75 pages • 2 hours read
Henry JamesA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Chapter Summaries & Analyses
Miss Birdseye is “a little old lady” (22) whose “long practice of philanthropy” (22) has resulted in her features being hard to read. She gives her money away to “negro[es]” and “refugees” (23) and almost would prefer that slaves be “back in bondage” (23) so she could save them. Basil finds her “ascetic” (17) home bland and wonders how Olive can like it. Olive also detests the house.
Miss Farrinder is a lecturer on “temperance and the rights of women” (25). As people gather to hear her speak, Basil has the impression that “they were mediums, communists, vegetarians” (26). Dr. and Mrs. Tarrant enter with their daughter Verena. Dr. Tarrant is “a mesmeric healer” (27), and his wife is the daughter of an abolitionist.
Mrs. Farrinder would like Olive to bring wealthy women from her affluent neighborhood into the cause. However, Olive does not want to talk to other wealthy women; rather, she wishes to know “some very poor girl” (29). She did, once, attempt to befriend two “pale shop-maidens” (29), but they were “afraid” of Olive. Olive tells Mrs. Farrinder that she prefers to “enter into the lives of women who are lonely, who are piteous” (30).
By Henry James
Daisy Miller
Henry James
Roderick Hudson
Henry James
The Ambassadors
Henry James
The American
Henry James
The Aspern Papers
Henry James
The Beast in the Jungle
Henry James
The Golden Bowl
Henry James
The Jolly Corner
Henry James
The Portrait of a Lady
Henry James
The Real Thing
Henry James
The Turn of the Screw
Henry James
The Wings of the Dove
Henry James
Washington Square
Henry James
What Maisie Knew
Henry James