Analysis of Character: The nun of monza
Alessandro Manzoni, also known as the greatest novelist of Italian history expresses his opinions of forbidden love and consequence throughout the Betrothed, specifically by introducing a minor character with a great backstory. Gertrude, also known as “The nun of
Monza”, is brought into the story when one of the protagonists, Lucia, is sent to a convent as she has been forbidden to marry her one true love Renzo. Immediately following Lucia’s arrival to the convent, Gertrude appears and her life story takes up the following two chapters of the novel. Gertrude grew up at a time when a woman had two choices in life: the first was to find a spouse and have children while the other option was to become a nun. As a child, Gertrude had no desire to become a nun, but rather dreamt of the day when she could finally fall in love.
Gertrude’s father indirectly forced his daughter into becoming a nun by giving her dolls dressed as nuns, sending her to Sunday school, and having her read the bible. The brain washed child grew up to having no choice but to move to a convent and take on the life long commitment of becoming a nun.
The ceremony in which Gertrude accepts her future being a life devoted to God, she ponders her decision for a moment with conflicting thoughts rushing through her mind. She debates with herself on whether this is the life she wants or if this is the life society wants. When the church asks her if Gertrude has chosen to devote her life to God because of her own desire she pauses while looking at her father. After another inner battle with her emotions, Gertrude finally vows to become a nun.
Later on in Gertrude’s life, she goes to live in a convent located in an Italian town called
“Monza”, thus taking on the name “The Nun of Monza”. Here she spends her days praying during the day, but living a completely different life during the night. As time goes on she falls in love and develops a forbidden