Sleep Fictions: A Digital Companion

II.X.5 Mirth

Lily’s phobia of becoming an inanimate object—like the stands upon which ladies hats “perched like birds just poising for flight"—conflicts with her biological need for sleep. Such trepidation is best articulated when Lily seeks a sleeping aid.

Describing Lily’s anxiety as due in part to her disgust for her shabby boarding-house bedroom, the narrative states: “But what she dreaded most of all was having to pass the chemist’s . . . her steps were irresistibly drawn toward the flaring plate-glass corner." Given Lily’s disdain for showy window displays and the disdain she harbors for sleeping amongst dinginess, it is surprise to see Lily go to deceitful lengths to obtain a sleep-drug.

Using Mrs. Hatch’s prescription, Lily degrades herself by posing as a woman who she feels is beneath her. The language of this passage infers that some force—beyond Lily’s conscious will—is driving her to behave in such an uncharacteristic way. The chemist’s advice to Lily--that “a drop or two more [than the prescribed dosage], and off you go"--suggests that what compels Lily to seek something so potentially lethal is her desperate desire for restorative rest. 

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