Wednesday, September 4, 2019
Solomons The Return of the Screw :: Solomon Return of the Screw
      Solomon's The Return of the Screw                 Mrs. Grose, playing cleverly on the governess'  visions, convinces     her she is seeing Peter Quint and Ms. Jessel in an effort to drive her  mad.      At least, that is according to Eric Solomon's "The Return of the  Screw."     Mrs. Grose tries to remove the governess to get to Flora.                   Mrs. Grose will do anything to  gain control of Flora, as she proved     when she murdered Peter Quint.  He, along with Ms. Jessel, was too much  of     an influence on the children.  Quint died somewhat mysteriously, on a  path     between town and Bly.  He died from a blow on the head, supposedly  from     falling upon a rock in the road.  The reader's only impression of  the     death is through Mrs. Grose's story, though, and so, Solomon  hypothesizes,     she filters the information to make it seem less extraordinary a demise.     Perhaps Mrs. Grose killed him out of jealously.  The reader can infer  from     this point of view that Mrs. Grose somehow also had a hand in Ms.  Jessel's     death.           Mrs. Grose then proceeds, after the murders,  to twist the new     governess' visions of ghosts into visions of Quint and Jessel.   Solomon     does not address the issue of whether or not what the governess sees is     actually there.  His explanation is logical either way.  If the  governess     sees real ghosts, or if she is imagining it all, does not matter.   What     matters is that Mrs. Grose tailors Quint and Jessel to the governess'     descriptions.  She listens to the descriptions and tells the  governess'     she is seeing Quint and Jessel. Mrs. Grose does not herself create the     visions that the governess sees, instead, she bends them to her purpose.     The governess' visions of ghosts are twisted by Mrs. Grose. When the     governess reports seeing a ghost, Mrs. Grose seizes the opportunity,     exclaiming that the ghost she sees must be Peter Quint.  She also  labels     the other apparition as the ghost of Ms. Jessel.  In this way, she  can     give the ghosts an evil quality, imparted to them because of the evil     lives of Quint and Jessel.  Making the ghosts evil forces the  governess'     Victorian mind to attempt to shield the children from the evil.  Mrs.  Grose     knows the governess will read too far into the children's actions, and     					    
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