Department of English

Faculty of Arts, Chulalongkorn University


“The Lady's Maid”

(1920)

 

Katherine Mansfield

(October 14, 1888January 9, 1923)

Notes

 

171  eiderdown: a thick covering for the top of a bed, filled with soft feathers or warm material, used especially in the past (Cambridge Advanced Learner's)

 

171  lumbago: general pain in the lower part of the back (Cambridge Advanced Learner's)

 

172  pinny: UK informal for pinafore (LOOSE CLOTHING) (Cambridge Advanced Learner's)

pinafore: (informal pinny) a piece of clothing worn by women over the front of other clothes to keep them clean while doing something dirty, especially cooking (Cambridge Advanced Learner's)

 

173  Sheldon

 

174  ducky: (mainly US old-fashioned informal) excellent or very pleasant (Cambridge Advanced Learner's)

Life has been ducky since she got out of the hospital.

What a ducky little room!

(Merriam-Webster)

1: darling, cute <a ducky little tearoom>
2: satisfactory, fine <everything is just ducky>

 

174  brooch: a small piece of jewellery with a pin at the back that is fastened to a woman's clothes (Cambridge Advanced Learner's)

 

174  dagger: a short pointed knife which is sharp on both sides, used especially in the past as a weapon (Cambridge Advanced Learner's)

 



 

Comprehension Checks

  • Is "eleven o'clock" at the beginning of the story in the morning or at night?

  • Who or what is the maid addressing with the words "Now you needn't be in too much of a hurry to say your prayers" (171)?

  • How old is the lady's maid?

              

Study Questions

  • Fill in the missing side of the conversation.

  • Notice the presence of time in the story. How is time conveyed?

  • What is the relationship like between Ellen and her "ladies"? How does it compare to that between her and Harry?
  • What are the similarities and differences between the generations of women portrayed?
  • What is wrong with "thinking" at the end of the story?
  • Explore contrasts in the story such as lady vs. maid, holy vs. wicked, alive vs. dead, youth vs. age, close vs. open.
           



 

Review Sheet

Characters

Ellen "my mother died of consumption when I was four" (172); "I cut off all my hair" (172)

My lady's dead mother  

My lady   "she kneels on the hard carpet" (171); "your lumbago" (171)

Madam  

Grandfather "kept a hair-dresser's shop" (172)

Aunt " a cripple, an upholstress. Tiny!" (172)

Harry "had a little flower-shop just down the road and across from where we was living" (173); "White! he turned as white as a woman" (174)

 

Setting

 

Plot

 

 


 

Vocabulary

plot

conflict

setting

characters; characterization

dialogue

diction

imagery

metaphor

simile




 

Sample Student Reading Responses to Katherine Mansfield's “The Lady's Maid


Response 1:

 

 

 

 

 

Student Name

2202235 Reading and Analysis for the Study of English Literature

Acharn Puckpan Tipayamontri

January 18, 2010

Reading Response

 

Title

 

Text

 

 

 

 

 

            

 


 

Reference


Mansfield, Katherine. "The Lady's Maid." The Garden-Party, and Other Stories, Century Hutchinson, 1988, pp. 17175.

 

 

Links

 

Katherine Mansfield

 

 


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Last updated March 18, 2019