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Volu m e II - Purdue University Calumet

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husband and not the master of the house‟” (Arnstein 54). This reveals that Victoria was a powerful<br />

matriarch both inside and outside the domestic sphere: Victoria and Albert were partners in marriage but<br />

Victoria was the master of the house as well as Britain. Additionally, while Victoria enjoyed a blissfully<br />

happy marriage, she was aware that most marriages were not as happy as hers had been. She said that “„[a] ll<br />

marriage is such a lottery—the happiness is always an exchange—though it may be a very happy one—<br />

still—the poor woman is bodily and morally the husband‟s slave‟”(Helsinger 74). Consequently, Victoria<br />

felt worried about women‟s roles in marriage and the abuse of patriarchal power that husbands inflicted on<br />

their wives. Victoria's private views about marriage and her superiority over Albert contrast with her<br />

traditional image, and thus, represent the paradox of Victorian femininity. Victoria confesses her true<br />

opinion on men and women‟s roles in Victorian society in a private letter to her eldest daughter, the<br />

Princess Royal. Victoria warns her daughter that “men are very selfish and the woman‟s devotion is always<br />

one of submission which makes our poor sex so very unenviable” (Fulford 44). A true angel in the house<br />

would never call men selfish or complain about women‟s submission to men. Far from a progressive<br />

feminist, Victoria did not voice these beliefs publically, but she did voice them strongly in private letters to<br />

her daughter. Victoria‟s public persona clashes with her private opinions, and Marian Halcombe, the<br />

heroine of The Woman in White also exemplifies this paradox.<br />

Marian Halcombe is a conventional “good angel” at the end of the novel; she is Walter Hartright‟s<br />

loyal confidant, Laura‟s dutiful sister, and a maternal aunt. Marian, however, represents the novel‟s<br />

ultimate paradox: she is feminine and masculine, beautiful and ugly, powerful and powerless. Walter<br />

Hartright describes Marian as “ugly,” (31) “swarthy,” (32) and lacking “in those feminine attractions” (32).<br />

Through the character of Marian, Wilkie Collins demonstrates the juxtaposition of feminine subordination<br />

and feminine power. Marian, therefore, represents Collins‟ conflict with the Victorian feminine ideal and<br />

the excessively powerful, independent woman. Even though Marian often challenges the role of the<br />

Victorian middle-class woman Victorian readers loved and admired her. Despite Marian‟s masculine<br />

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