Friday, September 14, 2018

What happened to Rezia?


Rezia is Septimus’ companion throughout Mrs. Dalloway. She left her home so that she could live with him in England. While at times she gets frustrated with him and his condition, she stays with him and loves him. She tied up and kept his messages of Universal Love, which was very meaningful for Septimus. On pages 144-145, Septimus sees Rezia as “a flowering tree” who “triumphed” over the doctors. Overall, (in my opinion), they genuinely loved each other, and (hear me out) the death of Septimus is to Rezia what the death of Evans is to Septimus.

After Septimus’ death, we stay in Rezia’s point of view for five paragraphs, then do not return to her for the remainder of the novel. In these paragraphs, we seem to get Septimus-like thoughts as someone she has a deep connection with has just died. Directly after Septimus dies, Woolf narrates from Rezia’s point of view: “Rezia ran to the window, she saw; she understood” (146). Not only does Rezia understand what has happened to Septimus; she also understands how Septimus felt after losing Evans. Septimus had formed a close bond with Evans throughout the course of the war, and, very close to the end of the war, Evans died. The preceding section where Septimus and Rezia are together is very reminiscent of that: they are on the same side, against the doctors. Mrs. Filmer’s apron reminds Rezia of a flag, and she thinks “Men killed in battle were thus saluted, and Septimus had been through the War” (146).

As we go further after the death of Septimus, Rezia begins to focus on things that Septimus tended to focus on, such as Big Ben: “The clock was striking—one, two, three: how sensible the sound was; compared with all this thumping and whispering; like Septimus himself” (146). Because Rezia has gone through a similar traumatic experience, she now understands the sensibility of Septimus’ reactions and behavior.

Perhaps the most distinct emotion Septimus has after the death of Evans is his inability to feel. Rezia has this too, as she talked with Mrs. Filmer: “’He is dead,’she said, smiling at the poor old woman who guarded her with her honest light-blue eyes fixed on the door.” (147). Contrary to what we would think of as a normal reaction, Rezia seems very subdued, almost content. She is in a dream-like, hallucinatory state for our last interaction with her. Now, how much of that reaction comes from whatever sedative Dr. Holmes put in her drink and how much of it is genuine is up for debate, but either way, it seems almost as if Rezia can’t quite feel any emotions either.

A similarity Rezia and Septimus have is their distrust of the doctors. Septimus truly hated the doctors and placed special emphasis on their use of the word “must” in their prescriptions, where Septimus felt he must do things because the doctors told him. After Septimus’ death, Rezia hears Dr. Holmes: “She must be brave and drink something, he said (What was it? Something sweet), for her husband was horribly mangled, would not recover consciousness, she must not see him, must be spared as much as possible, would have the inquest to go through, poor young woman” (146). Later on, there is the sentence “But they must do as the doctors said” (147). While Rezia herself does not say that she is bothered by the word “must,” it still comes up a lot in our final paragraphs with Rezia.

Readers leave Rezia in an ominous position: “She saw the large outline of his body standing dark against the window. So that was Dr. Holmes” (147). Rezia finally fully sees and understands the Dr. Holmes that Septimus saw. By showing Holmes as a dark figure against the window in Rezia’s point of view, Woolf shows readers that Rezia knows the cruelty of Holmes and that Rezia suffers similarly to Septimus.

That is where Rezia disappears and readers are left to wonder what would happen to her next. Woolf could have just as easily omitted this part of the story, cutting off where Septimus dies. But I think she includes it to prove a point: that when Rezia underwent a traumatic event, she easily sees the reasoning behind Septimus’ behavior; that responses like Septimus’ are not unsual when someone has been traumatized. Throughout the novel, I tended to think of Rezia's perspective as normal, but Woolf shows how quickly that can all change. 

Thoughts?



3 comments:

  1. This is really interesting! I've never thought about this before, but I do find Rezia's possible futures intriguing. I like that you related Rezia's fight against the doctors to Septimus fighting in war. I guess in the way that Septimus fought for the England that was Miss Isabelle Pole and Shakespeare, Rezia was fighting for the Septimus she had joked with moments before. I also think this is interesting because I’ve heard of parents of sick kids developing PTSD from their stress and trauma, so this isn't unrealistic. I could definitely see Woolf continuing this by having traumatized and grief-ridden Rezia subjected to the rest cure and other outdated treatments.

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  2. I like this reading of the line, "she understood," and I haven't heard this before. The immediate meaning seems to be that she "understands" what has just happened, but I think it's plausible that there's this deeper grasping of Septmimus's trauma and despair here, as she feels this intense loss for the first time.

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  3. I also find it interesting that Rezia disappears, almost as if her sole purpose was to feel what Septimus felt. I think Woolf may have added the part about the sedative in her drink, which caused a hallucinatory state, to further draw the parallels between her and Septimus.

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