Dinah Morris
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Dinah Morris is a major character in George Eliot's novel Adam Bede (1859); a Methodist lay preacher, she was modelled on Eliot's aunt Elizabeth Evans.
Dinah visits the fictional community of Hayslope — a rural, pastoral and close-knit community in 1799. She says to Lisbeth Bede in Chapter Ten, "I work in the cotton-mill when I am at home."[1] She lives thirty miles away in the fictional Snowfield, in the fictional Stonyshire County.
[edit] Description
She is a cousin by marriage of Hetty Sorrel, and related to the Poysers. Judith Poyser is her aunt, and wishes Dinah would stay with them in Hayslope longer.
Dinah is deeply religious, and a follower of Wesleyan Methodism. She lives to comfort others, including Adam Bede's mother when her husband drowns. She offers to help Hetty if she is ever in need. When Hetty commits her crime and cannot own up to it, Dinah's presence allows Hetty to face what she has done and ask for forgiveness.
At the beginning of the novel, she lives at the Poyser Farm because she is Mrs. Poyser's niece. Despite the fact that she is an attractive woman, she seems to show no signs of self-consciousness while she preaches. In fact, she is sometimes considered to be Eliot's most confident female character.
According to Diana Neill, "The plot [of Adam Bede] is founded on a story told to George Eliot by her aunt Elizabeth Evans, a preacher, and the original of Dinah Morris of the novel, of a confession of child-murder, made to her by a girl in prison."[2]
Dinah's preaching is extremely effective, and persuades the extremely vain Bess to take off her gaudy earrings temporarily. Her resistance to marriage because she is worried that it will curtail her religious teaching is resolved by Eliot in a manner calculated not to upset the male hierarchy.[3] It turns out that Dinah was not in fact prevented from a traditional marriage by piety, but rather by the fact that no man that she truly loved had yet asked her to marry him. Indeed, she quiets into a typical housewife at the end of the novel, even consenting to discontinue her preaching because the Methodist men have decided that it is not a good idea.[4]
[edit] Footnotes
[edit] References
- Eliot, George. Adam Bede. London, 1859.
- Gates, Sarah. "The Sound of the Scythe Being Whetted: Gender, Genre, and Realism in Adam Bede." Studies in the Novel 30 (1998).
- Martin, Bruce. "Rescue and Marriage in Adam Bede". Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900 12 (1974).
- Neill, S. Diana. A Short History of the English Novel. New York: Collier.