You are on page 1of 6

Virginia Woolf's "The Legacy"

Author(s): Ann Lavine


Source: The English Journal, Vol. 75, No. 2 (Feb., 1986), pp. 74-78
Published by: National Council of Teachers of English
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/817895 .
Accessed: 25/03/2013 14:00

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp

.
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of
content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms
of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org.

National Council of Teachers of English is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to
The English Journal.

http://www.jstor.org

This content downloaded from 142.104.240.194 on Mon, 25 Mar 2013 14:00:52 PM


All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
A New Contributor

Virginia Woolf s
"The Legacy"

Ann Lavine

The first time I taught Virginia Woolf's short story accepts the brooch Angela intended for her but
"The Legacy" I knew I had found a good way to declines the financial assistance Gilbert extends,
introduce Woolf to high school students. Imme- instead offering him help if he should need it.
diately after we finished the story, the class was After Sissy's departure, Gilbert begins to read
divided into two distinct groups--one group sym- Angela's diary. He randomly picks up volumes
pathized with one of the two main characters and from the beginning of their marriage and is
viewed the other as villainous while the second pleased to see all the referencesto himself and his
group espoused the reverse. I knew we were on career. As he progresses through the volumes he
our way to comprehending one of Woolf's under- notes that his name appears less frequentlywhile
lying beliefs about fiction, namely, that it should the initials B. M. enter and occur more and more
not present reality as absolute and neatly package- frequently. As he reads, he learns that B. M.
able but rather it should try to present it as it is comes from the lower classes, discussed politics
subjectively experienced by individuals. In her with Angela, and visits her while she is alone. In
essay "Modern Fiction," Woolf explains that "life the final volumeGilbertreads that B. M. requests
is not a series of gig-lamps symmetrically some behaviorfrom Angela which she is not will-
arranged; life is a luminous halo, a semi-transpar- ing to do. Near the end of the diary Angela writes,
ent envelope surrounding us from the beginning "He threatened that if I did not .... " but then
of consciousness to the end" (Woolf, 1967, p. 106). the remainderof the page is crossed out. Gilbert
The task of the writer, according to Woolf, is to assumes B. M. asked Angela to become his mis-
render this reality in all its "aberration and com- tress. He remembers that Sissy's brother died
plexity" (Woolf, 1967, p. 106); our task as readers unexpectedly only a few weeks before Angela's
is not to look simply for symmetrically arranged death and calls Sissy to confirm B. M.'s identity.
gig-lamps. The story ends then with Gilbert telling us that
"The Legacy" is told entirely from the perspec- "he had received his legacy.She had told him the
tive of Gilbert Clandon, a somewhat successful truth. She had stepped off the kerb to rejoin her
politician whose wife Angela has recently died. As lover.She had stepped off the kerbto escape from
the story opens, Gilbert is perplexed about Ange- him."
la's actions before her accidental death. She had The group of students who believed Gilbert
arranged small gifts for all of her friends almost had been wronged saw Angela as deceitful and
as if she knew she were going to die. No gift is left adulterousand Gilbert as loyal and generous. In
expressly for Gilbert, but he thinks she may have contrast, the students who sympathized with
intended him to have the fifteen-volume diary she Angela viewedGilbertas patronizingand self-cen-
kept during their marriage. Gilbert's thoughts are tered. Furthermore, they were convinced that
interrupted by the arrival of Sissy Miller, Angela's Angela was forced to find intimacy elsewhere. I
long-time friend and secretary. Visibly upset, Sissy wouldlike not only to propose a third wayof read-

74 English Journal

This content downloaded from 142.104.240.194 on Mon, 25 Mar 2013 14:00:52 PM


All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
ing "The Legacy"but also to suggest that the mul- with him, instead of puzzling her poor little head
tiple interpretationswere intended and that they about questions that were much too difficult for
contributeto the overall meaning of the story. her to understand!"And while Gilbert acknowl-
A strong case was made by the students who edges her assistance to him with his career, he
believedthat Gilbertwas a good husbandwho was remarks that her day-to-day existence was only
wrongedby an adulterouswife. To begin with, the made up of "littletrifles."
story is told from his perspective and as readers These students also noted that Gilbert is
we have been conditioned to trust and like our patronizing toward women in general. His atti-
narrators. One generally assumes the truth is tudes towardSissyMillerindicate that he does not
being spoken unless evidence proves otherwise, view Angela simply as a particular case but that
and Gilbert simply tells us they were happy and he perceives all women as inferior. With Sissy
had a sound marriage.Likewise,we know he was Miller, however, Gilbert also categorizes her
a good provider,often buying her small gifts, tak- according to her class. He says that "she was
ing her out to dinner, and vacationingwith her in scarcelydistinguishablefrom any other womanof
Europe. He tells us that they rarely argued and her kind. There were thousandsof Sissy Millers-
that he was extremely proud to have her as his drab little womenin blackcarryingattachecases."
wife. We see his kindness when he offers money Along with perceiving women as helpmates to
to Sissy and also learn that he allowed Angela to men and their intellectual inferiors, Gilbert sees
do some volunteer work outside of the home. In them as sexual objects and adornments. After
the early volumes of Angela's diary, we see that acknowledging that "he had always been very
she is completely enamored of Gilbert, that she proud to be her husband,"he admitsthat it is only
regrets that she cannot give him a son, and that because of Angela'sbeauty. He is merelyproud of
she is more than happy to perform the duties of being able to say,"Sheis the loveliestwomanhere!"
a politician's wife. Into this rosy picture comes when they dine out. Further evidence of Gilbert's
B. M. who fills Angela'shead with strange notions pompous attitudes toward women occurs when
and apparently threatens suicide if she does not Sissy offers Gilbert help, "lookingstraight at him
take him as her lover.Since B. M. and Angela kill for the first time." Gilbertasks himself, "Couldit
themselveswithin two weeks of each other,Gilbert be that during all those years when he had
is left with the realization that his wife has scarcelynoticed her, she, as the novelistssay, had
betrayedhim-or wanted to. entertaineda passionfor him?"The one time Sissy
The second group of studentswere not as trust- emerges in his perception from the "thou-
ing of Gilbert's perceptions as the first group. sands... of drab little women"and approaches
They began to doubt his judgments by the second him as an individualand as an equal, he interprets
paragraph when Gilbert wonders how his wife her offer as a sexual advance, never permitting
could have foreseen her own accidental death; her outside of the female stereotype she occupies
never does he suspect that the death may have in his mind.
been premeditated. In fact, he blames Angela's The students also pointed to indications that
death on her lackof thought, noting that "if only Gilbert is self-centeredand materialistic.He con-
she had stopped one moment, and had thought fesses that "he could not help admitting that he
what she was doing, she would be alive now."As was still, as the looking-glassshowed him, a very
the story progresses, students noted that this atti- distinguishedman," and as the referencesto him
tude is not atypical for Gilbert; he consistently in Angela's diary decrease, he admits that "his
views his wife as intellectuallyinferior and child- interest slackened."When he discoversthat B. M.
like. While reminiscingabout their trip to Venice, has been to dine while he was engaged elsewhere,
he notes that "she was still such a child" and that he only remembers "his own speech" that night
he enjoyed travelling with her because "she was so and not whether Angela acted differently or their
eager to learn." He remembers that she would say rooms showed signs of a visit. Evidence of Gilbert's
she was "so terribly ignorant," but he considers materialism is suggested by his belief that the
that "one of her charms." When he reads in her brooch Angela leaves for Sissy is a "rather incon-
diary about her political discussions with B. M., gruous gift," a more appropriate one being "a sum
he remarks, "If only she had discussed the matter of money or even the typewriter." Likewise, his

February 1986 75

This content downloaded from 142.104.240.194 on Mon, 25 Mar 2013 14:00:52 PM


All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
idea of help for Sissy takes the form of financial act of writing for Woolf was an act of disobedi-
assistance only. ence. In "Thinking Back Through Our Mothers"
Although students are unlikely to perceive this Jane Marcus explains that Woolf
distinction, those familiar with Woolf's writings felt that writing was a conspiracyagainst the state,
will note that Gilbert, far from being the kind an act of aggressionagainstthe powerful,the willful
husband he envisions himself to be, is rather a breaking of a treaty of silence the oppressed had
good example of the patriarch Woolf abhors so made with their masters to ensure survival.... If
much. She explains in A Room of One's Own that language was the privatepropertyof the patriarchs,
men like Gilbert maintain their belief in their own to "trespass"on it was an act of usurpation(p. 1).
"innate superiority" by "feeling that great num- From Gilbert we learn that Angela never allowed
bers of people, half the human race indeed, are him to read her diary and that their only argu-
by nature inferior. . . . It must indeed be one of ments occurred because of this refusal. Even at
the chief sources of their power." Furthermore, the beginning of their marriage then, when
Woolf sees a connection between Gilbert's domi- Angela was at her most dutiful, she kept a small
nant position in the marriage and his dominant part of her existence separate from him. And
position in society. Woolf makes Gilbert a husband since Gilbert only first reads the diary six weeks
and a politician much like Charlotte Perkins Gil- after her death and very casually at that, one can
man makes John in "The Yellow Wallpaper" a hus- infer that he was less interested in the content than
band and a doctor. As Beverly Ann Schlack in in the fact that she did not devote herself entirely
"Fathers in General: The Patriarchy in Virginia to him.
Woolf's Fiction" explains: The content of Angela's diary depicts her grow-
dissatisfaction with the marriage. At first the
For Woolf the authoritarianstate is the patriarchal ing
volumes show her enjoyment and gratification with
family extended. In the larger public world, the
tyrants simply mass together into business and being Gilbert's wife. For example, she writes,
Be
professions. they professors, clerics,doctors,men "When Gilbert sat down the applause was terrific.
of commerce,lawyers,politicians,or policemen,they The whole audience rose and
are instrumentsof the partriarchy.(p. 58) sang: 'For he's ajolly
good fellow.' I was quite overcome," and then
Schlack continues, "We need not wait for the observes, "How proud I am to be his wife!" Later
explicitly bitter anger of Three Guineas to see that volumes reflect the fact that Gilbert is becoming
Woolf had always had a dark vision of connections "more and more absorbed in his work" and that
between manhood and patriotism, politics, and Angela is increasingly left alone. We learn that
war" (p. 70). while she regrets'not being able to have a child,
Once we recognize Gilbert as a Woolfian patri- Gilbert never regrets it because "life had been so
arch and realize how he perceives women, it is no full, so rich" for him. Her loneliness and sense of
longer possible to accept his portrayal of Angela usefulness reach the point at which she asks Gil-
without question. Woolf writes that when women bert for permission to do some volunteer work in
are portrayed by men, they are "almost without a poor district of London. She is afraid to ask him
exception... shown in their relation to men" the diary makes clear because "it seemed selfish
(Room,p. 86). She continues: to bother him with [her] own affairs," and Gilbert
remembers that "she had told him that she felt so
And how small a part of a woman'slife is that; and so useless. She wished to have some work of
how little can a man know even of that when he idle,
observes it through the black or rosy spectacles her own." Angela's references to B. M. occur after
which sex puts upon his nose. Hence, perhaps... she begins her volunteer work. We learn that at
the astonishingextremes of beauty and horror; her first she has an adversarial relationship with him.
alternationsbetween heavenlygoodness and hellish "Had a heated argument about socialism with
depravity. B. M." and "B. M. made a violent attack upon the
Gilbert's categories of dutiful wife and adulterous upper classes .... I walked back after the meeting
woman no longer suffice for us. with B. M. and tried to convince him. But he is so
Fortunately, Angela is not without a voice in the narrow-minded." B. M. and Angela became more
story-she leaves behind a fifteen volume diary. than intellectual sparring partners. He begins to
For Woolf, however, the diary serves as more than lend her books, they go to the Tower of London
just a way to bypass Gilbert's spectacles. The bare together, and she has him over for dinner. One of

76 English Journal

This content downloaded from 142.104.240.194 on Mon, 25 Mar 2013 14:00:52 PM


All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
her last entries reads, "Dined alone with B. M.... ficulty all human beings have in understanding
He became very agitated. He said it was time we and knowing one another, an example of the igno-
understood each other.... I tried to make him rance and loneliness from which we try in vain to
listen. But he would not. He threatened that if I escape" (Guiguet, p. 339). Robert Kiely in Beyond
did not... "; the remainder of the entry is care- Egotism:TheFiction ofJamesJoyce,Virginia Woolf,and
fully blotted out. After B. M.'s death, her only D. H. Lawrence describes "The Legacy" simply as
entries are "He has done what he threatened" and a story about marriage told by two authors, a hus-
"Have I the courage to do it too?" band and a wife. He believes the "moral outrage"
Just as Gilbert serves as the universal patriarch, Gilbert feels at the end "gives way to shock and
Woolf intends Angela to represent more than despair at the extent to which human beings,
simply a particular individual. Except for keeping including married couples, are isolated from one
the diary, Angela is the ideal wife, one of the another" (Kiely, p. 88). Only recent criticism rec-
"women [who] have served all these centuries as ognizes the importance of class and gender in
looking-glasses possessing the magic and delicious understanding "The Legacy." In "What is to Con-
power of reflecting the figure of man at twice its sole Us?: The Politics of Deception in Woolf's
natural size" (Room, p. 35). After a few years she Short Stories," Selma Meyerowitz explains that in
realizes her existence is not fulfilling and begins "'The Legacy,' a rather typical plot involving an
to look outside of the marriage for meaning for extramarital love relationship is transformed into
her life. She works with the poor, reads books on a perceptive statement about the destructive
economics, attends political meetings, and even- effects of class and status on human values and
tually comes to question her upper class status. interpersonal communication" (Meyerowitz, p.
She once records, "B. M. told me the story of his 242).
childhood. His mother went out charring.... The third interpretation of "The Legacy" is
When I think of it, I can hardly bear to go on more a variation of the second than a completely
living in such luxury.... " and admonishes her- different reading. Students who grew to mistrust
self, "Three guineas for one hat!" That she Gilbert and ultimately sympathized with Angela
crosses out an entire page near the end of her believed Gilbert received his comeuppance at the
diary by writing "Egypt. Egypt. Egypt" over it end by realizing what had actually been going on.
indicates that she saw a connection between her The few critics who have written about "The Leg-
husband's treatment of her and his role in society acy" also hold this view. Robert Kiely writes, "The
which she was beginning to abhor. crux of the tale is the husband's realization that
Evelyn Haller in her article, "Isis Unveiled: Vir- his wife-the one person he supposedly knows
ginia Woolf's Use of Egyptian Myth," explains that through and through, a woman he thinks belongs
at the time Woolf wrote, Egypt was seen as a "sub- to him-is capable of a life. . . that he cannot
versive element' and its study was viewed as "a bold share" (Kiely, p. 88). Jean Guiguet writes that
undertaking, for it undermined the Victorian "The Legacy" begins as a "riddle" and ends with
world view" (Haller, p. 109). Haller explains that a "solution," crediting this particular story with
Woolf in particular "sid[ed] with Egypt against "more firmness and clarity of outline" (Guiguet,
imperialism, Christianity, and patriarchy" (Hallar, p. 341) than any of Woolf's other short stories.
p. 110). Although the evidence is slight and not Rudolf Villgradter believes that Woolf uses the
always firsthand, it seems clear that Angela is notions of illusion and reality to structure "The
decidedly more than just a good wife who falls in Legacy," arguing that illusion is eventually
love with another man and kills herself because stripped away, thereby exposing reality at the end
her lover does. Rather, she is an example of a of the story (Villgradter, p. 288). Even Selma Mey-
woman who comes to realize that the roles of gen- erowitz believes Gilbert arrives at a "final under-
der and class are interdependent and constrictive. standing of the illusions he maintained about his
Little has been written about "The Legacy," but wife and his marriage" (Meyerowitz, p. 246).
what has been written generally treats the story as I would like to suggest that Gilbert's realization
a misunderstanding between two people and not at the end is a mock realization, and that instead
as an indictment of class and gender roles. For of bringing the story to closure, it points out how
example, Jean Guiguet in Virginia Woolf and Her little we really know. Throughout the story, we
Worksremarks, "It is just a special case of the dif- have seen Gilbert repeatedly stereotype others

February 1986 77

This content downloaded from 142.104.240.194 on Mon, 25 Mar 2013 14:00:52 PM


All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
according to gender and class. Even a person he Works Cited
has never met is not exempt; in reference to B. M.,
Gilbert claims he "knew the type, and had no lik- Guiguet, Jean. Virginia Woolfand Her Works.Trans. Jean
Stewart.New York: Harcourt, 1965.
ing for this particular specimen, whoever B. M.
Haller, Evelyn. "Isis Unveiled: Virginia Woolfs Use of
might be." We also have ample evidence that Gil-
bert makes assumptions which later turn out to be Egyptian Myth." in Virginia Woolf:A FeministSlant,
Jane Marcus, ed. Lincoln: University of Nebraska
false. He blithely assumes his wife's death is not Press, 1983, pp. 109-131.
premeditated; he assumes that because he is Kiely, Robert. BeyondEgotism: The Fiction of JamesJoyce,
remembering Angela and Sissy working together Virginia Woolf,and D. H. Lawrence.Cambridge: Har-
"no doubt Miss Miller was thinking of that, too"; vard University Press, 1980.
and after Sissy confirms that B. M. was her Marcus, Jane. "Thinking Back through Our Mothers"
brother, he assumes he now knows the truth. Even in New FeministEssays on Virginia Woolf,Jane Marcus,
when Sissy asks if he would like an explanation, ed. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1981, pp.
1-30.
Gilbert refuses. By the end of the story we should
mistrust Gilbert enough to be suspicious when he Meyerowitz, Selma. "What Is to Console Us? The Pol-
claims that he has the truth, that "she had stepped itics of Deception in Woolfs Short Stories" in New
FeministEssayson Virginia Woolf,Jane Marcus, ed. Lin-
off the kerb to rejoin her lover." Instead of figur- coln: University of Nebraska Press, 1981, pp. 238-
ing out the riddle of Angela, Gilbert only sees a 252.
woman who prefers another man sexually. Instead Schlack, Beverly Ann. "Fathers in General: The Patriar-
of enlightening him as to what has really been chy in Virginia Woolfs Fiction" in Virginia Woolf:A
going on, Gilbert's final "realization" will probably FeministSlant,Jane Marcus, ed. Lincoln: University of
Nebraska Press, 1983, pp. 52-77.
only confirm his stereotypes about women. Angela
remains, despite Gilbert's claim of knowledge, Villgradter, Rudolf. "Die Konzeption der Wirklichkeit
als Struckturelement der Erzahlungen Virginia
basically unknown.
"The Legacy" does not just make the connec- Woolfs." Germanisch-RomanischeMonatsschrift 16
tion between class and gender; it makes the con- (1966): 282-297.
nection among class, gender, and traditional Woolf, Virginia. "The Legacy." A Haunted House and
OtherStories. London: Hogarth, 1943.
fiction-Gilbert is husband, politician, and narra-
tor. His authoritative voice presents reality as "a . "Modern Fiction." Collected Essays, 4 vols.
New York: Harcourt, Brace, and World, 1967.
series of gig-lamps symmetrically arranged," and
even in a moment of crisis and in the face of con- SA Room of One's Own. New York: Harcourt,
Brace, and World, 1957. First published in 1929.
tradictory evidence, he adheres strictly to his
myopic depiction of it. Not only is this rendition
of reality false, according to Woolf, it is, like class
and gender, a from of oppression which at times Ann Lavineformerlytaught in Verona
can be deadly. High School, Wisconsin.

78 English Journal

This content downloaded from 142.104.240.194 on Mon, 25 Mar 2013 14:00:52 PM


All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

You might also like