Tag Archives: divorce

What We Know From What Maisie Sees

Henry James creates an interesting juxtaposition in What Maisie Knew with Maisie’s age and how she sees and understands her world despite her age. The duality of Maisie’s perceptiveness and naïveté establishes irony for both the reader and the novel’s characters. Irony is strewn throughout the novel: when Sir Claude is first mentioned in Chapter 6, prior to meeting him Maisie asks Miss Overmore if the gentleman her mother has been seeing should be made her tutor. She asks, “mightn’t that make it right—as right as your being my governess makes it for you to be with papa?” Upon hearing this, Miss Overmore blushes, signaling that Maisie’s comment is exceptionally perceptive. Maisie understands the implications of Miss Overmore’s relationship with Beale, and Sir Claude’s relationship with Ida, and the irony in this scene is twofold: Miss Overmore recognizes the situational irony of Maisie’s question, and we as the reader recognize the dramatic irony of the role Sir Claude comes to play in Maisie’s life. Though Miss Overmore rejects Maisie’s proposition, Sir Claude does end up, in some sense, tutoring Maisie. Though he doesn’t give her a formal education, the outings Sir Claude has with Maisie give her an informal education of her world.

How Maisie sees the world is interesting, especially given the context of how spectating is used throughout the novel. As both an object and subject of spectating, Maisie transitions from the former to the latter over the course of the story. In the earlier chapters of the novel, Maisie exists passively; in her first stay with Beale, she is observed by the men going in and out the house, and “her features had somehow become prominent; they were so perpetually nipped by the gentlemen who came to see her father and the smoke of whose cigarettes went into her face. Some of these gentlemen made her strike matches and light their cigarettes; others, holding her on knees violently jolted, pinched the calves of her legs till she shrieked—her shriek was much admired—and reproached them with being toothpicks” (Ch. 1). Similarly, when Mr. Perriam is first introduced to Maisie he remarks that Maisie is not a “myth,” as her mother was “always talking about you, but she’d never produce you” (Ch. 11). However, in the latter half of the novel, as Maisie ages she begins to gain agency, partly because of how she becomes more perceptive of the world around her—”so the sharpened sense of spectatorship was the child’s main support, the long habit, from the first, of seeing herself in discussion and finding in the fury of it—she had had a glimpse of the game of football—a sort of compensation for the doom of a peculiar passivity” (Ch. 12). Maisie uses her position as the subject of spectating to overcome the passivity that she has been cast into. This is shown in the multiple times Maisie pretends to not know anything, acting innocent and childlike to avoid confrontation with the adults in her life. With this action, Maisie reverses who is the subject and object of spectatorship; using the situational irony of feigning ignorance, she places herself as the subject to the reader, while she remains the object to the characters in the novel.

Perhaps James’s experimentation with the child as the focus of his novel is an exercise of literary modernism in its infancy. This is one of the earliest works I’ve read that establishes a child as the focal point of narration. The use of a child’s perspective gives way to ironic situations which arise from how adults see the child and degree of how much the child is expected to understand. Maisie is more emotionally aware than what we would consider the “average child” because she has been exposed to the difficulties of divorce and her role in the game that her parents play. James not only disrupts 20th century notions of a child, but our notions of children in literature as well.

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Does Maisie Know Who Her Parents Are? Do We?

Something that struck me was Maisie’s realization that she had “two fathers, two mothers and two homes, six protections in all, she shouldn’t know ‘wherever’ to go” (Ch. 12).
When I picked up the reading from Chapter 10, I was confused by the question Sir Clause posed to Maisie, regarding Mrs. Beale: “Do you think she really cares for you?” What confused me was the name that Miss Overmore had taken after marrying Beale Farange—I had thought that “Mrs. Beale” referred to Ida Farange, and it wasn’t until later on in the chapter when both Mrs. Beale and Ida were mentioned within the same sentence that I had realized my error. This deliberate choice by James to change Miss Overmore to Mrs. Beale without informing the reader presents us with the same confusion that Maisie faces over her multiple parents. Part of this confusion comes from the fact that Maisie’s four parents (Beale Farange & Mrs. Beale, Ida Farange & Sir Claude) have all encountered one another. Before Mrs. Beale had married Beale, she was know to both us and Maisie as the governess Miss Overmore, employed by Ida. Additionally, it’s revealed that Sir Claude had been visiting Mrs. Beale on multiple occasions, which he’s lied about to Maisie.

As Ida begins to spend less and less time with both her daughter and new husband, she delegates the responsibility of her daughter—whose custody she’d furiously fought for in her divorce—to Sir Claude; she even directly tells Maisie that “I’ve washed my hands of you” (Ch. 11). Ida’s deterioration as Maisie’s mother leaves her with no concrete maternal figure, as Maisie has a caring governess in addition to a stepmother. Maisie asks Sir Claude if she has brought him and Mrs. Beale together, as she’d brought Beale and Mrs. Beale together, and asks if the three of them can live together. This request shows the fluidity of who occupies the parental positions of Maisie. Rather than it being one couple (whether it be the Beales or Ida and Sir Claude), Maisie seems to want her parents to be those who are closest to her, both physically and emotionally. In the earlier chapters, Maisie shows loyalty to her father as she spent the first six months with him. After Miss Overmore is introduced when Maisie is sent to Ida’s, Maisie adopts her as the maternal figure in her life; Maisie is overjoyed when Miss Overmore abandons her post at Ida’s to move in with Maisie and her father. Not long after, when it’s revealed that Ida has remarried, Maisie becomes infatuated with (the photograph of) Sir Claude, and replaces him as her paternal figure when her custody returns to Ida.

Maisie’s choice of parents are a mix of proximity and loyalty. This is shown in Chapter 13, when Sir Claude brings Maisie to the Beale’s new house, and she remarks that if she is to return to them she must give him up, “as I gave up Mrs. Beale when I last went to mamma’s.” Though Maisie realizes she has multiple parents, she still processes the idea of mother and father as singular; she cannot consider Mrs. Beale if she is at her mother’s, and when she is at her father’s with Mrs. Beale she does not consider Ida to be her mother. James uses the multiple adults in Maisie’s life to establish confusion for her, as she must deliberate which one of the adults she wishes to be her true parents.

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