A Companion to the American Short Story

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A Companion to the American Short Story Page 37

by Alfred Bendixen


  impressions: “ Oh! The sweet rapture of rest! There is music in the Temple. And here

  is fruit to taste. … The moon shines and the breeze is soft ” (572). She awakens from

  her trance feeling that she has “ tasted the depths of human despair ” (572), and though

  she briefl y wonders whether the other cigarettes might hold pleasant visions, she

  destroys the remainder, telling her friend that she is “ ‘ a little the worse for a dream ’ ”

  (573). For all her wish to escape the mundanity of the club meeting, the protagonist ’ s

  desire to experience a different world has not brought pleasure. Indeed, the story

  conservatively treats her “ unwomanly ” experimentation, implying that the cigarettes

  contain more than just tobacco. 21 Her decadent adventure with the cigarette has

  allowed the woman to glimpse only misery, not euphoria.

  In contrast, in “ The Storm ” (1898), the consequences of another woman ’ s defi ance

  of societal convention are paradoxically less serious. This story follows such works as

  “ A Shameless Affair, ” “ A Harbinger, ” and “ A Respectable Woman ” in its treatment

  of erotic initiation and the controversial ideal of sexual freedom often associated with

  New Women. However, “ The Storm ” is bolder in its depiction of such matters than

  the earlier tales. Chopin also treated the topic of sexual awakening in a story written

  between those works and “ The Storm, ” “ A Vocation and a Voice ” (1896), although

  that narrative describes a young man who is initiated by a gypsy girl, Suzima, and

  who, after becoming a priest, fl ees the monastery to rejoin her. A sensual young

  woman who neither feels shame over nor suffers for her sexual acts, Suzima is an

  antecedent for Calixta in “ The Storm. ”

  Calixta, in contrast to her incarnation as a young coquette in the story ’ s prequel,

  “ At the ‘ Cadian Ball ” (1892), is now a wife and mother, but her seductive ways have

  not disappeared, as her former suitor Alc é e Laballi è re fi nds when he takes refuge in

  her home during a storm while her family is away. She staggers into his arms during

  the thunder, and “ as she glanced up at him the fear in her liquid blue eyes had given

  place to a drowsy gleam that unconsciously betrayed a sensuous desire ” (594). After

  the explicitly described scene of their adultery, the two part, Calixta laughing as she

  watches him ride away. When her husband and son return, she is pleased to see them.

  Alc é e writes to his wife encouraging her to remain on vacation, and she is also pleased,

  for “ devoted as she was to her husband, their intimate conjugal life was something

  which she was more than willing to forego for a while ” (596). Thus, everyone is happy

  166

  Charlotte Rich

  at the end of the story, unlike the tragedies wrought by fi ctional adulteresses such as

  Anna Karenina and Emma Bovary, and, as with several stories by Chopin, the tale

  unapologetically acknowledges female sexuality, in contrast to dominant gender ide-

  ologies of her day. Moreover, this tale excludes narratorial comment on Calixta ’ s act,

  again demonstrating Chopin ’ s tendency toward objectivity about moral issues in her

  fi ction.

  Chopin

  ’

  s late story

  “

  Charlie

  ”

  (1900) contains one of the most independent of

  Chopin ’ s protagonists, a young woman who violates several conventions of nineteenth -

  century Southern womanhood. Charlotte Laborde, or Charlie, fi rst appears in the story

  after having been out riding her horse, sporting cropped hair and “ a costume of her

  own devising … which she called her ‘ trouserlets ’ ” (639). Like the female protagonist

  in an earlier story entitled “ The Unexpected ” (1895), Charlie also rides a bicycle, an

  emblem of the New Woman ’ s liberation. Furthermore, she enjoys the unladylike

  hobby of shooting at targets, but after accidentally grazing the arm of a visitor to the

  Laborde plantation, she agrees to enter a convent school and learn more feminine ways.

  Working to “ transform herself from a hoyden to a fascinating young lady ” (658), she

  is near her goal when she receives news that her father has been injured. She rushes

  home and, fi nding that his arm must be amputated, stays on to manage the plantation

  admirably. When a young friend, Gus Bradley, declares his love for her, she confesses

  her mutual feelings, but also asserts her desire to keep working. As with Paula Von

  Stolz in “ Wiser Than a God, ” it appears that Charlie will only enter into a “ new ” or

  companionate marriage that allows her to have non - domestic pursuits.

  Despite her many fi ctional portraits of women like Charlie Laborde who defy con-

  vention, Chopin ’ s stories also contain characters who adhere to nineteenth - century

  codes of feminine behavior, as well as to Creole and Catholic mores, suggesting that

  the New Woman ’ s progressive or radical ideas do not suit all women. For example,

  in “ A Lady of Bayou St. John ” (1893), the protagonist considers entering into an

  adulterous relationship while her husband is away in the Civil War. However, she

  receives news of her husband ’ s death, and when her suitor comes after an appropriate

  interval to ask for her hand, she refuses him. Madame Delisle has dedicated her life

  to her dead husband, explaining that he “ ‘ has never been so living to me as he is

  now ’ ” (301), and she spends the rest of her life worshiping his memory as a proper

  Catholic widow. The conclusion of Chopin ’ s story “ Regret ” (1894) also adheres to

  dominant Victorian notions of female identity in valorizing the maternal impulse.

  Aur é lie is a middle - aged woman who once refused marriage and “ had not yet lived

  to regret it ” (375). However, when she cares for a neighbor ’ s children for two weeks,

  her maternal instinct blossoms as she grows to love them. The conclusion contains

  perhaps the most poignant scene in Chopin ’ s stories: when Aur é lie is alone after the

  children leave, she weeps at the opportunity for motherhood she once declined.

  Similarly, two of Chopin ’ s tales focus on women as objects of the male gaze and,

  while their treatment of this conception is ironic, they suggest the women ’ s complic-

  ity with this dominant ideal in one degree or another. In “ A Mental Suggestion ”

  (1896), the intellectual Pauline Edmonds, who wears eyeglasses and is “ possessed of

  Kate

  Chopin

  167

  an investigating turn of mind, ” appears to a male character, Faverham, as “ the type

  of woman that [he] detested. Her mental poise was a rebuke to him; there was constant

  rebuff in her lack of the coquettish, the captivating, the feminine ” (548). However,

  during an experiment with hypnosis, he becomes attracted to Pauline, and she becomes

  a pretty woman, from another male character ’ s perspective, after she falls in love with

  and marries Faverham: “ There was color in her face whose contour was softened and

  embellished by a particularly happy arrangement of her brown hair. The pince - nez

  which she had substituted for the rather formidable spectacles … lent it a piquancy

  that was very attractive ” (554). Pauline is thus “ femin
ized ” when she replaces her

  intellectual enthusiasm with a more conventional object of affection, though Chopin

  qualifi es this view by fi ltering it through a male perspective. The resulting dramatic

  irony calls attention to such assumptions and, as with stories such as “ The Story of

  an Hour, ” Chopin utilizes point of view to illuminate the themes of the story. The

  protagonist of Chopin ’ s story “ Suzette ” (1897) also reifi es the cultural idealization of

  women in the nineteenth century as passive objects to be admired for their beauty,

  perceiving herself merely as an object of the male gaze. Hearing that a suitor has

  drowned, Suzette is barely disturbed by this news as she anticipates being seen by a

  handsome cattle

  -

  driver who often passes her window. Unfortunately, he does not

  notice her, and the narrator dryly notes Suzette ’ s distress: “ He had not looked at her!

  He had not thought of her! He would be gone three weeks – three eternities! and

  every hour freighted with the one bitter remembrance of his indifference! ” (559). The

  tone of this story is clearly critical of Suzette, but perhaps also of the culture that

  infl uences her attitude.

  Moreover, besides these examples of more conventional female characters in Cho-

  pin ’ s fi ction, and aside from her sympathetic portrayal of Charlie Laborde, Chopin

  depicts few examples of women working outside the home, and these women often

  do so out of fi nancial need or to provide for others rather than for their own satisfac-

  tion. For example, in Chopin ’ s fi nal story, “ The Impossible Miss Meadows ” (1903), a

  poor young woman is invited to visit a wealthy family, the Hyleighs. Miss Meadows ’ s

  confession to Evadne Hyleigh that “ ‘ a nursery governess is about all I ’ m equal to,

  ma ’ m. … Indeed me pride ’ s all gone ’ ” (688) reveals her unhappiness and shame at

  being alone in the world, forced to make her own way. Similarly, the protagonist of

  Chopin ’ s late story “ Polly ” (1902) works as a bookkeeper but willingly resigns her

  position after her marriage. When she receives a bequest from a relative with the

  injunction to use the money rather than save it, Polly buys household items for her

  parents, adhering to the feminine code of selfl ess dedication to family. Likewise,

  Elizabeth Stock is the town postmistress in “ Elizabeth Stock ’ s One Story ” (1898), but

  she uses her earnings to provide schooling for her sister ’ s children. In fact, as she

  reveals in the course of the “ one story ” she ever wrote, Elizabeth would have liked to

  pursue a more personally satisfying career as a writer. These examples of characters

  who adhere to Victorian ideas of femininity rather than to the progressive ideals of

  the New Woman, particularly in their selfl essness, illustrate the tendency of Chopin ’ s

  fi ction not to suggest a single model of fulfi llment for women.

  168

  Charlotte Rich

  As the wide variety of stories discussed above indicates, Chopin ’ s short fi ction that

  treats the theme of female defi ance of social codes ranges broadly in tone. But as the

  long - debated, ambiguous conclusion of The Awakening also demonstrates, she did not

  provide a clear solution to the widely debated Woman Question of her day. In fact,

  Chopin did not see lasting value in “ social problem ” literature concerning specifi c

  contemporary issues; in an 1894 review of Hamlin Garland

  ’

  s literary manifesto

  Crumbling Idols , which praised authors such as Henrik Ibsen, she wrote:

  Human impulses do not change and can not so long as men and women continue to

  stand in the relation to one another which they have occupied since our knowledge of

  their existence began. It is why Aeschylus is true, and Shakespeare is true to - day, and

  why Ibsen will not be true in some remote to - morrow, however forcible and representa-

  tive he may be for the hour, because he takes for his themes social problems which by

  their very nature are mutable. (693)

  Chopin ’ s short fi ction does refl ect her cultural moment of the 1890s in that it fre-

  quently embodies the historical and literary phenomenon of the New Woman, and,

  indeed, her work is distinctive within that genre for its candid acknowledgment of

  female sexuality. However, Chopin resists turning her tales of women in confl ict with

  their society ’ s gender expectations into “ social problem ” literature with a specifi c

  agenda. Treating her female characters with restrained objectivity, and avoiding judg-

  ment of their choices in keeping with her dislike of didacticism or polemic, she insists

  above all else upon the importance of seeking an authentic self, be that through con-

  ventional or controversial means.

  Notes

  1

  “ The Western Association of Writers, ” origi-

  and domestic concerns. She was often an

  nally published in

  Critic

  (July 7, 1894);

  advocate of “ rational dress ” and fond of exer-

  The Complete Works of Kate Chopin

  , ed. Per

  cise. If the New Woman chose to marry, she

  Seyersted (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State

  was associated with the concept of compan-

  University Press, 1969 , rpt. 1993), 691. Page

  ionate marriage, in which husband and wife

  references to Chopin

  ’

  s works hereafter cite

  regarded each other with equal respect and

  this edition and appear in the text.

  shared responsibilities, while after the turn of

  2

  Defi ned by her commitment to various types

  the century she was associated with greater

  of independence, the stereotypical New

  sexual freedom. For further discussion of the

  Woman was college educated and believed in

  New Woman phenomenon in literature, see

  a woman ’ s right to work in traditionally mas-

  Ardis , New Women, New Novels ; Fernando ,

  culine professions; in the United States, in

  “ New Women ” in the Late Victorian Novel ; Cun-

  particular, she often sought a public role in

  ningham , The New Woman and the Victorian

  occupations that would help to

  “

  improve

  Novel ; Ledger , The New Woman ; Smith -

  society.

  ”

  The New Woman championed

  Rosenberg, Disorderly Conduct

  ; and Tichi,

  women

  ’

  s right to the vote, to economic

  “ Women Writers and the New Woman. ”

  autonomy, and to the right to prioritize intel-

  3

  Contrary to popular myth, Chopin continued

  lectual or artistic aspirations over marriage

  writing after the censure of The Awakening ;

  Kate

  Chopin

  169

  see Thomas, “ ‘ What Are the Prospects for the

  10

  Chopin deals with the effects of Catholicism

  Book? ’ ” 36 – 57, on how Chopin ’ s fi nal years

  on women not only in The Awakening and her

  were mythologized by the literary market-

  fi rst novel, At Fault , but also in stories
includ-

  place of her day and how such misrepresenta-

  ing “ Madame C é lestin ’ s Divorce ” (1893), “ A

  tions were perpetuated in twentieth - century

  Lady of Bayou St. John ” (1893), “ A Sentimen-

  scholarship.

  tal Soul ” (1894), and “ Two Portraits ” (1895).

  4

  Besides The Awakening

  , other American 11

  Chopin herself was known to oppose religious

  novels that employ imagery of the New

  and social prejudice against divorce; see Toth,

  Woman as a bird include Elizabeth Stuart

  Kate Chopin 266.

  Phelps ’ s The Story of Avis

  (1878), Ellen 12

  Chopin ’ s naming the parish “ Sabine ” has his-

  Glasgow ’ s The Wheel of Life (1906), and Willa

  torical resonance for the brutality that ‘ Tite

  Cather ’ s The Song of the Lark (1915).

  Reine suffers. The Sabines inhabited a region

  5

  See “ Women ’ s Education: ‘ Maddest Folly

  of Italy subjugated by the Romans around

  Going, ’ ” in Marks , Bicycles, Bangs and Bloom-

  290 bce ; an event often depicted in classical

  ers

  , 90

  –

  116, on satirical arguments against

  art is the rape of the Sabine women, when

  higher education for women, some of which

  Romulus, who needed wives for his soldiers,

  proceeded from assertions of female intellec-

  lured the men away and allowed the soldiers

  tual inferiority (102 – 3).

  to have their way with the women.

  6

  See Woloch , Women and the American Experi-

  13

  See Schneider and Schneider , American Women

  ence , on the infl uence of Edward Clarke ’ s book

  in the Progressive Era , 137 – 8, for discussion of

  Sex in Education (1873), which asserted that

  this phenomenon.

  “ mental activity drew blood from the nervous

  14

  Chopin ’ s story “ Mrs. Mobry ’ s Reason ” (1891)

  system and reproductive organs. Higher edu-

  describes how young love is destroyed by

  cation, therefore, could cause mental collapse,

  hereditary insanity apparently caused by

  physical incapacity, infertility, and early

  inherited syphilis, as Emily Toth notes in

 

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