Home > Mrs. Bathurst Summary & Study Guide > Essays and Criticism > Mrs. Bathurst’: Indeterminacy in Motion
Mrs. Bathurst | Mrs. Bathurst’: Indeterminacy in Motion
In the following excerpt, Lodge discusses the
themes of love, death, and guilt in Kipling’s
‘‘Mrs. Bathurst.’’
That is what Mrs Bathurst does when she appears on the screen: ‘She walked on and on till she melted out of the picture.’ And it is, metaphorically speaking, what Vickery does: he steps out of the frame of Pyecroft’s perception at Simonstown station.
In this remarkable passage Kipling manages vividly to convey the disconcerting effect of the cinematic image—at once lifelike and insubstantial— when it was still a novelty, and to turn this experience into a poignant symbol of both the pain of disappointed desire and the mystery of human motivation. To Vickery, watching...
[The entire page is 1298 words long]
Join eNotes
The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the:
Summary and Analysis – Themes – Characters – And much more...
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Mrs. Bathurst: Introduction
- Mrs. Bathurst: Summary
- Mrs. Bathurst: Rudyard Kipling Biography
- Mrs. Bathurst: Characters
- Mrs. Bathurst: Themes
- Mrs. Bathurst: Style
- Mrs. Bathurst: Historical Context
- Mrs. Bathurst: Critical Overview
- Mrs. Bathurst: Essays and Criticism
- Mrs. Bathurst: Compare and Contrast
- Mrs. Bathurst: Topics for Further Study
- Mrs. Bathurst: What Do I Read Next?
- Mrs. Bathurst: Bibliography and Further Reading
- Mrs. Bathurst: Pictures
- Copyright
Related Topics
Tell a friend about Mrs. Bathurst at eNotes.
