Maude Clare is set immediately after a wedding, it makes sense for there to be smiles but title suggests otherwise
3 main women and Lord Thomas' wedding
Lord Thomas' mother went through the same thing with her husband, generational, women will win men over
"Nell" has implications of death and has to die for newlove to be present
Who are the 3 women in Maude Clare?
Maude Clare
Thomas's mother
Nell
Maude Clare and Thomas used to be a couple
Maude Clare gives Thomas gifts as he will need blessings to manage in life "My half of the golden chain" special memento
"Lilies are budding now" shows Maude Clare and Thomas should be marrying, lilies are a symbol of death and suggest fertility, their relationship ended prematurely
Thomas gets embarrassed when Maude Clare mocks him
Forbidden love as Rosetti rejects lovers due to religion, is Maude Clare religious?
Maude Clare has clear disdain for the union between Nell and Thomas so gives Nell a "fickleheart" declaring she no longer wants anything to do with Thomas
"Take it or leave it as you will" reminds Nell she can still leave him like in No thank you John
Nell acknowledges Maude Clare is smarter and prettier but he loves her more due to her class, opposite of sisterhood as they are competing for affection
Nell is like Nora at the beginning of the play as Maude Clare is like Nora at the end of the play
"My lord was pale with inward strife" he's lying and marrying the wrong woman and he is trying to contain his emotions and masculinity
Nell recognises Thomas doesn't love her yet "I'll love him till he loves me best"
A03: Lord Thomas truly cared for Maude Clare but she was too lower social class
A03: Bourgeois marriage is only for financial value, economic transactions, possessions and ownership
A03: marriage as a social ill, sense of liberation for Maude Clare as marriage was an entrapment
Unlike Nell, Nora realises that women sacrifice their identity for men but their love is always selfish and self-serving
Maude Clare dwells on the idea that marriage is not ideal because it doesn't fulfil love
"Half of the golden chain" is a gift from Maude Clare and it's only whole when together and suggests that marriage deteriorates real love
Nell gets the last word in the poem but the final thought is from Maude Clare which emphasises the impending doom on their poem
A03: Maude Clare is confident, sexual and outrages whereas Nell is reserved, polite and emotionally restrained. The women are polar opposite and although Rosetti doesn't say who's ideas of love are more accurate the title is Maude Clare
A03: This poem is different to the Pre-Raphaelite theme of tragic love as it isn't infused with love and tragedy through the introduction of death but instead the love triangle which leaves all parties alive, unsatisfied and longing for fulfilled love
Maude Clare shows how she is willing to walk away and leave Thomas despite loving him and there is no melodrama
Nell suffers with inner conflict with herself to be better than Maude Clare and gain Thomas's love to stabilise her position
A03: IN the Victorian Era many marriages were arranged in order to benefit the family, upper class people tended to marry within their social class
A03: Women tended to come with a dowry from their fathers that was given to their husband after they wedded
Thomas is still torn about wanting Maude Clare despite having just married Nell so he "was pale with inward strife" due to the conflict between what his heart wants and what is best for his social class