AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL
Villette
(Novel)
By Charlotte
Bronte
Synopsis:
Lucy
Snowe, a young Englishwoman of the educated class, narrates the story of her
life—in a particularly partisan and sometimes unreliable manner. She is left
destitute after the death of her mysterious family and, after briefly being a
nurse-companion, takes herself off on a blind, daring trip to the Continent.
She goes to the kingdom of Labassecour (perhaps modeled on Belgium) and,
through a series of very fortunate occurrences, manages to land herself a job
and a place to live on her first night in the town of Villette. She becomes a
nursery governess to the three daughters of the proprietress of a large school
for girls. During her time as the bonne d'enfants, she impresses her employer,
Madame Beck, with her modesty and excellent English. She is elevated to the
position of English teacher, though she has no qualifications for it and has a
poor command of the French language spoken in Villette. Lucy, however, comes to
excel at teaching and to love it.
Dr.
John Graham Bretton, a friend of Lucy’s in her childhood, also happens to be
working in Villette. Their paths cross, but he does not recognize her. During
this time Lucy and a student at Madame Beck's, Ginevra Fanshawe, become friends,
and Lucy learns of Ginevra's secret suitors. One of them is Dr. John, for whom
Lucy has also formed an attachment. Ginevra is fickle and selfish, and Lucy
cannot understand how Ginevra could prefer another (the Count De Hamal) to her
adored Dr. John. Meanwhile, the imperious and difficult M. Paul, a professor of
literature, is paying Lucy attention, but chiefly to admonish her and instruct
her about what he considers proper conduct for a young lady.
Two
more friends from Lucy's childhood, Paulina Home and her father, now live in
Villette. Mr. Home has inherited a title and a fortune, and he and his daughter
live in fine style. Paulina (Polly), who is younger than both Dr. John and
Lucy, stayed with the Brettons when a young child and formed an interestingly
adult attachment to Dr. John. Dr. John, who was enamored of Polly's flighty
cousin Ginevra, now transfers his affections to the seventeen-year-old.
During
this time Lucy is visited by a spectral nun, said to the be the shade of a
sister buried alive in the garden when Madame Beck's school was a convent. Lucy
learns that M. Paul, with whom she has had several battles but has formed a
friendship, was engaged to be married twenty years ago to a woman named Justine
Marie. Because of debts and the unforeseen death of M. Paul's father, the two
were unable to marry, and she died very young in a convent. M. Paul supports
Justine's family in a house with a priest named Pere Silas. Lucy also learns
that M. Paul lives quietly in two rooms at a nearby boys' college, keeping no
servants.
Lucy
and M. Paul become very good friends, and he calls her his sister. At one
moment, however, Lucy thinks that perhaps M. Paul feels more strongly for her.
He tries to convert her to Catholicism, but Lucy is a truly faithful believer
in the Protestant faith of her upbringing, and becoming a Catholic for her is
not possible. Though the two finally come to some agreement on the relative
worth of their faiths, it is clear that Lucy's Protestantism will keep her from
ever being M. Paul's wife. Pere Silas and Madame Beck counsel M. Paul that
marriage to Lucy is an impossibility, and M. Paul decides he must go to
Guadalupe to take care of some business interests of Madame Malravens.
Dr.
John and Polly fall in love. They exchange letters, hoping to become engaged.
M. de Bassompierre is against letting his daughter go, but he eventually
relents. The couple marry and are happy, having many healthy children. Ginevra,
formerly loved by Dr. John, is now jealous and dislikes her cousin Polly.
M.
Paul and Lucy fall in love, but she is not a Catholic, and the decision has
already been made for him to leave. Before he goes he is very mysterious and
does not see Lucy until the night before his departure. He has procured a house
for her to set up a new school so that she may be independent and wait for him
to return from Guadalupe. They exchange pledges of love, and M. Paul leaves.
Ginevra
has been seeing the Count De Hamal secretly. He has been visiting her at the
school dressed as the spectral nun. On the night Ginevra elopes with the Count,
it is revealed to Lucy that the ghostly visitation was nothing other than Count
De Hamal in disguise. Lucy is relieved that she has never seen a ghost.
Lucy
leaves the school and prospers at her own school while she waits for M. Paul's
return. She receives an unexpected legacy from an old friend, with which she
turns her day school into a boarding school. The ending of the novel is
ambiguous, but it is implied that M. Paul dies in a shipwreck on his way home.
Lucy lives out her life alone, at least comforted by the memory of love.
Analysis:
In this
literary piece, I can say that it is an autobiographical theory. It is because
the story is all about the experience of the person who is narrating the story.
Also, the story is in narrative form which enables the readers to understand it
easily. It is in simplified autobiographical narration wherein the readers can
create their own interpretation based on the text written.
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