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The Unawakening of
Edna Pontellier
By James H. Justus
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108 THE SOUTHERN LITERARY JOURNAL
and other characters of the short stories are not merely picturesque
(they are not "sweet and lovable" creatures which one reviewer,
shocked by The Awakening , urged Chopin to return to), they do de
pend upon the special circumstances of race, religion, and custom
which American local colorists so rigorously delineated in the latter
half of the nineteenth century.l Edna transcends the circumstantial
exigencies of her time and place in the same way that some of the
characters of Edith Wharton transcend their social and cultural
boundaries. Like Lily Bart of The House of Mirth and Newland Ar
cher of The Age of Innocence, Edna Pontellier is a figure beset more
by a divided will than by the circumstances of an environing world.
For some of Chopin's other female characters who suffer from a
radical imbalance, resolution is nearly always achieved in terms of
their environing world?and that world's values. The imbalance
which haunts Edna is within the self, and the dilemma is resolved in
terms of her psychic compulsions. Caught between conflicting urgen
cies?her need to succumb to her sensuality is countered by an equal
need for a freedom that is almost anarchic ?Edna never succeeds in
creating a new self. The spiritual movement in her story is at best
sporadic, halting, impulsive, and at worst regressive and passive.
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EDNA PONTELLIER 109
her own small life all within herself. At a very early period she had
apprehended instinctively the dual life?that outward existence
which conforms, the inward life which questions." Significantly, it is
not a passionate attachment to Robert Lebrun which first en
courages the breakdown of the conforming patterns of her outward
life, but place. It is setting, that most accentuated element of
American local color fiction?setting in its larger sense?which
serves that purpose. Grand Isle, a Creole summer resort, is a place of
langour, a place of hot sun enveloped by sea breezes from the Gulf,
the place of Creole spontaneity and candor. Representing that socie
ty, momentarily displaced from a tropically luxuriant Gulf city to an
even more tropically luxuriant island, is Ad?le Ratignolle, the very
epitome of the faithful Creole matron and presumably the one
least likely to stimulate discontent within Edna. This "embodiment
of every womanly grace and charm" does, however, strike a respon
sive chord in Edna, who has a "sensuous susceptibility to beauty."
But though Ad?le, like her sister Creole matrons, is marked by can
dor of speech, she is also like them, the very soul of fidelity. Atten
tiveness to husband, children, and home is so much the priority that
it leaves no room for what Edna sees as a necessity?the inward life,
an identity unconnected to matrimony. If these Creole women are
characterized by an "entire absence of prudery" and a total freedom
of expression which often embarrass the Kentucky Presbyterian, even
Edna recognizes that "inborn and unmistakable" in them is a "lofty
chastity" which can not be compromised. In a rare editorializing
note, Chopin wryly calls these Grand Isle matrons "mother-women
..., fluttering about with extended, protecting wings when any harm,
real or imaginary, threatened their precious brood. They were
women who idolized their children, worshipped their husbands, and
esteemed it a holy privilege to efface themselves as individuals and
grow wings as ministering angels."
If Ad?le Ratignolle is one kind of foil for Edna Pontellier,
Mademoiselle Reisz is quite another kind. This "disagreeable little
woman, no longer young," with a self-assertive temper and a
"disposition to trample upon the rights of others," quarrels with
everyone at Grand Isle and is so visibly distressed by its general
domestic flavor that one wonders how she can possibly endure so
homogenous a watering place. And if Ad?le grows wings as a
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110 THE SOUTHERN LITERARY JOURNAL
ministering angel, Mademoiselle Reisz knows something about other
kinds of wings. After her return to the city, Edna cultivates
Mademoiselle Reisz, visiting her, reading Robert's letters, listening to
appropriate piano music. At the end of one of these visits,
Mademoiselle Reisz puts her arms around Edna and feels her
shoulder blades to see if "her wings were strong." "The bird that
would soar above the level plain of tradition and prejudice must have
strong wings," she says. "It is a sad spectacle to see the weaklings
bruised, exhausted, fluttering back to earth." Although Edna pro
fesses to be thinking of no "extraordinary flights," the final natural
object she sees before her suicide in the Gulf is a "bird with a broken
wing . . . beating the air above, reeling, fluttering, circling disabled
down, down to the water."
Mademoiselle Reisz is an artist of sorts who lives her own life in
modestly bohemian quarters, but despite her credo ?"The artist
must possess the courageous soul that dares and defies" ?she is no
more ambitious about her music than Edna is about her painting.
Ad?le, the sensuously handsome woman, keeps up her music "on ac
count of the children, . . . because she and her husband both [con
sider] it a means of brightening the home and making it attractive."
Unprofessionally, she plays waltzes for general enjoyment; the profes
sional Reisz, awkward, homely, tasteless, plays Chopin primarily for
the enjoyment of Edna. As a model for an alternative way of life,
Reisz has obvious disadvantages. Chopin's description of her at the
piano is clearly meant to suggest a spiritual impoverishment, despite
the talent and the courage to think and behave as she pleases: "She
sat low at the instrument, and the lines of her body settled into
ungraceful curves and angles that gave it an appearance of deformi
ty." Her dust-covered bust of Beethoven, his wizened frame, the
shabby artificial violets which she wears in her mousy hair, her
Pandarus-like function: these are hardly the marks of one who is suc
cessful in the push for complete freedom. She has freedom because
she is alone.
For Adele, complacent satisfaction?never being alone?comes
from having no identity beyond her given roles; for Reisz, the am
biguous satisfactions of having her own identity is the result of always
being alone. Relentlessly anti-domestic, Reisz is bored and annoyed
by children. Ad?le lives only for them. At the very moment Edna
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EDNA PONTELLIER 111
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112 THE SOUTHERN LITERARY JOURNAL
romantic illusion as is Emma Bovary. Her marriage to L?once, we
are told, "was purely an accident," following a period of "absolute
devotion [which] flattered her. She fancied there was a sympathy of
thought and taste between them, in which fancy she was mistaken.
Add to this the violent opposition of her father and her sister
Margaret to her marriage with a Catholic, and we need seek no fur
ther for the motives which led her to accept Monsieur Pontellier for
her husband."
Marriage for Edna closes "the portals forever behind her upon the
realm of romance and dreams." But these portals are of course not
forever closed, since the burden of her story is the reopening of the
doors to the "realm of romance and dreams." I would suggest that
the awakening of Edna Pontellier is in actuality a reawakening; it is
not an advance toward a new definition of self but a return to the
protective, self-evident identity of childhood. Consider the careful
details with which Chopin sketches this process.
On the beach at Grand Isle, the undulating waves of the Gulf re
mind Edna suddenly of a summer meadow of high grass in Kentucky:
"Sometimes I feel this summer as if I were walking through the green
meadow again, idly, aimlessly, unthinking and unguided." It is the
perfectly ordinary and proper state for childhood: unfocused drift is
possible because of the security of childhood. Needless to say, an
aimless and unguided drift is not the state appropriate for the willed
forging of a new identity. The re-creation of that childhood moment
of walking through the high grass of Kentucky triggers also the
memory of three unreturned passions: at an early age, a dignified
and sad-eyed cavalry officer with a Napoleonic face; some time later,
a young Mississippi gentleman already engaged to a young lady on an
adjoining plantation; and, after she is a grown woman, a "great
tragedian" whose face and figure "haunt her imagination and stir
her senses," whose picture under the "cold glass" she kisses pas
sionately. What all three have in common is their remoteness, the
safety, we might say, of implausible reciprocity: a father's friend, a
neighbor's suitor, an adoring public's stage hero. Each one, Chopin
notes, melts "imperceptibly out of her existence," going "the way of
dreams." At the age of twenty-eight, these dreams return? and final
ly in an emotionally destructive way. The charms of romance, the
magnetic pull of dreams, are powerful precisely because they are
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EDNA PONTELLIER 113
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114
THE SOUTHERN LITERARY JOURNAL
Madame Ratignolle, who as a "mother-woman" should be an
authority on the subject, comments on Edna's action in moving out
of her husband's house and into the little pigeon house a few blocks
away: "In some way you seem to me like a child, Edna. You seem to
act without a certain amount of reflection which is necessary in this
life." For Edna, of course, that move is an impulsive act performed
without any great deliberation; but its significance is clear, even to
Edna: it is one more step taken "toward relieving herself from obliga
tions," and she equates that relief with her "expansion as an in
dividual." As Chopin puts its, "She began to look with her own eyes,
to see and to apprehend the deeper undercurrents of life. No longer
was she content to 'feed upon opinions' when her own soul had in
vited her." From this moment on, she indeed acts upon that formula:
the fewer her obligations, the greater her individuality.
Psychologically, Edna does not will herself forward to embrace
new experiences attendant upon her sensual and spiritual awaken
ing, but drifts languidly backward, to the realm of romance and
dreams. The circumstances of that summer at Grand Isle could not
possibly be more propitious. Lazy days of desultory activity, with a
husband absent in the city except for weekends, with children at
tended by a quadroon nurse, and with a devoted swain who enter
tains her with Creole love songs and stories of enchanted islands, Gulf
spirits, and buried pirate treasure. Moreover, this perfect situation is
abetted by nature: "Strange, rare odors abroad?a tangle of the sea
smell and of weeds and damp, new-plowed earth . . ., the heavy per
fume" of orange and lemon trees; and above all, the "everlasting
voice of the sea" whose "sonorous murmur reached her like a loving
but imperative entreaty."
It must be admitted that Edna responds rather slowly to these
dream-making circumstances. She cries without apparent cause, but
does it after midnight on her cottage poreh while her husband and
children sleep, listening to the hooting of an owl and the mournful
lullaby of the sea, responding to an "indescribable oppression, which
seemed to generate in some unfamiliar part of her consciousness
. . . ." Even her "vague anguish" is romantic, this shadow "passing
across her soul's summer day," but her creator disallows her the easy
immersion in that romantic moment: "She was just having a good cry
all to herself. The mosquitoes made merry over her, biting her firm,
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EDNA PONTELLIER 115
round arms and nipping at her bare insteps." Even when Chopin
takes another opportunity for authorial comment, it is laced with
detachment rather than sympathy: "In short, Mrs. Pontellier was
beginning to realize her position in the universe as a human being,
and to recognize her relations as an individual to the world within
and about her. This may seem like a ponderous weight of wisdom to
descend upon the soul of a young woman of twenty-eight?perhaps
more wisdom than the Holy Ghost is usually pleased to vouchsafe to
any woman." It is certainly more wisdom than Kate Chopin finally
allows her protagonist.
If this is the story of the sensual awakening of a woman, two
peculiarities of the narrative should be noted: (1) the growth of
dissatisfaction in Edna which develops concurrently with her
grand love for Robert Lebrun and for her affair with the convenient
sexual partner, Alc?e Arobin; and (2) her concomitant realization of
the fact of aloneness. Her awakening to her own physicality is a
response that is, in the usual sense of the terms, neither markedly
emotional nor intellectual, but self-sufficient, indulgent, enclosed.
Chopin's rather detailed account of Edna's love of music serves as a
clue to this self-absorption in its wider aspects.
We are told early on that Edna's response to music is recreative in
an almost pictorial manner.
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116 THE SOUTHERN LITERARY JOURNAL
propriates the initiating music, renames it, and attributes a tangible
meaning to the created picture. The picture itself can be seen as a
transsexual projection: the naked man is Edna as well as the vaguely
identified, wished-for, would-be lover: a kind of redaction of the
twenty-eight-swimmers plus one in Walt Whitman's Song of Myself2
The ability to imagine pictures when she listens to piano music is
the case normally?when, say, Ad?le plays in her competent but un
professional way. When Edna listens to Mademoiselle Reisz,
however, something else happens. "Material pictures" refuse to
"gather and blaze before her imagination," no pictures of "solitude,
of hope, of longing, or of despair" can be summoned. Chopin's
description is vivid: the very passions themselves "were aroused
within her soul, swaying it, lashing it, as the waves daily beat upon
her splendid body. She trembled, she was choking, and the tears
blinded her." Whereas "material pictures" safely distance her from
the passions when Madame Ratignolle plays, the playing of
Mademoiselle Reisz releases the naked passions themselves. The pic
torial mode is itself a referent, a cushioned and imaginative one, but
in the case of Reisz's playing, the response has no referent, and Edna
is at the mercy of her senses.
A more direct, less displaced clue to Edna's growing solipsism also
occurs early in the narrative. The circumstances of the setting con
spire to make Edna susceptible. It is midnight, and some attentive
male suggests "a bath at that mystic hour and under that mystic
moon." But the accompanying male is superfluous to Edna's ex
perience of personal exultation, joy, release. For the first time she
swims alone, "daring and reckless," far out, "where no woman had
swum before. . . . She would not join the groups" near the shore, but
"intoxicated with her newly conquered power, she swam out alone."
Her "excited fancy" responds to the "space and solitude" of the
water, and as she swims, she reaches "out for the unlimited in which
to lose herself." That moment is significant not only because her will
blazes up for the first time, amazing her husband, but also because
2. This is not the only mental picture Edna creates when she listens to Ad?le's
playing? there are also scenes of domestic life: children playing, demure women strok
ing cats, dainty women in Empire gowns mincing through tall hedges. Edna may have
an obvious romantic imagination but, despite Freudian critics, it does not come across
as a particularly obsessed one.
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EDNA PONTELLIER 117
Ill
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118 THE SOUTHERN LITERARY JOURNAL
She walked all through the house, from one room to another,
as if inspecting it for the first time. She tried the various chairs
and lounges, as if she had never sat and reclined upon them
before. And she perambulated around the outside of the house,
investigating, looking to see if windows and shutters were
secure and in order. The flowers were like new acquaintances;
she approached them in a familiar spirit, and made herself at
home among them. The garden walks were damp, and Edna
called to the maid to bring out her rubber sandals. And there
she stayed, and stooped, digging around the plants, trimming,
picking dead, dry leaves. The children's little dog came out, in
terfering, getting in her way. She scolded him, laughed at him,
played with him. The garden smelled so good and looked so
pretty in the afternoon sunlight. Edna plucked all the bright
flowers she could find, and went into the house with them, she
and the little dog.
If both the diction and the syntax here suggest the picture of a little
girl playing house, the implications are more serious. Regression to
childhood rather than progress toward a new self-fulfillment is the
dominant key.
Going to the races with a faster crowd than she is accustomed to
brings back memories of her Kentucky childhood, with its "at
mosphere of the stables and the breath of the bluegrass
paddock. . . ." Her slightly bohemian companions bore her?Mrs.
Highcamp's ignorance, Mr. Highcamp's unresponsive plainness,
Miss Highcamp's mechanical beauty and indifferent talent. (In play
ing Grieg, we are told, "She seemed to have apprehended all of the
composer's coldness and none of his poetry.") Except as a sexual part
ner, even the Creole rou?, Alc?e Arobin, does little to supplant
Edna's growing mood of aloneness.
In Edna's state of dissatisfaction the present Alc?e, for all his sex
ual attractiveness, is no competition for the absent Robert, who
seems nearer to her "off there in Mexico" than when he returns; his
very absence, nourishing in Edna a "dreamy, absent look," allows her
the frequent luxury of being "alone in a kind of reverie?a sort of
stupor." Dreamy, reverie, stupor, these words and their analogues
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EDNA PONTELLIER 119
pervade The Awakening. It was George Arms a few years ago who
perceptively observed that for a novel called The Awakening, much
of its action consists of its heroine's sleeping.3 It is a state which
neutralizes any determined struggle to construct a new self, or even
to uncover deeper levels of the old one. In a fine touch of
characterization, Kate Chopin never allows her protagonist to
understand fully what it is she is awakening to. Sometimes it is an
"awakening sensuousness," sometimes an "animalism that stirred im
patiently within her," and certainly for Alc?e Arobin it is the "latent
sensuality" which, once detected, unfolds under his tutelage "like a
torpid, torrid, sensitive blossom." On the other hand, "expansion as
an individual" is the grander way Edna sees the process. But the
gradual awakening to any or all of these?sensuousness, sensuality,
consciousness as an individual ?carries with it the promise of no
spiritual peace. If anything, Edna becomes more and more confused.
Her earlier life as a wife and mother she describes as a dream out of
which she has come; but, once awakened, we are told she likes to
"wander alone into strange and unfamiliar places," discovering
"many a sunny, sleepy corner, fashioned to dream in. And she [finds]
it good to dream and to be alone and unmolested." Which is the
dream? To be awakened from a Ratignolle-like domesticity is not to
experience "life's delirium," as Edna vaguely anticipates, but to be
assailed with "the old ennui" which comes "like something ex
traneous, independent of volition . . . , overpowering her . . . with a
sense of the unattainable." Even when she gives a grand but intimate
dinner to celebrate her leaving her husband's house, she does not join
in the good cheer: "There was something in her attitude . . . which
suggested the regal woman, the one who rules, who looks on, who
stands alone."
The one thing which Edna consistently is able to articulate about
her awakening, however, is that it means a release from respon
sibilities. And this realization comes early. As soon as she returns
from her summer at Grand Isle, we are told "she began to do as she
liked and to feel as she liked. . . , going and coming as it suited her
3. George Arms, "Kate Chopin's The Awakening in the Perspective of Her Literary
Career," Essays on American Literature in Honor of fay B. Hubbell, ed. Clarence
Gohdes (Durham, N.C: Duke Univ. Press, 1967), p. 219. This is the single most satisfy
ing essay on Chopin's novel, and I am indebted to many of Arms's insights.
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120 THE SOUTHERN LITERARY JOURNAL
fancy, and, so far as she was able, lending herself to any passing
caprice." What this means in social terms is that she spends more and
more time alone; what it means in psychological terms is that she
spends more and more time fashioning an ideal state of romantic
self-fulfillment which, practically speaking, requires not even
Robert. By the time this conventionally love-sick swain returns from
Mexico, avoiding Edna because of their "impossible" love, she has
already "resolved never again to belong to another than herself." In
Robert's eyes, L?once Pontellier is an impediment; it means Edna is
"not free." His dream, as he calls it several times during their last
evening, is to marry her?but that dream is clearly not consonant
with Edna's: " You have been a very, very foolish boy, wasting your
time dreaming of impossible things when you speak of Mr. Pontellier
setting me free! I am no longer one of Mr. Pontellier's possessions to
dispose of or not. I give myself where I choose. If he were to say,
Here Robert, take her and be happy, she is yours, I should laugh at
you both.' " Her love must be manifested on her own terms. As she
confesses to the old doctor, "I don't want anything but my own way."
And Chopin observes, "She could picture at that moment no greater
bliss on earth than possession of the beloved one." That is, she would
possess, but she would not be possessed. It is finally only a mature
version of childish self-sufficiency?"I don't want anything but my
own way."
Edna's process of awakening is a kind of enlightenment, but it can
hardly be called growth. What she discovers does not set her free but
binds her even more tightly to a destined end. Moments before her
death, she responds again to the seductive murmuring of the sea,
which "invit[es] the soul to wander in abysses of solitude." Her final
thoughts return not to Robert but to the clanging of the spurs of the
cavalry officer, her childish first love, and to the bluegrass meadow
of her childhood, with "no beginning and no end," her child-like
longing for a state of being stripped of restraints.
IV
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EDNA PONTELLIER 121
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