Saturday, May 16, 2015

The Drive

Isabella Hajnos
H English Period D
15 May 2015
Topic E

The Drive


            On the drive back to Manderley from talking to Colonel Julyan, Maxim and the main character decide to stop for the night. When Maxim calls Frank to let him know everything that happened, Frank tells him that Mrs. Danvers left Manderley. Maxim gets a bad feeling and decides to go straight home. The tiring drive for the main character allows her to finally be alone with her thoughts. She keeps having these dreams in her uncomfortable sleep, there is one in particular that haunts her. She dreams of Rebecca’s ghost back in Manderley. She sees Maxim brushing her hair, with Rebecca’s hair turning into a rope, “[twisting] like a snake, and he took hold of it with both hands and smiled at Rebecca and put it round his neck” (du Maurier     ). This shows that Rebecca’s presence is still very strong, even though they know the truth about her and that she can’t hurt them anymore. As they drive up the ridge, they see Manderley up in flames, an inkling that Mrs. Danvers did it because she no longer has ties to Rebecca and can no longer sabotage the main character. Even though the truth of Rebecca is out and she can’t hurt them anymore, the name of Manderley was made by Rebecca- it’s her home. The main character and Maxim can never have a happy life so long as they live at Manderley. It seems as though burning it down is the best thing for them, because it finally gets rid of Rebecca once and for all.

A Sky Shot with Crimson

Blog Post #5
Topic F
May 15, 2015
By Kaeleigh Foecking

     In the scene leading up to the end of the novel Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier, suspense grows more than ever before in the novel. Du Maurier uses intense yet vague imagery to build suspense, giving the reader a sense of foreboding. In this scene, the main character and Maxim are driving home to Manderly after investigating a lead in the case of Rebecca’s alleged suicide. Instead of boarding for the night and continuing the trip home in the morning, Maxim is very anxious to get home and opts instead to drive through the night and arrive home early in the morning. While driving home, the main character describes vivid nightmares, flashes of previous events in the novel. With growing suspense, the scene builds up to a climax when Maxim and the main character discover that “the sky on the horizon [is] not dark at all. It [is] shot with crimson, like a splash of blood. And the ashes [blow] towards [them] with the salt wind from the sea” (du Maurier 386). With those words, the novel comes to an end. By describing the surroundings in vivid detail, du Maurier uses the imagery of this scene to freeze time, stuck in the moment when the car tops the hill and the couple discovers Manderly in flames. Not only does the imagery seem to freeze time, but it also creates a feeling of fatality and finality. By describing the sky as looking "like a splash of blood", the reader knows that this is the end of Manderly as well as Maxim and the main character's life there.

Tuesday, May 12, 2015

Foreshadowing

Stephanie Storczer

Topic A

May 12, 2015

At the very end of the trial, when all seems to have worked out for the main character and Maxim, a bad feeling happens. Maxim expresses his desire to get home saying "something's wrong, I know it is. I wasn't to get home" (368). Reading farther in the final chapter, it is concluded that Maxim's feelings were correct. To ruin their happy ending was Manderley, burning down. It was a quick realization that it wasn't northern lights or a wrong direction but a burning home. It can be led to believe that when Mrs Danvers realized she hadn't won against MC, she burned down one of the only things holding them together - Manderley. This concluded Maxim's fear of a wrong problem, and he was indeed too late to prevent it.

Saturday, May 9, 2015

Rebecca Lost



Isabella Hajnos
H English Per. D
08 May 2015
Topic A
The Truth

            We later find out in the novel that Rebecca did not drown at all, but Maxim killed her. Rebecca was an evil and cold woman who only hurt Maxim and deceived those around her. The main character finally realizes that “Rebecca had lost” (du Maurier 290). This quote clearly signifies that the main character was not defeated by the overpowering presence of Rebecca she felt for almost her entire relationship with Maxim. Maxim and Rebecca’s marriage was a scam and not real, and with this the main character’s insecurity is lifted and her confidence greatly rises. With Rebecca’s loss, Mrs. Danvers’ grip on the main characters confidence also dies, and Mrs. Danvers is now much more vulnerable when the main character begins to show herself in Manderley.
           Although the main character’s internal struggle is fixed, her external problems are only beginning with the discovery of Rebecca’s boat and body. They are interviewed by the coroner and Maxim tells him ‘what he knows’, obviously denying that he had anything to do with the sinking of the boat. Jack Favell later hears that the coroner declared Rebecca’s death to be suicide, and demands “to see justice is done to Rebecca” (du Maurier 329). Since Favell is drunk, when Maxim gets Colonel Julyan to come over and hear Jacks’ story, Julyan doesn’t take lightly to Favell. This all helps the main character in ‘winning’ against Rebecca in the fight for justice and confidence. Rebecca’s fight is over; she truly has lost. In thinking she can win, the truth always brings out the best and worst in people. In this case, it brought out the best in the main character, and the worst of Rebecca and Jack.

Friday, May 8, 2015

Gaining the Upper Hand

~Gaining the Upper Hand~
Blog Post #4
Topic C
May 9th, 2015
By Joanna Badillo


               The Relationship between The Main Character and Mrs. Danvers has grown significantly and has helped the main character face her insecurities about herself. In the beginning of the book, when the Main Character went to Manderly for the first time, Mrs. Danvers intimidated her by her appearance of being “tall and gaunt…whose prominent cheekbones and great, hollow eyes gave her a skull face” (66). By describing Mrs. Danvers as skull like, gives the reader a sense that Mrs. Danvers intimidates her. This continues throughout the book, like when the main character answers the phone saying “Mrs. De Winter has been dead for over a year” to Danvers, or when Mrs. Danvers tries to show Rebecca’s room to the main character. Mrs. Danvers also uses this fear and intimidation to her advantage and convinces the main character to become more insecure and to feel overpowered by Rebecca. This Relationship between Mrs. Danvers continues throughout the book and is even in main parts of major plot points like the time Mrs. Danvers told the main character about the night Rebecca died and when she convinces the main character to wear the dress for the ball. The main character doesn't gain her confidence of herself until she confronts Mrs. Danvers after the ball. That encounter was the climax of their relationship together. It was the defining point that causes Mrs. Danvers to lose her last hope to get rid of the main character, and the main character to become stronger than Mrs. Danvers. After this encounter, as well as finding out that the marriage to Rebecca was a sham, the Main character was able to become herself again and to even start ordering people around. The Relationship between the main character and Mrs. Danvers has grown positively for the main character and negatively for Mrs. Danvers. 

Failure

Stephanie Storczer

Mrs Molyneaux

Blog Post 4

Topic D

5/8/15

Among many of the themes in Rebecca, marriage and failure seem to stand out. Constantly does the main character mention her discomfort in the stability of the marriage, and this is especially shown after the ball. Throughout the marriage, MC had feelings of doubt when Maxim would treat her as a child or snap at her, but after dressing in the same outfit as Rebecca and being accused of mockery, she knew the marriage was going downhill once and for all. She "no longer made any effort to pretend" that the marriage was going well (232). After the mistake, "last night had shown [her] too well. [Her] marriage was a failure" (232). MC feels that there is nothing to be done about the marriage and thoroughly feels that Maxim feels the same way. Making the mistake of bringing back Rebecca and her memories was the last straw. The motif of a failing marriage surfaced in the very beginning of the book and continued to grow until just the right thing could make it snap.

Sunday, May 3, 2015

Caroline's Dress

Stephanie Storczer

Mrs Molyneaux

Topic E

May 3, 2015


After the death of Rebecca, Manderley's party days seemed to be over. Only after some great convincing and planning did MC decide to throw her first (and last) party at Manderley. MC has the great idea to take advice from Mrs Danvers and model her dress off of the old Caroline de Winter. It seems to be a success to her as she pulls on the wig, but when she goes down to meet everyone, "something was wrong, [and] they had not understood" (215). Maxim's face went white, and the rest of the guests stared in utter shock. It turns out that while this had been Caroline de Winter's dress, Rebecca, Maxim's late wife, had done the exact same thing with the exact same outfit.

Maxim thought of this as MC's way of playing a joke or mocking him and REbecca. It is likely that Mrs Danvers gave MC the idea to dress this way in order to cause grief to Maxim and embarrass the MC for replacing Rebecca. When the MC ran up to her room in shame, Mrs Danvers had the "face of an exulting devil, .... her face, loathsome, triumphant" (216). This may be Mrs Danvers' way of getting back at Mc and hoping to ruin the marriage. Hopefully, the MC learns not to trust Mrs Danvers if she wants to have any hope of overshadowing Rebecca.