24. 10. 2014.

Mr. Meeson's will in execution (tattooing scene)


Preferred Citation: Christ, Carol T., and John O. Jordan, editors Victorian Literature and the Victorian Visual Imagination. Berkeley:  University of California Press,  c1995 1995.  SOURCE

Mr. Meeson's Will (online literature)

 
 
 Augusta Smithers is a frustrated best-selling first author, financially cheated by her contractual obligations to the huge Birmingham firm of Meeson's. A series of improbable events precipitates her into love with the proprietor's son—and precipitates her and the father overboard together in the subsequent shipwreck of a passenger liner. Washed to a forlorn shore with him and a few other survivors, Augusta arrives at the moral dilemma of the novel: whether to sacrifice herself, out of love for her fiancé, to allow the dying and now repentent father to write a last will that would reverse his recent disinheriting of the young man. The difficulty is that in the absence of all normal writing materials, the amended will can only be inscribed on her neck and shoulders by a sailor, one Bill Jones, willing to undertake the tattooing assignment. If she had wanted, for instance, "a fancy pictur of your young man, I might manage it on your arm," but for a "doccyment" of the sort in question "one wants space."[11] Instead of indulging herself with an erotic fetish, then, she must in her own person become a legal one. Augusta of course stalwartly submits to the painful inscription (Fig. 95). She then delivers the signature and dictates of paternal intention into a court of law, where the very admissibility of her text, of herself as text—still sight unseen—is ponderously debated, only to be read into evidence at last in an eroticized spectacle of disclosure that saves the day and helps unite her with her lover (Fig. 96). This resulting union with her fiancé is witnessed by his embrace of the heroine's body, marked as it is by the material index, the wound, of familial sanction and continuity. From financially abused writer to painfully inscribed text: such is the heroine's sacrificial decline. If woman in the standard Victorian marriage plot may at any point operate merely as signifier of patriarchal intentionality, sign and prize of a hero's coming into his majority, here the fiancée—as corporeal text of the would-be father-in-law's will—is a reductio ad absurdum of that signifying function. In a nightmare contortion of female expressivity, the heroine, once having written to be read, achieves the deserved financial reward of her popular success only after being read in her own person at last.
And read not just by the staring court. For, in her own readable figure, Augusta Smithers becomes the novel's title figure.[12] She stands before us as Mr. Meeson's Will incarnate, heroine of the illustrated novel that the Victorian reader here sees—and I choose the dead metaphor advisedly—to completion. Then, too, the juridical logic implied by this climactic courtroom scene of actionable decipherment cagily doubles for the interpretive signals of a more familiar novelistic rhetoric. The judge, that is, speaking with the dubiousness of a critical reader, nonetheless succumbs to credulity with the ultimate cliché of documentary verification in those exotic late-Victorian thrillers of which Haggard is to become the best-selling master: "The whole tale is undoubtedly of a wild and romantic order, and once again illustrates the saying that 'truth is stranger than fiction'" (262).
In all this, the levels of implication emerge in a form that verges on a fourfold allegory: biological, erotic, generic, and finally textual. The woman's body is always in one sense the conduit for patriarchal succession. So much, first, for woman as wife: potential gestational vessel awaiting the biological imprint of the male will. Second, erotically, the woman's body is immediately reinscribed into just that masculine line of succession as object of desire and exchange. Third, generically, the fetishized female form is the very figure for the spectacle either of family melodrama or of exotic romance, what Barthes calls the "striptease" of narrative disclosure itself. It is only at the fourth—the textual—level that we come around to the promised photographic moment that the reader may have thought this paper was losing sight of.
No, it is the story itself that seems to forget its own photographic twist. For nothing is mentioned during the final courtroom disrobing about a transitional bit of prudent jurisprudence by which the legality of the woman as text can be ratified. The intermediate chapter is called "How Augusta Is Filed" and narrates the brainstorm by which the Court Registrar hits on "something better than a certified copy of the will," namely "a photographic copy" (213). After the appointed photographer "took two or three shots at her back," he promised "that he would bring a life-sized reproduction to be filed in the Registry in a couple of days" (215–16). The much-reduced novelistic illustrations are of course all we actually see, except as we visualize the life-size Augusta in court, the former novelist as text, embodying her own testamentary declaration. In sum, between the woman as readable writer at the start of the novel and the female body as legible text in the climactic trial by evidentiary ordeal, what has intervened is the photographic equivalent of literary textuality: the character-as print phenomenon, a textual figuration to be archived (or elsewhere marketed) and read upon demand.
In that climactic courtroom illustration, the magnifying glass in the judge's hands is the ultimate tease. Reaching for one of our own, in order to make out the writing that was so clear in the earlier etching (the "I leave all" of the tattooing-in-progress), we find what we might have suspected: that the full and decisive text is mere indecipherable hatchings (see enlargement, Fig. 97). What is legibly incised there is only the woman's body itself, not the signifiers it is supposed to carry. That body is what we are all there, and all we are there, to read.

1-Fig. 95.:Mr. Meeson's will in execution (tattooing scene), from H. Rider Haggard,
Mr. Meeson's Will,  1888.
2-Fig. 96.: Courtroom disrobing, from H. Rider Haggard,  Mr. Meeson's Will,  1888.
3-Fig. 97.: Detail of Fig. 96.