![]() Abroad, they tramped through such places as the jungles of South America to collect the flower they worshipped-the orchid. They adorned their buttonholes with carnations, their hair with camellias, their homes with chrysanthemums. ![]() The Victorian love affair with flowers was manifested in activities both at home and abroad.4 In domestic and national spaces, the Victorians planted roses, sold lilies, and exhibited pansies. The text, therefore, establishes a crucial itinerary, in which, step by step, the development of a young girl is used to further male power. Although Mary does not easily relinquish her wildness, she becomes a girl who, like the ideal garden, can provide both beauty and comfort, and who can cultivate her male cousin, the young patriarch-in-training. As we shall see, Mary's cultivation follows the steps of nineteenth-century garden theorists in their plans for the perfect garden: namely, enclosure, imprisonment, instruction, and beautification. Plunging her hands into English soil becomes a cure for creolization. This metamorphosis is accompanied by-in fact, is inseparable from-the Indian-born Mary's inculcation in English ways and values. She will trade her sickliness for health, her yellow skin for white, her Indian nature for an English one. In the Yorkshire mansion and on its grounds, Mary takes the first steps toward proper girlhood and womanhood. While the young Mary cultivates a secret garden, her work in this maternal space disciplines her. The Secret Garden is a novel that only could be nurtured in the late nineteenth century and brought to fruition at the beginning of the twentieth century-a time when interest in gardens reached a frenzy, when gender roles were being hotly contested, and when England was adjusting to the return of its colonizing subjects. Critics such as Phyllis Bixler, Elizabeth Lennox Keyser, and Anna Krugovov Silver have produced feminist studies of The Secret Garden which explore domesticity and mothering, but ignore the increasingly urgent burden of feminism today: the global significance of gender relations at home.2 Jerry Phillips, by contrast, provides an excellent discussion of "blowback," the disruptive effects of returning colonialists, but does not consider Mary Lennox as a gendered subject.3 My own reading of The Secret Garden stresses the intimate connection between gender, class, and imperialism. The most important essays on The Secret Garden have separated these terms. And, when Mary enters the secret garden, her story becomes further entangled in the thorny issues of gender, class, and imperialism. The omniscient narrator of Burnett's novel, while ostensibly recording Mary's transformation from "selfish pig" to caring cousin, participates from the beginning in an imperialist discourse by bestowing on Mary the same bestial insult that she bestows on her Indian servants. At the beginning of Francis Hodgson Burnett's The Secret Garden (1911), the narrative voice informs us that nine-year-old Mary Lennox is not only "the most disagreeable-looking child ever seen," but "as tyrannical and selfish a little pig as ever lived" (9-10).1 Orphaned by a cholera epidemic in India, Mary must live at Misselthwaite manor, her uncle's Yorkshire estate.
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