Showing posts with label Costello. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Costello. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Daisy Miller (Review)

 

Daisy is portrayed as a character who is not only innocent, but also an individual that wishes to ensure that she attains her freedom. In addition, she is an individual that seems to believe that Europe is a fantasy world and has the ambition to become married to a member of the European upper class so that she can become a part of that society. Daisy is shown to be extremely naïve because she seems to be very trusting of individuals. One of the most important ways through which her naiveté is depicted is in the situation where she agrees to visit the Château de Chillon with Winterbourne despite barely knowing him for a half hour. A result of this situation is that she is easily carried away and she displays characteristics that can be considered oblivious to the environment and culture around her. Her easy familiarity with individuals all round her is also mentioned, with Mrs. Costello disapproving of the way that Daisy shows too much familiarity with the courier (James, 1879, p. 400). Such familiarity is often a sign of a lose woman, but Daisy does not realize how her actions are making her appear to others within the society that she desires to become a part of. The failure by Daisy to realize or weigh the consequences of her actions can be considered a sign that she is totally oblivious and she is headstrong goes ahead with her activities. This situation is what leads to disaster because she is unable to see her tragic end until it is too late.

Daisy flirtatiously plays with Frederick Winterbourne, an individual that she has just recently met. Winterbourne, on the other hand, thinks of her as just a flirt, and this is to such an extent that he feels that were she not American, it would have been inappropriate. He further believes that it is essential to make sure that she is not judged by European standards, which are what he has become used to over the years that he has spent in Europe. Winterbourne compares Daisy to European women and finds her to be an innocent individual, despite her flirtatious nature (James, 1879, p. 397). As a man that has essentially become used to the European way of life and the way that the women of the continent behaves, he is at first wary of Daisy’s flirtatiousness, but comes to the conclusion that rather than being a lose individual, she is actually just an innocent flirt. This attitude is essential in helping in the development of friendship between them to such an extent that when Winterbourne tells her that he will be going to Geneva the next day, Daisy feels some disappointment and makes him promise her that they will meet in Rome within the year. The manner through which Daisy plays with Winterbourne is an important plot in the story because it shows her to be an innocent individual that seems to appear world wise. A consequence is that she ends putting herself in situations that cause concern to Winterbourne, as in the case where she is seeing Giovanelli, a young Italian of questionable character (James, 1879, p. 423).