Henry James’ novel is about the life of a young girl named Maisie. The story revolves around the family and the struggles of Maisie to understand and live under the emotional stresses her mother and father both put her through. A specific scene in which this is made clear is when Maisie was leaving her father’s house and was about to go to her mother (who had come to pick her up). Here, the father had told Maisie to give a message to her mother— an insult that she conveyed just as she was instructed. “Crudely as they had calculated they were at first justified by the event: she was the little feathered shuttlecock they could fiercely keep flying between them. The evil they had the gift of thinking or pretending to think of each other they poured into her little gravely-gazing soul as into a boundless receptacle, and each of them had doubtless the best conscience in the world as to the duty of teaching her the stern truth that should be her safeguard against the other.” This marked the beginning of the parents using their daughter as a metaphorical shuttlecock between each other, using her to hurt and aggravate each other.
Maisie did not know this at the time, as she is too young, but the repercussions of their actions and words show up when Maisie starts immitating/exhibiting their behaviors while playing with her doll, Lisette. “Maisie replied to her—and precisely about the motive of a disappearance—as she, Maisie, had once been replied to by Mrs. Farange: “Find out for yourself!” She mimicked her mother’s sharpness, but she was rather ashamed afterwards, though as to whether of the sharpness or of the mimicry was not quite clear.” This mimicry is usually just the start of children beginning to adopt the traits/actions of the adults near them, though Maisie felt shame in doing so. The negative effects of her parents being selfish individuals even in regards to their own child seems to go unnoticed by them, as they continue on with their own lives and personal relationships with others.
However, Maisie’s caretakers, that were hired by her parents, provided her with an education and the companionship she needed growing up (though it may or may not have been enough). She was able to find solace is Mrs. Wix, who, unlike Ms. Overmore (now Mrs. Beale), was a mother, and Maisie arguably needed a motherly figure because her biological one was not present in her life (as an active motherly figure). The lack of direct parenting and instead entrusting her to the other adults leads to a lonelier childhood and perhaps feeling even more confused of the environment surrounding her— her parents hating each other and their new partners’ entanglement, and having caretakers that are not her parents.


