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{{Short description|1862 Novel by Mary Elizabeth Braddon}} | |||
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{{Use British English|date=September 2017}} | |||
] | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2024}} | |||
'''''Lady Audley's Secret''''' is a ] by ], written in 1862. It was originally produced in ] along with a serialized magazine version and, later, a single volume edition.. | |||
{{Infobox book| | |||
| name = Lady Audley's Secret | |||
| title_orig = | |||
| translator = | |||
| image = Lady Audleys Secret Cover.jpg | |||
| caption = Cover of ''Lady Audley's Secret'' | |||
| author = ] | |||
| illustrator = | |||
| cover_artist = | |||
| country = United Kingdom | |||
| language = English | |||
| genre = ] | |||
| published = 26 May 1862 (]) | |||
| media_type = Print (hardcover) | |||
| pages = 3 vols., 355 | |||
| isbn = 978-0-19-953724-2 | |||
| preceded_by = ] | |||
| followed_by = ] | |||
}} | |||
'''''Lady Audley's Secret''''' is a ] by ] published on 26 May 1862.<ref name=sutherland>]. "Lady Audley's Secret" in ''The Stanford Companion to Victorian Fiction'', 1989.</ref> It was Braddon's most successful and well-known novel. Critic ] (1989) described the work as "the most sensationally successful of all the sensation novels".<ref name=sutherland/> The plot centres on "accidental ]" which was in literary fashion in the early 1860s.<ref name=sutherland/> The plot was summarised by literary critic ] (1982): "Braddon's bigamous heroine deserts her child, pushes husband number one down a well, thinks about poisoning husband number two and sets fire to a hotel in which her other male acquaintances are residing".<ref name=sutherland2/><ref>{{cite book|first=Elaine|last=Showalter|authorlink=Elaine Showalter|date=1977|title=Literature of Their Own: British Women Novelists from Brontė to Lessing|publisher=]|location=Princeton, New Jersey|page=163|ISBN=978-0691063188}}</ref> Elements of the novel mirror themes of the real-life ] of June 1860 which gripped the nation for years.<ref name=summerscale>{{cite book | first=Kate | last=Summerscale | title=The Suspicions of Mr Whicher, Or the murder at Road Hill House | publisher=] | location=London, England | year=2008 | isbn=978-0-7475-8215-1 | url-access=registration | url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780747582151 | pages=217–18}}</ref> Braddon's second 'bigamy' novel, '']'', appeared in 1863. Braddon set the story in ], ], inspired by a visit there.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.blackmorehistory.co.uk/ingatestone.html |title=History of Ingatestone, Essex |access-date=30 September 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131115080048/http://www.blackmorehistory.co.uk/ingatestone.html |archive-date=15 November 2013 |url-status=dead }}</ref> There have been three silent film adaptations, one UK television version in 2000, and three minor stage adaptations. | |||
''Lady Audley's Secret'' follows Robert Audley through his detective-like work in trying to uncover what happened to his friend George Talboys and who his uncle's wife, Lucy Graham Audley, really is. During his search, Robert has to deal with lies, deceit, and even an attempt to kill him. Although the novel's content of bigamy and attempted murder was considered fairly immoral at the time of publication, it was extremely successful. It has been in print ever since its first publication. | |||
== |
==History== | ||
''Lady Audley's Secret'' was partly serialised in '']'' magazine in July–September 1861, then entirely serialised in '']'' in January–December 1862 and once again serialised in '']'' March–August 1863. It was published in 1862 in ] by ].<ref name=sutherland2/> | |||
The novel opens with the marriage of Lucy Graham, a beautiful, doll-like blonde, to Sir Michael Audley, a widower, in June of 1857. Lucy was a governess for the local doctor, Mr. Dawson. Previous to this time, Lucy was in service with Mrs. Vincent; and all that was known of her past was the fact of her being an orphan. | |||
Braddon initially sold the rights to the Irish publisher ], with whom Braddon also lived and had children. Maxwell published it in his magazine ''Robin Goodfellow''. Braddon wrote the final third in less than two weeks. It was published as a three-volume novel, and it became a success, allowing Braddon to be financially independent for the rest of her life. It was also a financial success for Tinsley, who went on to build a ] in Barnes, "Audley Lodge", with the profits.<ref name=sutherland2>{{cite book|first=John|last=Sutherland|authorlink=John Sutherland (author)|chapter=Braddon|title=The Stanford Companion to Victorian Fiction|publisher=]|location=Stanford, California|ISBN=9780804718424|date=1989}}</ref> | |||
At one point, Phoebe Marks, Lady Audley's personal maid, took her cousin and suitor Luke Marks on a tour of the great Audley Court. She ends up taking Luke to Lady Audley's rooms, which are especially wonderful. She shows Luke all the beautiful things in the room, and mentions that she would love to show him my lady's jewels, but that they were locked up. When Phoebe begins to clean Lady Audley's rooms, she finds that my lady had left the key in her dressing gown. Phoebe opens the jewel chest and Luke suggests stealing a diamond bracelet so they could have money. Phoebe refuses to steal from my lady. While continuing to admire my lady's jewelry, they come across a ribbon which Lady Audley had always worn around her neck before her marriage to Sir Michael. It had a yellowed piece of paper at the end, and there was also a baby's booty in the secret drawer. Phoebe announces to Luke that they have no need of the bracelet, for now she owned Lady Audley's secret and that would get them more than they'd ever hoped. | |||
Notably – given the theme of bigamy in the novel's plot – Maxwell himself was married to another woman, and so Braddon was unable to marry him until his wife died in 1874. When it became public that Maxwell and Braddon had been living in an "irregular" arrangement all those years, it caused a minor scandal during which all their servants ].<ref name=sutherland2/> | |||
Around the time of the marriage, Sir Michael’s nephew, barrister (only in name, as he'd never taken on a case) Robert Audley, welcomes back to England an old friend of his, George Talboys, who has returned after three years of successful fortune-hunting in Australia. George is anxious to get news of his wife, Helen, whom he left three years ago when their financial situation became desperate, hoping to return to her with Australian gold. Unfortunately, a week after his return to England, he reads in the newspaper that Helen has died; and, after visiting her home in Ventnor to confirm this, has a complete breakdown. Robert Audley cares for his friend, and, hoping to distract him, offers to take him to his wealthy uncle’s country manor. George had a child, Georgey, who was left under the care of Lieutenant ("Captain") Maldon, George's father-in-law. Robert and George set off to visit Georgey and it is then that George decides to make Robert little Georgey's guardian and caretaker of 20,000 pounds put into the boy's name. After settling the matter of the boy's guardianship, the two set off to visit Sir Michael. | |||
In 1997 a Wordsworth Limited edition was released with an Introduction by Keith Carabine from the ] in which he states, "In the latter half of the nineteenth century, everyone knew ''Lady Audley’s Secret."<ref>{{Cite book|last=Carabine|first=Keith|title=Lady Audley's Secret: Introduction|publisher=Wordsworth Classes|location=Philadelphia, Pennsylvania|year=1997}}</ref> | |||
While at Audley Court, the country manor, Lady Audley avoids meeting with George. When Robert and George seek an audience with the new Lady Audley, she makes many excuses to avoid their visit. Lady Audley tells Sir Michael that they must hurry to Essex, where her former employer, Mrs. Vincent is dying and she wants to see Mrs. Vincent before she passes away. While in Essex, my lady writes to Alicia Audley (Robert's cousin) asking how much longer she expects Robert and George to stay. She sends a note telling Lady Audley that Robert and George had plans to leave the very next morning. Alicia Audley suggests a tour and especially wants to show them Lady Audley's rooms, but Lady Audley has locked the one door that offers entry to her rooms and has taken the key. George and Robert find a portrait of my Lady Audley when Alicia tells them of a secret passage they can use to get into the Lady's rooms. George appears greatly struck by the portrait, somewhat to Robert’s surprise, but he does not comment further on it. | |||
== Plot == | |||
We learn later that Lady Audley and Sir Michael could not find Mrs. Vincent's home; and there was no way for them to find her, since there was no return address on the telegram which informed Lady Audley of her former employer's impending death. | |||
The novel opens in June 1857 with the marriage of Lucy Graham and Sir Michael Audley. Lucy is a young, beautiful woman who enchants almost all who meet her. Sir Michael is a kindly, wealthy middle-aged widower. Lucy's past is unclear. Prior to marrying Sir Michael she had served as governess for the children of the local doctor, Mr. Dawson, and before that she was in service with Mrs. Vincent. Very little is known about her prior to that. Shortly after the marriage Sir Michael's nephew, the barrister Robert Audley, welcomes his old friend George Talboys back to England. | |||
Three years before, though happily married, George's financial situation had been desperate. He left for Australia to seek a fortune in ]. Behind him in England he had left his young wife Helen, whom he is now anxious to get news of. He reads in the newspaper that she has died, and, after visiting her home to confirm this, he becomes despondent. Robert Audley cares for his friend, and, hoping to distract him, offers to take him to his wealthy uncle's country manor. George had a child, Georgey, who was left under the care of Lieutenant Maldon, George's father-in-law. Robert and George set off to visit Georgey, and George decides to make Robert little Georgey's guardian and trustee of £20,000 put into the boy's name. After settling the matter of the boy's guardianship, the two set off to visit Sir Michael. | |||
Lady Audley and Sir Michael return to Audley Court to find out that Robert and George are still visiting - that they'd decided to stay one more day. Lady Audley claims to have a headache and asks to be left alone with her personal maid, Phoebe, so she can recover. Shortly thereafter, George and Robert go fishing. While Robert is napping, George disappears, much to Robert’s consternation. Unwilling to believe that George has simply left him without a proper good-bye, Robert begins to look into the circumstances around the disappearance, suspecting the worst. | |||
While at the country manor Audley Court, Lady Audley avoids meeting George. When the two seek an audience with the new Lady Audley, she makes many excuses and avoids their visits. During her absence a thunder storm confines George and Robert to the interior of Audley Court, and the two are shown a portrait of Lady Audley. Looking back toward his friend, Robert notes that George seems disturbed, and attributes his disturbed mood to the storm. Shortly thereafter George disappears. Robert is perplexed. Unwilling to believe George simply left with no notice, Robert begins to look into the circumstances of his disappearance. | |||
That very evening, Lady Audley meets Robert and they are all in the sitting room while Lady Audley plays the piano. Robert had gone with her to the piano to turn pages for her, but she played from memory, so he ended up not being needed. Robert was mesmerized by Lady Audley's beauty, and he stayed by her side, watching her play. That is when he noticed a bruise on my lady's arm. She passed it off as a mark she made herself when she accidentally tied the ribbon around her wrist too tightly - she bruises easily. The men look at the wrist, and they notice there are actually five bruises, as if someone had held her wrist too tightly. Lady Audley refuses to explain further. | |||
While searching for his friend, Robert takes note of the events surrounding George's disappearance. The name of Lady Audley repeatedly appears in these notes, and much to his distress, the evidence begins to collect against her. One night, he reveals his notes to Lady Audley, including that George was in possession of many letters of his former wife. Lady Audley sets off to London, where the letters were kept. Robert follows after her. However, by the time he arrives, he discovers that George's possessions have been broken into and the letters are missing. One possession, however, remains – a book with a note written by George's wife that matches Lady Audley's handwriting. This confirms Robert's suspicion that Lady Audley is implicated in George's disappearance; it also leads Robert to conclude that Lady Audley is actually George's supposedly dead wife. | |||
While searching for his friend, Robert begins to take notes of the events as they unfold. His notes inlcude a suspicion to the involvement of Lady Audley, and he slowly begins to collect circumstantial evidence against her. One night, Robert reveals his suspicions to Lady Audley, and mentions letters that George Talboys had saved which had come from Helen. Robert tips his hand and says he can use them to prove that Lady Audley, formerly Lucy Graham, was none other than the wife that George Talboys had abandoned in order to seek his fortune - Helen Talboys. Robert plans to head straight to London. Upon his arrival, he literally bumps into Lady Audley who is on her way home after supposedly hurrying to London to pay a milliner's bill which she would not even "wish the best of husbands to see", due to its extravagance. When Robert arrives at his home (Fig-Tree Court), he discovers that George's possessions (all in one chest marked "GT")have been broken into and the all-important letters had been stolen. Upon inquiry, Robert learns from his maid (Mrs. Maloney) that a blacksmith had been there earlier, fixing locks which supposedly were "all out of repair". Robert goes to the blacksmith's to confront him and finds that the blacksmith is celebrating the windfall that has just come his way. As Robert arrives, the blacksmith is just finishing up his story of the circumstances in which he gained his new fortune: "And, with that, she walked off as graceful as you please." Robert gets a story out of the blacksmith that a lady hired him to go in and pilfer George's belongings, which were at the apartments. Robert is very disappointed and frustrated. However, upon further examining the contents of the chest, Robert discovers that one possession, a book, contains Helen Talboys's writing: she had presented the book to her husband, George - and, in doing so, had left an example of her handwriting in the front of the book. It was in handwriting exactly like that of Lady Audley. This proved to Robert that Lady Audley was a liar and was involved in George's disappearance. | |||
Suspecting |
Suspecting the worst of Lady Audley and being afraid for little Georgey's life, Robert travels to Lieutenant Maldon's house and demands possession of the boy. Once Robert has Georgey under his control, he places the boy in a school run by Mr. Marchmont. Afterwards, Robert visits George's father, Mr. Harcourt Talboys, and confronts the Squire with his son's death. Harcourt listens dispassionately to the story. In the course of his visit to the Talboys' manor, Robert is entranced by George's sister Clara, who looks startlingly like George. Clara's passion for finding her brother spurs Robert on. | ||
] | ] | ||
In February 1859, Robert continues searching for evidence. He receives a notice that his uncle is ill, and he quickly returns to Audley Court. While there, Robert speaks with Mr. Dawson and receives a brief description of all that is known about Lucy's background. He hears that Lucy was employed by Mrs. Vincent at her school since 1852. To verify this claim, Robert tracks down Mrs. Vincent, who is in hiding because of debts. According to Miss Tonks, a teacher at Mrs. Vincent's school, Lucy actually arrived at the school in August 1854 and was secretive about her past. Miss Tonks gives Robert a travel box that used to belong to Lucy. Upon examining stickers on the box, Robert discovers both the name Lucy Graham and the name Helen Talboys. | |||
Robert |
Robert realizes that Helen Talboys faked her death before creating her new identity. When Robert confronts Lucy, she tells him that he has no proof. He leaves to find more evidence, heading to Castle Inn, which is run by Luke Marks. During the night, Lucy forces Luke's wife, Phoebe, to let her into the inn, then Lucy sets the place afire to kill Robert. However, Robert survives and returns to Audley Court and again confronts Lucy. This time, she says she is insane and confesses her life's story to Robert and Sir Michael, claiming that George abandoned her originally and she had no choice but to abandon her old life and child to find another, wealthier husband. | ||
Sir Michael is unhappy and leaves with Alicia to travel through Europe. Robert invites a Dr. Mosgrave to make a more astute judgment regarding Lucy's sanity, and he proclaims that she is indeed victim to latent insanity, which overpowers her in times of stress and makes her very dangerous to any and all. Lucy, under the name of Madame Taylor, enters a mental institution located somewhere in Belgium along the route between Brussels and Paris. While being committed, Lucy confesses to Robert that she killed George by pushing him down a deserted well in the garden of Audley Court. | |||
Robert leaves to find more evidence and heads to Castle Inn, a place run by Phoebe Marks's husband, Luke. (The purchase of the run-down inn was funded by Lady Audley, who was being blackmailed by her former maid and by Luke.) During the night, Phoebe mentions that Luke was drunk when she left, and he tended to leave candles burning. It was surprising to her that Luke had never burned down the inn. Lady Audley then forces Phoebe Marks to take her to the inn and my lady locks the room in which Robert is staying from the outside just before she sets the place on fire in order to kill him. However, Robert was sleeping in the common room downstairs, so he survives, and he rescued Luke Marks in the process. Robert returns to Audley Court and confronts Lady Audley once again. This time, she declares to him that she is mad and says she is ready to reveal her life's story to Robert and Sir Michael, claiming that her mother had been kept in a madhouse and that George abandoned her originally, so she had no choice but to abandon her old life and child in order to find another, wealthier husband. Before Lady Audley could confess all to her husband, Sir Michael stops her narration and orders his luggage be packed so he can leave Robert to deal with Lady Audley. Robert suggests to Alicia that she should travel with her father, but he does not reveal Lady Audley's secret in order to protect Alicia from the truth and also to prevent Alicia from bringing up the topic while the two are away. So Robert is left in charge of what should happen to Lady Audley from there. Sir Michael suggests that no one should speak the lady's name around him any more and that Robert will be in charge of the lady's care. If Robert ever needs more money to care for Lady Audley, he need only ask for funds without specifying what those funds are for. | |||
Robert grieves for his friend George until a dying Luke Marks contacts him. Before succumbing to injuries he suffered in the fire, Luke tells Robert that George survived Lady Audley's attempted murder. Luke then helped George escape, with George intending to return to Australia. Robert is overjoyed, and he asks Clara to marry him and go with him to Australia to find George. Clara accepts, but before they set out, George returns and reveals that he actually visited New York instead. The narrative ends with the death of Lucy abroad, and Clara and Robert happily married and living in a country cottage with George and his son. Robert's formerly infatuated cousin Alicia marries her once-spurned suitor, Sir Harry Towers, and Audley Court is left abandoned along with all of its unhappy memories. | |||
Robert telegrams to Francis Wilmington, an associate, to discover if there is a physician who can discreetly evaluate someone for mental illness. Wilmington provides the name of a Dr. Mosgrave. Robert writes to Mosgrave, and without mentioning for whom he needs the doctor's services, asks him to come to Audley Court. Dr. Mosgrave arrives very quickly and asks Robert about the patient - he mentions that he is very busy and is only making this trip because his friend had recommended him. Robert sends Mosgrave to Lady Audley's chambers, and Mosgrave spends about thirty minutes talking to Lady Audley. The doctor tells Robert that Lady Audley may have the markers for mental illness, but that she doesn't necessarily pose a threat since she has not done anything violent. Robert tells the doctor about the murder of George Talboys and about Lady Audley's attempt to kill him with the fire she set at Castle Inn. The doctor recommends an out-of-the-way asylum for Lady Audley, and Robert tells Lady Audley to get ready for a trip - that they will leave in a few hours. Lady Audley thinks she will be put into exile and allowed to live somewhere else, possibly overseas. She helps her maid pack her luggage, and she carries off all the wealth in beautiful artifacts and jewelry that had accumulated in her rooms. After all, she'll need to have a decent life, and she hopes that she will encounter others who will fall for her beauty and therefore take care of her. | |||
== Analysis and themes == | |||
Lady Audley is very upset when she learns she has come to a mad house (like her mother). She is left in her stately rooms (after all, she is a Lady, and Sir Michael said to spare no expense in caring for her), and Robert discusses the patient with the head of the asylum. Robert tells the director that he should spare nothing in caring for Lady Audley, whom he decides to call "Mrs. Taylor" to protect his family's reputation, and to make her as comfortable as possible. Then he leaves Lady Audley behind and returns to London. During his travel, Robert grieves for his friend George, and he thinks he shall never see him again - he can't even give his friend a proper burial, since doing so would reveal the treachery of Lady Audley, ruining his uncle's name. He eventually comes to the conclusion that he loves Clara Talboys, and for that reason, he must let the truth come out. He did not want to marry his friend's sister while forever holding the news of George's death back - leaving her always hopeful that he should some day return. | |||
''Lady Audley's Secret'' plays on ] anxieties about the ]. The home was supposed to be a refuge from the dangers of the outside world, but in the novel, the seemingly perfect domestic lady turns out to be a violent criminal who has not only tried to commit murder but who has also committed bigamy and abandoned her child. This unsettled Victorian readers because it indicated that the concepts of "the perfect lady/mother" and "domestic bliss" were more idealistic than realistic. In addition, anxieties about the increasing urbanization of Britain abound; the city gives Lady Audley the power to change her identity because it renders its citizens effectively anonymous. The small town of Audley is no longer a refuge where everyone knows the life story of every neighbor; the residents of Audley must accept Lucy Graham's account of herself since they have no other information about her past. Other anxieties about unstable identity appear throughout the novel: Lady Audley's maid, Phoebe, resembles Lady Audley, thus banishing the idea of physical distinction between the upper and lower classes and therefore of any inherent superiority of the former. | |||
''Lady Audley's Secret'' is, furthermore, a story about gender and class, and Lady Audley's objectionable upward mobility suggests a threat to the paradigm of social class. Madness is also a key issue. Lady Audley and others often converse about the meaning of this word, but many readers believe that Lady Audley is not mad. In fact, many critics view Lady Audley's deception as a feminist act in which a woman takes control of the direction of her own life.<ref>{{cite journal|first=Shaqayeq|last=Moqari|title=Representation of Mad Woman in Lady Audley's Secret by Mary Elizabeth Braddon|url=http://www.worldscientificnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/WSN-22-2015-40-54.pdf|journal=World Scientific News|issue=22|date=2015|pages=40–54}}</ref> | |||
When Robert arrives in London, he seeks out his uncle's rooms at the Clarendon Hotel. His uncle and Alicia have left for Paris, so Robert plans to stay there that night. He ends up getting a note from Clara, telling him to spare no time in coming to Essex - that the man whom he'd saved in the fire at Castle Inn was asking for him. Robert figured it was only to thank him possibly, before he died, but he hurries over there, anyway, even walking the last six miles on foot in order to get there as soon as possible. | |||
The novel mirrors many of the same themes from the real-life ] of June 1860.<ref name=summerscale/> The first instalment of ''Lady Audley's Secret'' came out almost exactly one year after the Kent murder.<ref name=summerscale/> The novel, like the real-life case, featured a stepmother and former governess, a mysterious and brutal murder in a country manor house, a body thrown down a well, and characters fascinated by madness.<ref name=summerscale/> Constance Kent can be seen in many of the female characters in the novel: the murderess Lady Audley, the tomboyish Alicia Audley, the restrained Phoebe Marks and the lonely Clara Talboys.<ref name=summerscale/> ], the detective and case investigator, can be seen in the character of Robert Audley.<ref name=summerscale/> | |||
Mr. Dawson has been caring for Luke Marks, who was critically injured in the fire at Castle Inn is indeed dying. However, before he dies, he manages to tell Robert that George in fact survived Lady Audley’s murderous attack, and with Luke’s help left again for Australia. He had a note for my lady and a note for Robert, which he was supposed to give only to them, and he'd never had the opportunity to be alone with either of them. Robert is overjoyed at the news of his friend, and proposes to Clara that they marry and go to Australia on their honeymoon to find George. Clara accepts; but, before they set out, George returns on his own. He had been in America, having changed his mind about going to Australia, but he'd missed having loved ones and friends around him. The loneliness drove him to return to England. The narrative ends with Clara and Robert happily married and living in a country cottage with George, little Georgey and their own child, and Alicia has married her once-spurned suitor, Harry Towers. Audley Court is being ignored in order to move on from the harsh memories, and Lady Audley ("Mrs. Taylor") dies abroad. | |||
==Analysis and Themes== | |||
''Lady Audley's Secret'' plays on ] anxieties about the domestic sphere. The home was supposed to be a refuge from the dangers outside. However, in this narrative, the seemingly perfect domestic lady turns out to be a violent criminal who has not only tried to commit murder, but has also committed bigamy and abandoned her child. Lady Audley's crimes disrupt the domestic sphere and remove the safety of the home. This was unsettling to a Victorian readership because it made it clear that the ideas of "the perfect lady/mother" and "domestic bliss" were more idealistic than realistic. In addition, anxieties about the increasing urbanization of Britain are noticeable: Lady Audley is able to change her identity in a city, where she is effectively anonymous. The small town of Audley is no longer a refuge where everyone knows his/her neighbors. The residents of Audley must accept Lucy Graham's account of herself, since they have no other way of identifying her. Other anxieties about unstable identity appear throughout the novel; Lady Audley's maid, Phoebe, resembles Lady Audley, except without makeup and hair dye. | |||
==Adaptations== | ==Adaptations== | ||
;Films | ;Films | ||
*''Lady Audley's Secret'' 1912 (USA, black and white, silent) | * ''Lady Audley's Secret'', 1912 (USA, black and white, silent) | ||
*''Lady Audley's Secret'' (aka ''Secrets of Society'') 1915 (USA, black and white, silent, directed by Marshall Farnum) | * '']'' (aka ''Secrets of Society''), 1915 (USA, black and white, silent, directed by ]) | ||
*''Lady Audley's Secret'' 1920 (UK, black and white, silent, directed by Jack Denton) | * '']'', 1920 (UK, black and white, silent, directed by ]) | ||
*''Lady Audley's Secret'' |
* ''Lady Audley's Secret'', 1949 (UK, TV, black and white) | ||
* ''{{ill|Lady Audley's Secret (1978 film)|de|3=Lady Audleys Geheimnis (Film)|lt=Lady Audleys Geheimnis}}'', 1978 (West Germany, TV, directed by Wilhelm Semmelroth) | |||
* ''Lady Audley's Secret'', 2000 (UK, TV, directed by Betsan Morris Evans) – (In the USA part of the '']'' series.) | |||
;Radio | |||
* ''Lady Audley's Secret'', 2009 (UK, BBC Radio 4) | |||
;Stage | |||
* 1863 – adapted by ], first performed at the Victoria Theatre, London, 1863. Hazlewood also dramatised Braddon's '']'' the same year.<ref>G. C. Boase, Megan A. Stephan, , rev. Megan A. Stephan, ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'', (accessed 3 December 2011)</ref> | |||
* 1930 – ]: a "melodramatized version" of the novel including a "birthday fete" and Rustic Ballet. The part of Lady Audley was played by (Dame) ] and the performance was produced by ]. It was preceded by a performance of Morton's '']''.<ref>Festival Theatre programmes of 25 January and 3 February 1930</ref> | |||
* 1971 – Chicago, ], adaptation by ],<ref name="plays"> (1974)</ref> music by George Goehring, and lyrics by John B. Kuntz. | |||
* 1972 – ], Seale adaptation,<ref name="1972debut">Barnes, Clive (4 October 1972). , '']''. Retrieved 1 December 2010 (debuted at Eastdale Playhouse in New York City on 3 October 1972)</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.mtishows.com/show_detail.asp?showid=000047|title = Lady Audley's Secret|date = 16 September 2015}}</ref> music by George Goehring, and lyrics by John B. Kuntz. | |||
==In popular culture== | |||
''Lady Audley's Secret'' is involved in a subplot of '']'', the fourth book in the ] series by ]. Betsy has read it and other books in the same genre, and aspires to write similar works. | |||
In the Agatha Christie short story ''Greenshaw's Folly'' Miss Greenshaw hides her will in a copy of Lady Audley's Secret remarking it was a "best seller in its day". | |||
== References == | |||
;Broadway | |||
Produced in 1972. | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
==Notes== | |||
== |
==Further reading== | ||
*{{cite book |last=Beller |year=2012 |first=Anne-Marie |title=Mary Elizabeth Braddon: A Companion to the Mystery Fiction |location=Jefferson, NC |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-7864-3667-5}} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Cvetkovich |year=1992 |first=Ann |title=Mixed Feelings: Feminism, Mass Culture and Victorian Sensationalism |location=New Brunswick, NJ |publisher=] |isbn=978-0813518572}} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Diamond |year=2003 |first=Michael |title=Victorian Sensation |location=London |publisher=Anthem |isbn=1-84331-150-X |pages=197–208}} | |||
*{{cite journal |last=King |year=2002 |first=Andrew |title=Sympathy as Subversion? Reading ''Lady Audley's Secret'' in the Kitchen |journal=] |volume=7 |issue=1 |pages=60–85 |doi=10.3366/jvc.2002.7.1.60}} | |||
*{{cite journal |last=Nemesvari |year=1995 |first=Richard |title=Robert Audley's secret: male homosocial desire in ''Lady Audley's Secret'' |journal=Studies in the Novel |volume=XXVII |issue=4 |pages=515–528 |jstor=29533089}} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Tilley |year=1995 |first=Elizabeth |chapter=Gender and role-playing in ''Lady Audley's Secret'' |title=Exhibited by Candlelight: Sources and Developments in the Gothic Tradition |editor=Valeria Tinkler-Villani & Peter Davidson, with Jane Stevenson |location=Amsterdam |publisher=Rodopi |pages=197–204 |isbn=9789051838329}} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Tomaiuolo |year=2010 |first=Saverio |title=In Lady Audley's Shadow: Mary Elizabeth Braddon and Victorian Literary Genres |location=Edinburgh |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-7486-4115-4}} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Wolff |year=1979 |first=Robert Lee |title=Nineteenth-Century Fiction: a Bibliographical Catalogue |publisher=Garland |location=New York}} | |||
*{{cite journal |last=Woolston |year=2008 |first=Jennifer M. |title=Lady Audley as the cunning 'other': an economic, sexual, and criminal attack on the Victorian patriarchal mindset |journal=English Association of Pennsylvania State Universities (EAPSU) Online |volume=5 <!--|url=http://eapsu.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=14&Itemid=27-->}} | |||
==External links== | == External links == | ||
* {{StandardEbooks|Standard Ebooks URL=https://standardebooks.org/ebooks/m-e-braddon/lady-audleys-secret}} | |||
*{{gutenberg|no=8954|name=Lady Audley's Secret}} | |||
* {{gutenberg|no=8954|name=Lady Audley's Secret}} (ebooks, plain text and HTML) | |||
* | |||
* {{librivox book | title=Lady Audley's Secret | author=Mary Elizabeth BRADDON}} | |||
* at ] (scanned books original editions) | |||
* Miller, Lucasta (9 August 2003). , '']''. Retrieved 1 December 2010 | |||
*{{IMDb title|qid=Q127788263|title=Lady Audley's Secret (TV Movie 2000)}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 19:42, 24 July 2024
1862 Novel by Mary Elizabeth Braddon
Cover of Lady Audley's Secret | |
Author | Mary Elizabeth Braddon |
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Language | English |
Genre | Sensation novel |
Published | 26 May 1862 (William Tinsley) |
Publication place | United Kingdom |
Media type | Print (hardcover) |
Pages | 3 vols., 355 |
ISBN | 978-0-19-953724-2 |
Preceded by | The Black Band |
Followed by | John Marchmont's Legacy |
Lady Audley's Secret is a sensation novel by Mary Elizabeth Braddon published on 26 May 1862. It was Braddon's most successful and well-known novel. Critic John Sutherland (1989) described the work as "the most sensationally successful of all the sensation novels". The plot centres on "accidental bigamy" which was in literary fashion in the early 1860s. The plot was summarised by literary critic Elaine Showalter (1982): "Braddon's bigamous heroine deserts her child, pushes husband number one down a well, thinks about poisoning husband number two and sets fire to a hotel in which her other male acquaintances are residing". Elements of the novel mirror themes of the real-life Constance Kent case of June 1860 which gripped the nation for years. Braddon's second 'bigamy' novel, Aurora Floyd, appeared in 1863. Braddon set the story in Ingatestone Hall, Essex, inspired by a visit there. There have been three silent film adaptations, one UK television version in 2000, and three minor stage adaptations.
History
Lady Audley's Secret was partly serialised in Robin Goodfellow magazine in July–September 1861, then entirely serialised in Sixpenny Magazine in January–December 1862 and once again serialised in The London Journal March–August 1863. It was published in 1862 in three volumes by William Tinsley.
Braddon initially sold the rights to the Irish publisher John Maxwell, with whom Braddon also lived and had children. Maxwell published it in his magazine Robin Goodfellow. Braddon wrote the final third in less than two weeks. It was published as a three-volume novel, and it became a success, allowing Braddon to be financially independent for the rest of her life. It was also a financial success for Tinsley, who went on to build a villa in Barnes, "Audley Lodge", with the profits.
Notably – given the theme of bigamy in the novel's plot – Maxwell himself was married to another woman, and so Braddon was unable to marry him until his wife died in 1874. When it became public that Maxwell and Braddon had been living in an "irregular" arrangement all those years, it caused a minor scandal during which all their servants gave notice.
In 1997 a Wordsworth Limited edition was released with an Introduction by Keith Carabine from the University of Kent in which he states, "In the latter half of the nineteenth century, everyone knew Lady Audley’s Secret."
Plot
The novel opens in June 1857 with the marriage of Lucy Graham and Sir Michael Audley. Lucy is a young, beautiful woman who enchants almost all who meet her. Sir Michael is a kindly, wealthy middle-aged widower. Lucy's past is unclear. Prior to marrying Sir Michael she had served as governess for the children of the local doctor, Mr. Dawson, and before that she was in service with Mrs. Vincent. Very little is known about her prior to that. Shortly after the marriage Sir Michael's nephew, the barrister Robert Audley, welcomes his old friend George Talboys back to England.
Three years before, though happily married, George's financial situation had been desperate. He left for Australia to seek a fortune in gold prospecting. Behind him in England he had left his young wife Helen, whom he is now anxious to get news of. He reads in the newspaper that she has died, and, after visiting her home to confirm this, he becomes despondent. Robert Audley cares for his friend, and, hoping to distract him, offers to take him to his wealthy uncle's country manor. George had a child, Georgey, who was left under the care of Lieutenant Maldon, George's father-in-law. Robert and George set off to visit Georgey, and George decides to make Robert little Georgey's guardian and trustee of £20,000 put into the boy's name. After settling the matter of the boy's guardianship, the two set off to visit Sir Michael.
While at the country manor Audley Court, Lady Audley avoids meeting George. When the two seek an audience with the new Lady Audley, she makes many excuses and avoids their visits. During her absence a thunder storm confines George and Robert to the interior of Audley Court, and the two are shown a portrait of Lady Audley. Looking back toward his friend, Robert notes that George seems disturbed, and attributes his disturbed mood to the storm. Shortly thereafter George disappears. Robert is perplexed. Unwilling to believe George simply left with no notice, Robert begins to look into the circumstances of his disappearance.
While searching for his friend, Robert takes note of the events surrounding George's disappearance. The name of Lady Audley repeatedly appears in these notes, and much to his distress, the evidence begins to collect against her. One night, he reveals his notes to Lady Audley, including that George was in possession of many letters of his former wife. Lady Audley sets off to London, where the letters were kept. Robert follows after her. However, by the time he arrives, he discovers that George's possessions have been broken into and the letters are missing. One possession, however, remains – a book with a note written by George's wife that matches Lady Audley's handwriting. This confirms Robert's suspicion that Lady Audley is implicated in George's disappearance; it also leads Robert to conclude that Lady Audley is actually George's supposedly dead wife.
Suspecting the worst of Lady Audley and being afraid for little Georgey's life, Robert travels to Lieutenant Maldon's house and demands possession of the boy. Once Robert has Georgey under his control, he places the boy in a school run by Mr. Marchmont. Afterwards, Robert visits George's father, Mr. Harcourt Talboys, and confronts the Squire with his son's death. Harcourt listens dispassionately to the story. In the course of his visit to the Talboys' manor, Robert is entranced by George's sister Clara, who looks startlingly like George. Clara's passion for finding her brother spurs Robert on.
In February 1859, Robert continues searching for evidence. He receives a notice that his uncle is ill, and he quickly returns to Audley Court. While there, Robert speaks with Mr. Dawson and receives a brief description of all that is known about Lucy's background. He hears that Lucy was employed by Mrs. Vincent at her school since 1852. To verify this claim, Robert tracks down Mrs. Vincent, who is in hiding because of debts. According to Miss Tonks, a teacher at Mrs. Vincent's school, Lucy actually arrived at the school in August 1854 and was secretive about her past. Miss Tonks gives Robert a travel box that used to belong to Lucy. Upon examining stickers on the box, Robert discovers both the name Lucy Graham and the name Helen Talboys.
Robert realizes that Helen Talboys faked her death before creating her new identity. When Robert confronts Lucy, she tells him that he has no proof. He leaves to find more evidence, heading to Castle Inn, which is run by Luke Marks. During the night, Lucy forces Luke's wife, Phoebe, to let her into the inn, then Lucy sets the place afire to kill Robert. However, Robert survives and returns to Audley Court and again confronts Lucy. This time, she says she is insane and confesses her life's story to Robert and Sir Michael, claiming that George abandoned her originally and she had no choice but to abandon her old life and child to find another, wealthier husband.
Sir Michael is unhappy and leaves with Alicia to travel through Europe. Robert invites a Dr. Mosgrave to make a more astute judgment regarding Lucy's sanity, and he proclaims that she is indeed victim to latent insanity, which overpowers her in times of stress and makes her very dangerous to any and all. Lucy, under the name of Madame Taylor, enters a mental institution located somewhere in Belgium along the route between Brussels and Paris. While being committed, Lucy confesses to Robert that she killed George by pushing him down a deserted well in the garden of Audley Court.
Robert grieves for his friend George until a dying Luke Marks contacts him. Before succumbing to injuries he suffered in the fire, Luke tells Robert that George survived Lady Audley's attempted murder. Luke then helped George escape, with George intending to return to Australia. Robert is overjoyed, and he asks Clara to marry him and go with him to Australia to find George. Clara accepts, but before they set out, George returns and reveals that he actually visited New York instead. The narrative ends with the death of Lucy abroad, and Clara and Robert happily married and living in a country cottage with George and his son. Robert's formerly infatuated cousin Alicia marries her once-spurned suitor, Sir Harry Towers, and Audley Court is left abandoned along with all of its unhappy memories.
Analysis and themes
Lady Audley's Secret plays on Victorian anxieties about the domestic sphere. The home was supposed to be a refuge from the dangers of the outside world, but in the novel, the seemingly perfect domestic lady turns out to be a violent criminal who has not only tried to commit murder but who has also committed bigamy and abandoned her child. This unsettled Victorian readers because it indicated that the concepts of "the perfect lady/mother" and "domestic bliss" were more idealistic than realistic. In addition, anxieties about the increasing urbanization of Britain abound; the city gives Lady Audley the power to change her identity because it renders its citizens effectively anonymous. The small town of Audley is no longer a refuge where everyone knows the life story of every neighbor; the residents of Audley must accept Lucy Graham's account of herself since they have no other information about her past. Other anxieties about unstable identity appear throughout the novel: Lady Audley's maid, Phoebe, resembles Lady Audley, thus banishing the idea of physical distinction between the upper and lower classes and therefore of any inherent superiority of the former.
Lady Audley's Secret is, furthermore, a story about gender and class, and Lady Audley's objectionable upward mobility suggests a threat to the paradigm of social class. Madness is also a key issue. Lady Audley and others often converse about the meaning of this word, but many readers believe that Lady Audley is not mad. In fact, many critics view Lady Audley's deception as a feminist act in which a woman takes control of the direction of her own life.
The novel mirrors many of the same themes from the real-life Constance Kent case of June 1860. The first instalment of Lady Audley's Secret came out almost exactly one year after the Kent murder. The novel, like the real-life case, featured a stepmother and former governess, a mysterious and brutal murder in a country manor house, a body thrown down a well, and characters fascinated by madness. Constance Kent can be seen in many of the female characters in the novel: the murderess Lady Audley, the tomboyish Alicia Audley, the restrained Phoebe Marks and the lonely Clara Talboys. Jack Whicher, the detective and case investigator, can be seen in the character of Robert Audley.
Adaptations
- Films
- Lady Audley's Secret, 1912 (USA, black and white, silent)
- Lady Audley's Secret (aka Secrets of Society), 1915 (USA, black and white, silent, directed by Marshall Farnum)
- Lady Audley's Secret, 1920 (UK, black and white, silent, directed by Jack Denton)
- Lady Audley's Secret, 1949 (UK, TV, black and white)
- Lady Audleys Geheimnis [de], 1978 (West Germany, TV, directed by Wilhelm Semmelroth)
- Lady Audley's Secret, 2000 (UK, TV, directed by Betsan Morris Evans) – (In the USA part of the Mystery! series.)
- Radio
- Lady Audley's Secret, 2009 (UK, BBC Radio 4)
- Stage
- 1863 – adapted by Colin Henry Hazlewood, first performed at the Victoria Theatre, London, 1863. Hazlewood also dramatised Braddon's Aurora Floyd the same year.
- 1930 – Cambridge Festival Theatre: a "melodramatized version" of the novel including a "birthday fete" and Rustic Ballet. The part of Lady Audley was played by (Dame) Flora Robson and the performance was produced by Tyrone Guthrie. It was preceded by a performance of Morton's Cox and Box.
- 1971 – Chicago, Goodman Theatre, adaptation by Douglas Seale, music by George Goehring, and lyrics by John B. Kuntz.
- 1972 – Off-Broadway, Seale adaptation, music by George Goehring, and lyrics by John B. Kuntz.
In popular culture
Lady Audley's Secret is involved in a subplot of Betsy and Tacy Go Downtown, the fourth book in the Betsy-Tacy series by Maud Hart Lovelace. Betsy has read it and other books in the same genre, and aspires to write similar works.
In the Agatha Christie short story Greenshaw's Folly Miss Greenshaw hides her will in a copy of Lady Audley's Secret remarking it was a "best seller in its day".
References
- ^ John Sutherland. "Lady Audley's Secret" in The Stanford Companion to Victorian Fiction, 1989.
- ^ Sutherland, John (1989). "Braddon". The Stanford Companion to Victorian Fiction. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 9780804718424.
- Showalter, Elaine (1977). Literature of Their Own: British Women Novelists from Brontė to Lessing. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. p. 163. ISBN 978-0691063188.
- ^ Summerscale, Kate (2008). The Suspicions of Mr Whicher, Or the murder at Road Hill House. London, England: Bloomsbury. pp. 217–18. ISBN 978-0-7475-8215-1.
- "History of Ingatestone, Essex". Archived from the original on 15 November 2013. Retrieved 30 September 2013.
- Carabine, Keith (1997). Lady Audley's Secret: Introduction. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Wordsworth Classes.
- Moqari, Shaqayeq (2015). "Representation of Mad Woman in Lady Audley's Secret by Mary Elizabeth Braddon" (PDF). World Scientific News (22): 40–54.
- G. C. Boase, Megan A. Stephan, "Hazlewood, Colin Henry (1823–1875)", rev. Megan A. Stephan, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, (accessed 3 December 2011)
- Festival Theatre programmes of 25 January and 3 February 1930
- Introduction to the Dover Edition by Norman Donaldson: Lady Audley's Secret (1974)
- Barnes, Clive (4 October 1972). The Stage: 'Lady Audley'; Victorian Musical Is at Eastside Playhouse, The New York Times. Retrieved 1 December 2010 (debuted at Eastdale Playhouse in New York City on 3 October 1972)
- "Lady Audley's Secret". 16 September 2015.
Further reading
- Beller, Anne-Marie (2012). Mary Elizabeth Braddon: A Companion to the Mystery Fiction. Jefferson, NC: McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-3667-5.
- Cvetkovich, Ann (1992). Mixed Feelings: Feminism, Mass Culture and Victorian Sensationalism. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. ISBN 978-0813518572.
- Diamond, Michael (2003). Victorian Sensation. London: Anthem. pp. 197–208. ISBN 1-84331-150-X.
- King, Andrew (2002). "Sympathy as Subversion? Reading Lady Audley's Secret in the Kitchen". Journal of Victorian Culture. 7 (1): 60–85. doi:10.3366/jvc.2002.7.1.60.
- Nemesvari, Richard (1995). "Robert Audley's secret: male homosocial desire in Lady Audley's Secret". Studies in the Novel. XXVII (4): 515–528. JSTOR 29533089.
- Tilley, Elizabeth (1995). "Gender and role-playing in Lady Audley's Secret". In Valeria Tinkler-Villani & Peter Davidson, with Jane Stevenson (ed.). Exhibited by Candlelight: Sources and Developments in the Gothic Tradition. Amsterdam: Rodopi. pp. 197–204. ISBN 9789051838329.
- Tomaiuolo, Saverio (2010). In Lady Audley's Shadow: Mary Elizabeth Braddon and Victorian Literary Genres. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 978-0-7486-4115-4.
- Wolff, Robert Lee (1979). Nineteenth-Century Fiction: a Bibliographical Catalogue. New York: Garland.
- Woolston, Jennifer M. (2008). "Lady Audley as the cunning 'other': an economic, sexual, and criminal attack on the Victorian patriarchal mindset". English Association of Pennsylvania State Universities (EAPSU) Online. 5.
External links
- Lady Audley's Secret at Standard Ebooks
- Lady Audley's Secret at Project Gutenberg (ebooks, plain text and HTML)
- Lady Audley's Secret public domain audiobook at LibriVox
- Lady Audley's Secret at Internet Archive (scanned books original editions)
- Miller, Lucasta (9 August 2003). "Sweet Sensation", The Guardian. Retrieved 1 December 2010
- Lady Audley's Secret (TV Movie 2000) at IMDb
Novels by Mary Elizabeth Braddon | |
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