The Woman in White - Wilkie Collins
Victorian era novelist Collins (1824 – 1889) is known for
two long novels that were originally published in installments in a weekly
magazine. The Woman in White, say
some critics, was one of the first mysteries, published in 1859, and The
Moonstone, published in 1868, is considered – by no less than T.S. Eliot – the first police procedural.
In The Woman in White, a young drawing master is
unfortunate enough to fall in love with a young woman who has been promised by
her father to a milord. After the marriage, the milord turns out to be neither
rich nor a gentleman in any sense. Mystery revolves around the milord’s secret,
known to a furtive lady dressed in white, who roams, forlornly but conveniently
for the plot, near our main characters. I cannot give away an inexplicable
death, which adds to the whydunnit aspect of the story.
True, there are slow spots, since we are, after all,
in the world of the Victorian novel whose audiences liked drawn-out scenes and
situations. Also true, in a couple of places Collins over-uses indirect speech,
in which one character merely reports to another character what was said in a
conversation with a third character. Overall, however, the various narrative
techniques hold interest. The story unfolds from different points of view, thus
forming a chain of evidence that is at once plausible and engrossing. A
contemporary critic said Collins’ special merit is “that he treats a
labyrinthine story in an apparently simple manner, and that the language in
which he writes is plain English.”
And what characters! Sir Percival Glyde is an exasperated
and desperate villain. His henchman Count Fosco is oily, cold, cautious, and
ruthless. Hollywood well cast Sydney Greenstreet – the heavy in The Maltese
Falcon – in the worthless 1948 movie version of this novel. The drawing
master writes of the startling and ingenious Fosco, “Sincerely as I loathed the
man, the prodigious strength of his character, even in most trivial aspects,
impressed me in spite of myself.”
Lady Fosco is a malign influence. Laura, the love interest of the artist, is
ineffectual, inept, weepy, and subject to the vapors. But her weaknesses are
balanced by the brave and reliable Marian Halcombe. As it was published as a
serial, Collins reports that single male readers wrote to him, asking who was
the living model on which Marian’s character was based, so that the writers
could presume to ask her for her hand. No stones cast by this reviewer, who had a
crush on Zelda Gilroy when a boy and fell for Elizabeth Benett at the age of 61.
For its riveting plot, memorable characters, enthralling
narrative techniques, and ominous atmosphere, this novel has never
been out of print since its first publication 150 years ago. Collins wrote
about 30 novels, but he considered this novel to be his best. So much so that
he had inscribed on his tombstone the epitaph “Wilkie Collins, author of The
Woman in White and other works of fiction.”