The use of the title in the prologue is to a great extent appropriate for the novella as it implies a sense of heightened tension as if the title referred to the tightening of physical thumbscrews. Douglas says that as the child in the story has the effect of turning the screw and increasing suspense for the reader, how much more apprehension is created by the involvement of two children, both Miles and Flora. Tension is also increased in the opening chapter through the use of emphatic and hyperbolic language to prepare the reader for a traditional ghost story. For example, the narrator describes the Governess’s tale as “quite too horrible” and containing, “dreadful – dreadfulness!” James uses such ardent language to encourage the reader to arrive at preconceived conclusions about the direction of the novella in conjunction with other traditional horror stories such as Dracula and Frankenstein. However, this can act as a trap for the unwary reader as the novella contains layers of deeper meaning which offer alternative explanations for the ghostly apparitions such as the emotionally unstable mind of the Governess. Furthermore, James creates the sense of sustained and accumulative tension as the plot develops; this could be represented by a physical turning of a screw which twists in the same way that the plot thickens, revealing different perspectives of the Governess and the state of the children. Prolonged suspense is also generated
The use of the title in the prologue is to a great extent appropriate for the novella as it implies a sense of heightened tension as if the title referred to the tightening of physical thumbscrews. Douglas says that as the child in the story has the effect of turning the screw and increasing suspense for the reader, how much more apprehension is created by the involvement of two children, both Miles and Flora. Tension is also increased in the opening chapter through the use of emphatic and hyperbolic language to prepare the reader for a traditional ghost story. For example, the narrator describes the Governess’s tale as “quite too horrible” and containing, “dreadful – dreadfulness!” James uses such ardent language to encourage the reader to arrive at preconceived conclusions about the direction of the novella in conjunction with other traditional horror stories such as Dracula and Frankenstein. However, this can act as a trap for the unwary reader as the novella contains layers of deeper meaning which offer alternative explanations for the ghostly apparitions such as the emotionally unstable mind of the Governess. Furthermore, James creates the sense of sustained and accumulative tension as the plot develops; this could be represented by a physical turning of a screw which twists in the same way that the plot thickens, revealing different perspectives of the Governess and the state of the children. Prolonged suspense is also generated