Wednesday, September 18, 2019
Helen Stoner :: English Literature Helen Stoner Essays
    Helen Stoner      Helen Stoner is instantly stereotyped by readers as a judicious and  unpretentious lady of high society England. Conan Doyle pulls the  strings of the Victorian males desires and creates a 'damsel in  distress', who comes to a man for aid that she does not have the  resources to conclude herself. He portrays her as a woman who is  wronged and in great danger therefore adding to the suspense of the  story.    Analysing the assortment of clothes that she is wearing the reader can  conclude that she is of sufficient 'breeding' and discreet. 'A woman  dressed in black, and heavily veiled' tells us that she is  unaccustomed to travelling around the conurbation solitary. She is  dressed in black as not to attract attention. It was uncommon for  women of a high-class family to travel around the metropolis alone,  she may think this shameful, which is interesting considering that it  contrasts to modern day westernised civilisation where it could be  interpreted as independent.    Manners were of paramount importance in Victorian society, and Helen  Stoner is represented as a woman who is capable of being able to  display the correct 'society manners'. Victorians were very pedantic  about how a woman was allowed to greet any males in her presence. The  fact that she is 'heavily veiled' specifies that she does not wish for  Dr Watson or Mr Holmes to direct any attention to her looks but  instead to her story. This suggests to the reader that no improper  conduct was to be entertained.    Helen Stoner also clearly has a methodical mind. She has natural  intelligence yet is prohibited to show any real deduction that may  question a mans views. This is why she visits Mr Holmes. She has no  power over her stepfather, her views, as a woman would be thought  totally irrational by other males, so she seeks professional (male)  help in the form of Sherlock Holmes. It is comprehensible to me that  she has been pushed beyond her mental limitations as a human being  long ago, 'She raised her veil as she spoke, and we could clearly see  that she was indeed in a pitiable state of agitation, her face all  drawn and grey, with restless, frightened eyes, like those of some  hunted animal. Her features and figure was those of a woman of thirty,  but her hair was shot with premature grey, and her expression was  weary and haggard' yet she has put up with what she has been reduced  to simply because it was seen as improper for a woman to question what  a man was doing or for a woman to draw attention to her home life.  					    
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