Title: I Lock My Door upon Myself
1I Lock My Door upon Myself
Summary The year is 1890, and Edith Margaret
Freilicht is an eccentric, red-haired beauty who
grows up in a small town in Eden County, New
York, where she remains an enigma to others. A
strange child, she wanders the countryside like a
sleepwalker, and insists on being called Calla,
the name her mother gave her before dying in
childbirth. At seventeen she is married off to a
coarse, much older neighboring farmer whom she
fights on her wedding night and for months
afterward. Bitter, unhappy, and increasingly
estranged from those around her, Calla leads a
life of quiet desperation until something
miraculous and tragic occursshe falls in love
with Tyrell Thompson, a tall black itinerant
water diviner whose trade brings him unbidden to
her her door. The townspeople are soon enraged .
In the novel Callas granddaughter recounts the
haunting resolution of this unwise passion in a
beautifully paced, measured prose spun fine as
poetry and as magnificently deep.
2Context
- People lived differently then, did things for
life, they made gestures that lasted for life . .
.Whose story is I Lock My Door Upon Myself? The
fiction chronicles the life of Edith Margaret
Freilicht, born 1890 and called "Calla" by her
mother who died birthing her. Elusive, willful,
eccentric, Calla is an enigma to the town of
Shaheen, Eden County, New York, to her family,
her husband, her children a flame-haired beauty
who views her surroundings and circumstances as a
sleepwalker moving through a dream landscape. A
woman whose life comes to be defined by her
association with a black itinerant water diviner,
Tyrell Thompson. The fiction is told by Calla's
granddaughter, in part to reach an understanding,
a recognition Because we are linked by blood,
and blood is memory without language. One of
the magical things about Joyce Carol Oates's
talent is her enduring ability to reinvent not
only the psychological space she inhabits when
writing, but herself as well, as part of her own
fiction. She is one of the most talented and
versatile writers of our time.
3Setting and Characters
- Setting 1890-1908- Shaheen, Eden County, New
York1911-1912- Chautauqua River
Valley1928-1967- - Characters Calla (Edith Margaret Honeystone
Freilicht)George Freilicht (freedom/light) (15,
34)Tyrell Thompson (34-36, 43)Enoch, Edward,
Emmaline (89, 93)
4Structure Three Parts
- Part I (3-52) Sec. 1-23identity--narrator/CallaÂ
narrator--italics Callas thoughts narrators
voice praying to God, addressing to the
public/to the readerCalla goes on a religious
journeyCalla's appearance--"red" hair (passion,
desire)disposition--wild animal (wandering in
the heath) kept silent might have been of
unusual intelligence and sensitivity might
have been touched in the head. Callas name
(5) Calla--"lilies" in the field water
/funeral flowersNarrator-Calla relationship Why
"She was my mother's mother but not my
grandmother...? (5)the narrator disowns Calla
on the intellectual level?Autumn (34) meeting
Tyrell Thompson (43) "Water dowser"WATER
religious journey for Calla (46, 48)Well well
of life? finding water --art--magic --Calla (29)
5- Part II (55-79) Sec. 24-35 Waterfall
episode rolling along with the current of the
river, not against itChoosing suicide /freedom
following her naturetears/water (65)a passage
wild animal pure water/spring
6- Part III (83-98) "Return" cyclingCalla always
returns to the houseThompson always comes back
to Calla at the end Calla returns to the past
after the waterfall episode Calls returns to the
house.generations--narrator/mother/Calla
relationship)life/deathwomanhood (90-91)
7Style
- long-line sentences yet smooth readinghyper-symbo
licpsychological/realistic novel
8Motifs
- selfhoodself-recognition/self-awarenessmadness
(insanity)--sanity (83, 91)room/womb--prison/sanc
tuary (bear children) exile (10)--an open bible
a room of her own lock herself in lock the
world outwomanhood woman's identity/experience/l
iberationwater imagery (29...)seasonal cycle
autumn (34)colors--white (5) green (24) yellow
(71) black (36) redblack/white racism (Ex.
64-65)
9- faith Christianity/ Public inhumanityhumanity
love Vs. inhumanity in townspeople
(anonymous)--inhumansocial identity--roles
people playChoice Vs. fate choose to die to
lock herself in to come out to help...love
(spiritual/quality)/property (material/quantity)p
ictures/charactersspiritual search
dreampassion (nature)--reason (society/social
convention)Language (10, 20, 75,
85-86)id/shadow Vs. superegowillingness
10I Lock My Door upon Myself painted by
KhnopffOil on Canvas (Neue Pinakothek, Munich)Â
- This work takes its title from a poem by
Christina Rossetti, "Who Shall Deliver Me" (a
title Khnopff used himself for another work of
the same year) - "I lock my door upon myself, And bar them out
but who shall wallSelf from myself, most loathed
of all? . . . Myself, arch-traitor to
myselfMy hollowest friend, my deadliest foe,My
clog whatever road I go".
11- "His painting is a self-indulgent but nonetheless
penetrating portrayal of neurosis. The expression
on the young woman's face suggests she is
savouring a morbid state with all its familiar
ambiguities and subterfuges...This female anima,
obedient to the familiar Symbolist pattern, has
withdrawn from the world and enclosed herself in
her own solitude. The moral of this strange
painting is that a world devoid of any generally
acceptable meaning locks each individual into the
intimacy of his own solitary experience. This
experience becomes the sole foundation of a
meaning that is private and largely inadequate,
since such solipsistic make-believe naturally
finds its refutation in the individual's death."
(Michael Gibson, "The Symbolists",1984)Â Choice
I do what I do, what I do is what I wanted to
have done. (37, 55, 77)Â Tyrell Calla cross the
border of conventions. Like Jacob, Calla pays
dearly, but is rewarded with blessing when she
lived to an old age. Many people in the novel do
not have choice (ex. George), but Calla and
Tyrell do. They choose to love, to die together.
Calla is possessed by love, while the others, by
property. When Calla gives her name, Calla, to
Tyrell, she also gives him the power over
her.Calla did not have a language to express
herself then the narrator (the grand-daughter)
has to piece together Calla's story through
imagination, understanding, and spiritual
identification.
12WHO SHALL DELIVER ME?Â
- God strengthen me to bear myself That heaviest
weight of all to bear, Inalienable weight of
care.All others are outside myselfI lock my
door and bar them outThe turmoil, tedium,
gad-about.I lock my door upon myself,And bar
them out but who shall wallSelf from myself,
most loathed of all?If I could once lay down
myself,And start self-purged upon the raceThat
all must run! Death runs apace.
13- If I could set aside myself,And start with
lightened heart uponThe road by all men
overgone!God harden me against myself, This
coward with pathetic voiceWho craves for ease
and rest and joysMyself, arch-traitor to
myselfMy hollowest friend, my deadliest foe,My
clog whatever road I go.Yet One there is can
curb myself,Can roll the strangling load from
meBreak off the yoke and set me free.Christina
Rossetti, 1876
14General Study Questions
- 1. Explain why in the very beginning the narrator
says She Calla was my mothers mother but not
my grandmother in any terms I can comprehend
(5). 2. What is the meaning of Calla? How is
Calla the right name for Edith Margaret? Why is
her name specially ordained, fated (5)? 3.
Describe Callas appearance and comment on her
disposition.4. How does the italics function in
the text? Who is the speaker? To whom these lines
are addressed?5. The narrator says, Yes it is
unimaginable that is why I must imagine it
(10-11) and If this is not my dream, for how
should I know the language in which to dream it?
(20) and If this is a dream it is not my dream
for how should I know the language in which to
dream it (75). What does the narrator have to
imagine and dream? What is the language the
narrator uses?Â
15- 6. The statement I do what I do what I have
done is what I have wanted to do appears
respectively on pages 37, 55 and 77. Who is the
I speaker? What does the speaker do or have
done? 7. She has faith in that life that was
unnameable and she thought with a sudden
half-angry conviction I am not drowning, really.
I will swim free (29). Why does Calla say that
she 'will swim free'? 8. How significant it is
that Tyrell Thompson is a water dowser and a
black? (hint Finding water and Calla both as
social outcasts)Â 9. In her setting and in her
choice of charactersCalla Honeystone and Tyrell
Thompsonwhat is Oates suggesting by nature,
especially water, imagery? 10. Why does Calla
'lock her door upon herself'? Is the room her
prison, sanctuary or womans womb (90)?
Give reasons for your answers.Â
16(No Transcript)
17(No Transcript)