Much of my practice is inspired by gothic novels and in particular the way many of them critique the position of women in society. I tend to combine gothic tropes such as veiling and nets with lace to suggest some of these ideas. The image above shows a net curtain inspired by a little-known gothic novel entitled Paul Ferroll by Caroline Clive. The eponymous ‘hero’ of this novel murders his wife at the beginning of the story and evades justice at the end. My net curtain presents the voice of the murdered wife as she speaks from beyond the grave to give her side of the story. The idea being that the net has sieved her words out of the ether in the home where she remains a ghostly presence.
I am not the
only one to find this story troubling. It seems a strange subject for a
nineteenth century novel aimed at a mainly female readership. Many readers
complained to the author about the outcome of the story, so when the book was
republished she added an extra final chapter
in which Paul Ferroll, having escaped from prison and fled to America with the
help of his daughter, caught a fever and died. The implication being that he
was punished by natural justice rather than the hangman’s noose. Many readers
weren’t satisfied with that explanation either, so Caroline Clive wrote a
prequel to the story with the unsurprising title: Why Paul Ferroll killed
his wife. This story explains how he met both his first and second wife and how the former tricked him
into marriage – so what else could he do but murder her! I still don’t find this
a valid explanation for murder but wisely Caroline Clive gave up trying to
persuade her readers that Paul Ferroll was a real hero and published no more stories
about him. Although you have to admire her for cleverly building up indignation
against him and selling two books about the same subject!














