they came
– to let his heart speak. Meanwhile he was on a very pleasant
footing. Mrs Wingrave showed a dignified indifference to his ‘intentions’, equally remote
from a carelessness of her daughter’s honour and from that sharp alacrity to make him
come to the point, which, in his quality of a young man of property, he had too often
encountered in the worldly matrons of his native islands. As for Bernard, all that he
asked was that his friend should treat his sisters as his own; and as for the poor girls
themselves, however each may have secretly longed that their visitor should do or say
something ‘marked’, they kept a very modest and contented demeanour.
Towards each other, however, they were somewhat more on the offensive. They
were good friends enough, and accommodating bedfellows (they shared the same
four-poster), betwixt whom it would take more than a day for the seeds of jealousy to
sprout and bear fruit; but they felt that the seeds had been sown on the day that Mr
Lloyd came into the house. Each made up her mind that, if she should be slighted, she
would bear her grief in silence, and that no one should be any the wiser; for if they had a
great deal of ambition, they had also a large share of pride. But each prayed in secret,
nevertheless, that upon
her the selection, the distinction, might fall. They had need of a
vast deal of patience, of self-control, of dissimulation. In those days a young girl of
decent breeding could make no advances whatever, and barely respond, indeed, to
those that were made. She was expected to sit still in her chair, with her eyes on the
carpet, watching the spot where the mystic handkerchief should fall. Poor Arthur Lloyd
was obliged to carry on his wooing in the little wainscoted parlour, before the eyes of
3
Mrs Wingrave, her son, and his prospective sister-in-law. But youth and love are so
cunning that a hundred signs and tokens might travel to and fro, and not one of these
three pairs of eyes detect them in their passage. The two maidens were almost always
together, and had plenty of chances to betray themselves. That each knew she was being
watched, however, made not a grain of difference in the little offices they mutually
rendered, or in the various household tasks they performed in common. Neither
flinched nor fluttered beneath the silent battery of her sister’s eyes. The only apparent
change in their habits was that they had less to say to each other. It was impossible to
talk about Mr Lloyd, and it was ridiculous to talk about anything else. By tacit agreement
they began to wear all their choice finery, and to devise such little implements of
conquest, in the way of ribbons and top-knots and kerchiefs, as were sanctioned by
indubitable modesty. They executed in the same inarticulate fashion a contract of fair
play in this exciting game. “Is it better so?” Rosalind would ask, tying a bunch of ribbons
on her bosom, and turning about from her glass to her sister. Perdita would look up
gravely from her work and examine the decoration. “I think you had better give it
another loop,” she would say, with great solemnity, looking hard at her sister with eyes
that added, ‘upon my honour!’ So they were for ever stitching and trimming their
petticoats, and pressing out their muslins, and contriving washes and ointments and
cosmetics, like
the ladies in the household of the vicar of Wakefield
. Some three or four
months went by; it grew to be midwinter, and as yet Rosalind knew that if Perdita had
nothing more to boast of than she, there was not much to be feared from her rivalry. But
Perdita by this time
– the charming Perdita
– felt that her secret had grown to be tenfold
more precious than her sister’s.
One afternoon Miss Wingrave sat alone
– that was a rare accident
– before her
toilet-glass, combing out her long hair. It was getting too dark to see; she lit the two
candles in their sockets, on the frame of her mirror, and then went to the window to
draw her curtains. It was a gray December evening; the landscape was bare and bleak,
and the sky heavy with snow-clouds. At the end of the large garden into which her
window looked was a wall with a little postern door, opening into a lane. The door stood
ajar, as she could vaguely see in the gathering darkness, and moved slowly to and fro, as
if some one were swaying it from the lane without. It was doubtless a servant-maid who
had been having a tryst with her sweetheart. But as she was about to drop her curtain
Rosalind saw her sister step into the garden and hurry along the path which led to the
house. She dropped the curtain, all save a little crevice for her eyes. As Perdita came up
the path she seemed to be examining something in her hand, holding it close to her eyes.
When she reached the house she stopped a moment, looked intently at the object, and
pressed it to her lips.
Poor Rosalind slowly came back to her chair and sat down before her glass, where, if
she had looked at it less abstractedly, she would have seen her handsome features sadly
disfigured by jealousy. A moment afterwards the door opened behind her and her sister
came into the room, out of breath, and her cheeks aglow with the chilly air.
4
Perdita started. “Ah,” said she, “I thought you were with our mother.” The ladies were
to go to a tea-party, and on such occasions it was the habit of one of the young girls to
help their mother to dress. Instead of coming in, Perdita lingered at the door.
“Come in, come in,” said Rosalind. “We have more than an hour yet. I should like you
very much to give a few strokes to my hair.” She knew that her sister wished to retreat,
and that she could see in the glass all her movements in the room. “Nay, just help me
with my hair,” she said, “and I will go to mamma.”
Perdita came reluctantly, and took the brush. She saw her sister’s eyes, in the glass,
fastened hard upon her hands. She had not made three passes when Rosalind clapped
her own right hand upon her sister’s left, and started out of her chair. “Whose ring is
that?” she cried, passionately, drawing her towards the light.
On the young girl’s third finger glistened a little gold ring, adorned with a very small
sapphire. Perdita felt that she need no longer keep her secret, yet that she must put a
bold face on her avowal. “It’s mine,” she said proudly.
“Who gave it to you?” cried the other.
Perdita hesitated a moment. “Mr Lloyd.”
“Mr Lloyd is generous, all of a sudden.”
“Ah no,” cried Perdita, with spirit, “not all of a sudden! He offered it to me a month
ago.”
“And you needed a month’s begging to take it?” said Rosalind, looking at the little
trinket, which indeed was not especially elegant, although it was the best that the
jeweller of the Province could furnish. “I wouldn’t have taken it in less than two.”
“It isn’t the ring,” Perdita answered, “it’s what it means!”
“It means that you are not a modest girl!” cried Rosalind. “Pray, does your mother
know of your intrigue? does Bernard?”
“My mother has approved my ‘intrigue’, as you call it. Mr Lloyd has asked for my hand,
and mamma has given it. Would you have had him apply to you, dearest sister?”
Rosalind gave her companion a long look, full of passionate envy and sorrow. Then
she dropped her lashes on her pale cheeks and turned away. Perdita felt that it had not
been a pretty scene; but it was her sister’s fault. However, the elder girl rapidly called
back her pride, and turned herself about again. “You have my very best wishes,” she said,
with a low curtsey. “I wish you every happiness, and a very long life.”
Perdita gave a bitter laugh. “Don’t speak in that tone!” she cried. “I would rather you
should curse me outright. Come, Rosy,” she added, “he couldn’t marry both of us.”
“I wish you very great joy,” Rosalind repeated, mechanically, sitting down to her glass
again, “and a very long life, and plenty of children.”
There was something in the sound of these words not at all to Perdita’s taste. “Will
you give me a year to live at least?” she said. “In a year I can have one little boy
– or one
little girl at least. If you will give me your brush again I will do your hair.”
“Thank you,” said Rosalind. “You had better go to mamma. It isn’t becoming that a
young lady with a promised husband should wait on a girl with none.”
5
“Nay,” said Perdita, good-humouredly, “I have Arthur to wait upon me. You need my
service more than I need yours.”
But her sister motioned her away, and she left the room. When she had gone poor
Rosalind fell on her knees before her dressing-table, buried her head in her arms, and
poured out a flood of tears and sobs. She felt very much the better for this effusion of
sorrow. When her sister came back she insisted upon helping her to dress – on her
wearing her prettiest things. She forced upon her acceptance a bit of lace of her own,
and declared that now that she was to be married she should do her best to appear
worthy of her lover’s choice. She discharged these offices in stern silence; but, such as
they were, they had to do duty as an apology and an atonement; she never made any
other.
Now that Lloyd was received by the family as an accepted suitor nothing remained
but to fix the wedding-day. It was appointed for the following April, and in the interval
preparations were diligently made for the marriage. Lloyd, on his side, was busy with his
commercial arrangements, and with establishing a correspondence with the great
mercantile house to which he had attached himself in England. He was therefore not so
frequent a visitor at Mrs Wingrave’s as during the months of his diffidence and
irresolution, and poor Rosalind had less to suffer than she had feared from the sight of
the mutual endearments of the young lovers. Touching his future sister-in-law Lloyd
had a perfectly clear conscience. There had not been a particle of love-making between
them, and he had not the slightest suspicion that he had dealt her a terrible blow. He was
quite at his ease; life promised so well, both domestically and financially. The great revolt
of the Colonies was not yet in the air, and that his connubial felicity should take a tragic
turn it was absurd, it was blasphemous, to apprehend. Meanwhile, at Mrs Wingrave’s,
there was a greater rustling of silks, a more rapid clicking of scissors and flying of
needles, than ever. The good lady had determined that her daughter should carry from
home the genteelest outfit that her money could buy or that the country could furnish.
All the sage women in the Province were convened, and their united taste was brought
to bear on Perdita’s wardrobe. Rosalind’s situation, at this moment, was assuredly not to
be envied. The poor girl had an inordinate love of dress, and the very best taste in the
world, as her sister perfectly well knew. Rosalind was tall, she was stately and sweeping,
she was made to carry stiff brocade and masses of heavy lace, such as belong to the toilet
of a rich man’s wife. But Rosalind sat aloof, with her beautiful arms folded and her head
averted, while her mother and sister and the venerable women aforesaid worried and
wondered over their materials, oppressed by the multitude of their resources. One day
there came in a beautiful piece of white silk, brocaded with heavenly blue and silver,
sent by the bridegroom himself
– it not being thought amiss in those days that the
hu ...
Purchase answer to see full
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