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The Invisible Man Study Guide
CHAPTER 1: The Strange Man’s Arrival
A stranger arrives in Bramble hurst
railway station. He is bundled from head to foot with only the tip of his nose
showing. He enters the Coach & Horses Inn and demands a room and a fire.
Mrs. Hall, the owner prepares a supper for him and offers to take his coat and
hat, but he refuses to take them off. When he finally removes the hat, his
entire head is swathed in a bandage. Mrs. Hall thinks he has endured some
accident. She tries to get him to talk about himself, but he is taciturn with
her, although not particularly rude.
Notes - This introduction to the Invisible Man through the eyes of
the town people is actually about midway through his own story. He has already
gone from place to place trying to keep his cover and has committed two acts of
violence, one against his own father and the other against the proprietor of a
costume shop whom he tied and gagged in order to be able to steal clothing and
money. Nevertheless, his intention at this point is simply to find a quiet
place and work as quickly as possible to find an antidote to the invisibility.
The primary thread of the story-that of the growing rumors and suspicions,
which eventually contribute to his exposure-is begun.
CHAPTER 2: Mr. Teddy Henfrey’s First Impressions
Teddy Henfrey, a clock repairman,
comes to the inn for tea. Mrs. Hall asks him to “repair the clock” in the
stranger’s room. Teddy deliberately takes as long as he can with the clock,
taking it apart and reassembling it for no reason. The stranger finally gets
him to hurry up and leave. Offended, Teddy talks himself into believing that
the stranger is someone of a suspicious nature, perhaps even wanted by the
police and is wrapped up to conceal his identity. Teddy runs into Mr. Hall and
warns him about the stranger, informing him that a “lot of luggage” will be coming.
It would seem that the stranger intends to stay awhile.
Mr. Hall goes home intending to
investigate the stranger, but is put off by the short-tempered demeanor of his
wife.
Notes - Mrs. Hall, although not a major character, is revealed as
rather devious in a harmless sort of way. She really wants to know what the
man’s disfigurement is; she assumes he has been in a horrible accident, and the
motherly side of her wants to know how to express sympathy. She is a very good
innkeeper under the circumstances. While she is not above using Teddy to pry
for information, she does not contribute to the spread of rumors. In fact, we
are told later that she defends him as long as he is faithful about paying his
bill. Teddy is a character typical of the other people of the town. He wants to
know the man’s story, and when he is rebuffed for his persistence, he begins to
imagine all sorts of things. His imagination soon becomes fact to him, and he
spreads his new knowledge to anyone who will listen.
CHAPTER 3: The Thousand and One Bottles
A stranger arrives in Bramble hurst
railway station. He is bundled from head to foot with only the tip of his nose
showing. He enters the Coach & Horses Inn and demands a room and a fire.
Mrs. Hall, the owner prepares a supper for him and offers to take his coat and
hat, but he refuses to take them off. When he finally removes the hat, his
entire head is swathed in a bandage. Mrs. Hall thinks he has endured some
accident. She tries to get him to talk about himself, but he is taciturn with
her, although not particularly rude.
The stranger’s luggage arrives at
the inn. Numerous crates fill the deliveryman’s cart, some of them containing
bottles packaged in straw. Fearenside, the cartman, owns a dog that starts to
growl when the stranger comes down the steps to help with the boxes. The dog
jumps for the stranger’s hand, but misses and sinks his teeth in a pant leg.
The dog tears open the trouser leg, whereupon the stranger goes quickly back
into the inn and to his room.
Concerned about the possibility of
injury, Mr. Hall goes to the stranger’s room. He gets a glimpse of what seems
like a white mottled face before he is shoved by an unseen force back through
the door. The stranger soon reappears at the door, his trousers changed, and gives
orders for the rest of his luggage. The stranger unpacks 6 crates of bottles,
which he arranges across the windowsill and all the available table and shelf
space in the inn’s parlor-a space he seems to have commandeered for himself.
Mrs. Hall enters later to tend to
his needs and catches a quick glimpse of him without his glasses. His eyes seem
hollow; he quickly puts his glasses on. She starts to complain about the straw
on the floor, but he tells her to put it on the bill and to knock before entering
his rooms. She points out that he could lock his door if he doesn’t want to be
bothered, advice that he takes. He then works behind the locked door all
afternoon. At one point, Mrs. Hall hears him raving about not being able to “go
on.” She hears a sound like a bottle being broken. Later she takes him tea and
notes the broken glass and a stain on the floor. He again tells her to “put it
on the bill.”
Meanwhile Fearenside talks in the
beer shop of Iping Hangar. Fearenside says that the stranger is a “black man,”
an assumption derived from the absence of “pink flesh” when the trouser leg was
ripped open. When reminded of the pink nose, Fearenside claims that the man
must therefore be a “piebald,” or a part white, part black creature.
Notes - Fearenside is more observant than even he realizes. Of
course, Griffin knows that a close look at his torn pant leg will reveal a
“missing” leg, but he also needs to get away from the dog until they can get
the animal under control. Subtle differences among characters of the town are
beginning to be revealed. Mrs. Hall notices a “hollow” look to the guest’s
eyes, an appearance masked by the dark glasses he usually wears. His
frustration is over the failure of his experiments; she notes the mess he makes
but cleans up after him with minimal complaint when he gives her extra money.
Fearenside, on the other hand, liberally discusses the “discoveries” he has
made as a result of the brief encounter. Fearenside refers to horses as an
example of the “patchy” color that can happen when black and white are mixed.
CHAPTER 4: Mr. Cuss Interviews the Stranger
The stranger works diligently in his
room until the end of April with only occasional skirmishes with Mrs. Hall.
Whenever she disapproves of anything he does, he quiets her with additional
payment. He rarely goes out during the day, but goes out nearly every night,
muffled up regardless of the weather.
His identity becomes a topic of
speculation in the town. Mrs. Hall defends him, repeating his own words that he
is an “experimental investigator.” The view of the town is that he is a
criminal trying to escape justice. Mr. Gould, the probationary assistant
imagines that the man must be an “anarchist” who is preparing explosives.
Another group of people believe he
is a piebald and could make a lot of money if he chose to show himself at the
fairs. All agree, however, that due to his habits of secrecy, they dislike him.
The young men begin to mock his bearing; a song called “Bogey Man” becomes
popular and children follow at a distance calling out “Bogey Man.”
The curiosity of a general
practitioner named Cuss is aroused, and he contrives for an interview. During
the interview the stranger accidentally removes his hand from his pocket. Cuss
is able to see down the empty sleeve to the elbow. Cuss questions him about
“moving an empty sleeve.” The stranger laughs, then extends the empty sleeve
toward Cuss’s face and pinches his nose. Cuss leaves in terror and tells his
story to Bunting, the vicar.
Notes - In spite of Hall’s defense, Griffin will be the cause of
his own destruction. Perhaps it is the frustration of always having to guard
his secret that causes him to act offensively when challenged, but in any case,
he could have handled the situation differently. The deliberate pinching of
Cuss’s nose is not only an unnecessary affront, but is also a mark of Griffin’s
immaturity. Bringing pain upon others for the sake of his own amusement,
however, will soon deteriorate to performing criminal acts. In fact, although
Bunting is about to become Griffin’s new victim, Griffin has already been
foraging at night for places that he could rob in order to maintain his
materials and keep up with his rent.
This chapter nudges the plot forward
a bit by bringing in Bunting the vicar. The actions which will follow begin to
bring the town together in an awareness of a stranger in their midst.
CHAPTER 5: The Burglary and the Vicarage
Mrs. Bunting, the vicar’s wife,
wakes up at the sound of bare feet walking through her house. She wakes her
husband and the two watch and listen as a candle is lit and papers are rustled
in the study. When they hear the telltale clink of money, Rev. Bunting rushes
into the study with a raised poker, but the room appears to be empty. Their
money disappears and at one point they hear a sneeze in the hallway but are
unable to locate or see the intruder.
Notes - Due to the necessity of running about naked, Griffin has
caught a cold, which he is unable to completely hide. His sneezes begin to give
him away even though people don’t yet understand what they are hearing. In
robbing the Buntings, Griffin also sets himself up for accusations and criminal
charges. Thus when his presence is discovered, it is inevitable that people
will begin to expect the worst and will be concentrating on apprehending him
rather than helping him.
CHAPTER 6: The Furniture that Went Mad
The Halls arise very early in the
morning on Whit-Monday in order to take care of some private business having
something to do with their wine cellar. In passing by the guest’s room, Mr.
Hall notices that the door is ajar. A few minutes later, he sees that the bolts
on the front door of the house are unlocked although he remembers shutting them
on the previous night. The guest is not in his room, but his clothes, shoes,
and even his hat are scattered about. As the Halls are investigating, the
bed-clothes suddenly gather themselves into a bundle and toss themselves over
the bottom rail. Then a chair flies toward Mrs. Hall. The legs of the chair are
brought to rest against her back, propelling her out of the room. The door
slams and is locked behind them. The Halls decide that the stranger is a
spirit.
They send for Sandy Wadgers, the
blacksmith who is also supposed to be an exorcist. Wadgers is joined by Huxter,
and together they ponder the likelihood of witchcraft and contemplate the
propriety of breaking through the door in order to examine the situation more
closely. However, before they can carry out any such action, the door opens and
the stranger emerges, wrapped and bundled as usual. He distracts them long
enough to enter the parlor and slam the door against them. When Mr. Hall raps
on the door and demands an explanation, the stranger tells him to “go to the
devil” and “shut the door after you.”
Notes - The panic is building for Griffin, while characterization
is enhanced for the people in the town. Wadgers delays “breaking” into the
room, using the excuse of propriety when the real and very human reason is
apprehension. While they may talk of spirits and witchcraft in their leisure,
it is clear that they have no real experience with such. The growing impression
is that the Invisible Man is something evil. Griffin helps the idea along with
his continued offenses.
CHAPTER 7: The Unveiling of the Stranger
The stranger remains locked in the
parlor all morning. He rings his bell for Mrs. Hall several times, but she does
not answer it. About noon, he emerges and demands to know why his meals have
not been brought to him. Mrs. Hall tells him that his bill has not been paid in
five days. She refuses to accept the excuse that he is waiting for a
remittance. When he produces some money, she refuses it, saying she first wants
to know why he doesn’t enter by doorways and move about like normal people.
For his answer, the stranger removes
all his head wrappings, including his nose and moustache. He thus looks like a
person with a missing head. At the sound of screams a crowd of people run
toward the inn. “Eye-witnesses” suddenly babble hysterical stories of the man
attacking the servant girl, and brandishing a knife. Bobby Jaffers, the village
constable, appears with a warrant.
The stranger slaps Jaffers with his
glove, but then says he will surrender. He will not accept handcuffs, however.
As the constable, Halls and others watch, the man removes the rest of his
clothes, becoming invisible before them. He tells them that he is invisible.
Jaffers wants to take him in for questioning on suspicion of robbing the
Bunting home. A scuffle ensues, and the stranger, now known as the “Invisible
Man,” escapes.
Notes - This is the last chapter in which Mrs. Hall has a
significant presence, but the reader is left with the image of a very
courageous, and spunky lady. She has, just a day before, been shoved out of one
of her own rooms with a floating chair; she knows the man has entered and left
by some mysterious means and yet she rejects his money and demands an
explanation. Griffin’s own actions are quickly becoming offensive, violent and
deliberately geared toward creating reactions of fear and terror in his
victims. There seems to be no sense of humanity left in him; everything he does
is first for survival, then for the sheer thrill of striking terror-simply
because he can. He is like an evil schoolboy who enjoys pulling the legs off of
flies just to see them squirm. It never occurs to him to try to solve his
problem by any means other than violence and terror.
CHAPTER 8: In Transit
An amateur naturalist named Gibbins
is relaxing out on the downs and hears someone coughing, sneezing and swearing.
Frightened, Gibbins gets up and runs home.
Notes - This chapter simply indicates the passage of the Invisible
Man through the countryside.
CHAPTER 9: Mr. Thomas Marvel
Marvel is an eccentric bachelor and
local tramp who likes to be comfortable and take his time about things. He has
come across a pair of boots in a ditch. He has tried them on and found them too
big, and is occupied in contemplating the boots when he hears a voice nearby.
Marvel talks about boots with the voice for several minutes before turning to
see his visitor and finding no one there.
First Marvel tells himself that he
has had too much to drink, then that his imagination has played some sort of
trick on him. The Invisible Man begins throwing things at Marvel to convince
him that he is not just imagining the presence. Eventually the Man convinces
Marvel that he is real and is in need of an accomplice who will first give him
food, water and shelter. He delivers an unfinished threat of what he will do if
Marvel betrays him.
Notes - Marvel appears eccentric, unassuming and something of a
loner, which would be bait to Griffin. He has no family, and apparently little
money as he is first found contemplating whether or not he wants to keep a set
of cast-off boots. He is fat, red faced, slow moving and doesn’t seem terribly
bright, but that is merely the effect of Griffin having the advantage over him.
As soon as he realizes his predicament, he begins to look for any possible
means of escape. As for Griffin, he is “making use” of Marvel in the same way
that he did the Halls, the stray cat, and even his own father. Whatever means
he deems necessary to his purpose is enacted without thought or conscience.
CHAPTER 10: Mr. Marvel’s Visit to Iping
Iping has nearly recovered its
earlier holiday atmosphere. As only a few people had actually made contact with
the Invisible Man, the general population is soon able to reason him away as
some trick of an overactive, holiday imagination.
Around 4:00, Mr. Marvel enters town
and is observed by Huxter to behave rather strangely. He makes his way down the
street almost reluctantly. He stops at the foot of the steps to the Coach &
Horses and seems to undergo a great struggle before finally entering. A few
minutes later, he re-emerges, apparently having had a drink, and walks as if he
is trying to act nonchalant. Soon he disappears into the yard and re-emerges
with a bundle wrapped in a tablecloth. Huxter thinks some robbery has taken
place and tries to follow Marvel when he is tripped in a mysterious fashion and
sent sprawling.
Notes - Griffin has used Marvel to attempt to get his belongings
out of the Coach & Horses. Marvel’s resistance manages to get attention,
but not the attention he wants. Huxter thinks that Marvel has committed the
robbery.
CHAPTER 11: In the Coach & Horses
The narrator backtracks to explain
what happened inside the Coach & Horses. Mr. Cuss and Mr. Bunting were in
the parlor going through the belongings of the Invisible Man. Three large books
labeled “Diary” are written in a cipher or code they do not understand.
Suddenly the inn door opens and Mr.
Marvel enters. They disregard him and begin studying the books again when an
unseen force grabs each of them by the neck and begins pounding their heads on
the table between questions about what they are doing with his things. The man
demands his belongings, saying he wants his books and some clothes.
Notes - Griffin is on the verge of insanity. He is probably
terrified on two counts. One would be lest someone tamper with his notes or
other belongings related to his experiments. The other would be lest someone
should actually be able to decipher his records.
CHAPTER 12: The Invisible Man Loses His Temper
Mr. Hall and Teddy Henfrey are
involved in a discussion behind the hotel bar when they hear a thump on the
parlor door. They hear strange sounds as of things being thrown against the
door and some bizarre conversation. Doors open and shut and they see Marvel
taking off with Huxter trying to follow him. Suddenly Huxter executes a
complicated leap in the air. Seconds later, Hall lands on the ground as if he
had been attacked by a football player.
Several other individuals are shoved
aside or sent sprawling in the streets. Mr. Cuss calls for help, telling people
that the “Man” has all of the vicar’s clothes. After breaking all the windows
in the Coach & Horses and thrusting a chair through the parlor window of
another citizen’s house, the Invisible Man disappears from Iping.
Notes - Marvel has taken advantage of the situation, and rather
than carrying Griffin’s material for him, has run off with it. The intervention
of Huxter and the other individuals almost enables Marvel to get away with the
precious books. Cuss quickly catches on to the fact that Griffin will be
visible so long as he is carrying the bundle, but he is unaware of the
existence of Marvel. The narrator tells us that “perhaps” the Invisible Man
only intended to use the vicar’s clothes to cover his retreat, but that at some
chance blow he has “gone completely over the edge.” He throws or upends
benches, chairs and boards, along with breaking windows. Eventually he catches
up with Marvel and they head for the next town.
CHAPTER 13: Mr. Marvel discusses His Resignation
Mr. Marvel, propelled by the
unrelenting shoulder grip and vocal threats of the Invisible Man, arrives in
Bramblehurst. Marvel tries to reason his way out of the situation to no avail.
The Invisible man needs a normal person to carry his books and is determined to
make use of the fat, red-faced little man.
Notes - This brief chapter serves to track Griffin’s movement to
the next location and to show his crude behavior toward Marvel. Marvel tries
reasoning, whining, and even suggesting that he may in the long run be a
failure and thus “mess up” Griffin’s plans.
Nothing works. For the moment,
Griffin needs Marvel. If Marvel should drop in accordance with his professed
heart condition, it would mean nothing to Griffin.
CHAPTER 14: At Port Stowe
Marvel arrives in Port Stowe and is
seen resting on a bench outside of town. He has the books with him, but the
bundle of clothing has been abandoned in the woods. As he sits there, an
elderly mariner, carrying a newspaper, sits down beside him. Citing the paper,
the mariner brings up the topic of an Invisible man.
According to the newspaper, the man
afflicted injuries on the constable at Iping. Certain evidence indicates that
he took the road to Port Stowe. The mariner ponders the strange things such a
man might be able to do-trespass, rob or even slip through a cordon of policeman.
Marvel begins to confide in the
mariner, saying he knows some things about this Invisible Man. Suddenly Marvel
is interrupted by an attack of some kind of pain. He says it is a toothache,
then goes on to say that the Invisible Man is a hoax. Marvel begins to move
off, walking sideways with violent forward jerks.
Later the mariner hears another
fantastic story-that of money floating along a wall in butterfly fashion. The
story is true, however. All about the neighborhood, money has been making off
by the handful and depositing itself in the pockets of Mr. Marvel.
Notes - Marvel tries to take advantage of a short respite to let
someone else know about the Invisible Man, but he is caught by Griffin before
he can complete his story. This chapter gives us a little insight as to how
Griffin has been surviving to this point. He has been stealing money wherever
he could find it. Now that he is obliged to remain invisible, however, he has
to use Marvel as a repository for his ill-gotten gain. The irony is that
although Griffin can steal unlimited amounts, he has no way to use the money in
his invisible condition. And Marvel, who is for a time nothing more than a
helpless victim, will be the one to benefit in the end.
CHAPTER 15: The Man Who Was Running
Dr. Kemp happens to be day-dreaming
out his window when he spots a short, fat man running down the hill as fast as
he can go. The doctor notices that the man is running “heavy” as if his pockets
are “full of lead.” Kemp’s reaction is one of contempt, but the people on the
street who see him approaching react a bit differently. The running man is
Marvel; his expression is one of terror. A short distance behind him, people
hear the sound of panting and a pad like hurrying bare feet. Soon cries of “The
Invisible Man is coming” are heard in the streets along with the slamming of
doors as people bolt into their houses.
Notes - This chapter simply introduces Kemp into the story. Kemp’s
attitude is representative of the average established, self-confident, and
self-sufficient individual. He sees a man in trouble, but his reaction in
contemptuous instead of concern. He has heard warning cries about an Invisible
Man, but clearly doesn’t believe any of it. He is a man who keeps himself apart
form the concerns of the general public, is buried in his work, interested only
in what award it will ultimately bring him.
CHAPTER 16: In the Jolly Cricketers
The Jolly Cricketers is a tavern.
The barkeep, a cabman, an American and an off duty policeman are engaged in
idle chat when marvel bursts through the door. Marvel begs for help, claiming
the Invisible Man is after him.
A pounding begins at the door and
then a window is broken in. The Invisible Man doesn’t come in immediately,
however. The barman checks the other doors, but by the time he realizes the
yard door is open, the Invisible Man is already inside. Marvel, who is hiding
behind the bar, is caught and dragged into the kitchen. The policeman rushes in
and grips the invisible wrist of the hand that holds onto Marvel, but is abruptly
hit in the face.
People stumble over and into each
other as all try to catch the Invisible Man. He yelps when the policeman steps
on his foot, then flails wildly about with his Invisible fists and finally
gives them the slip. The American fires five cartridges from his gun, sweeping
his gun in a circular pattern as he fires. The chapter ends with the men
feeling around for an invisible body.
Notes - Griffin is injured in this chapter. He is thus forced to
find shelter and help in the nearest possible place. But now, enough people
have been involved in Griffin’s mayhem that it will be relatively easy to round
up a posse of believers when the time comes to do so.
CHAPTER 17: Doctor Kemp’s Visitor
Doctor Kemp is still working in his
study when he hears the shots fired in the Cricketers. He opens his window and
watches the crowd at the bottom of the hill for a few minutes, then returns to
his writing desk. A few minutes later, he hears his doorbell ring, but his
housekeeper says it was only a “runaway” ring.
The doctor is at his work until 2 AM
when he decides to go downstairs for a drink. On the way he notices a spot of
drying blood on his linoleum floor. Then he finds more blood on the doorknob of
his own bedroom. In his room, his bedspread is smeared with blood, his sheet is
torn, and bedclothes are depressed as if someone has been sitting there.
The Invisible Man introduces himself
to Kemp. He is Griffin, of University College. He explains that he made himself
Invisible, but is wounded and desperately in need of shelter, clothes and food.
Kemp loans him a dressing gown along
with some drawers, socks and slippers. Griffin eats everything Kemp can rustle
up and finally asks for a cigar. He promises to tell Kemp the story of his
bizarre situation but insists that he must sleep first as he has had no sleep
in nearly three days.
Notes - Kemp’s reaction is in stark contrast to Marvel’s original
reaction to Griffin. Although he finds the story hard to believe, he is too
well educated and too intelligent to deny the evidence of his own eyes. Nor is
he prey to hysterics or to working class superstitions. The idea of a spirit or
witchcraft doesn’t even occur to him. His cool demeanor as he helps Griffin to
the things he needs could be an indication of hope for the Invisible Man.
CHAPTER 18: The Invisible Man Sleeps
Griffin examines the windows of the
room, then exacts a promise from Kemp that he will not be betrayed in his sleep
and finally locks the door, barring Kemp from his own room.
Kemp retires to his dining room to
speculate upon the strange events. There he sees the day’s newspaper, which he
had ignored earlier. He reads it eagerly, but assigns the more terrifying
elements of the stores to “fabrication.” In the morning he sends his
housekeeper for all available papers and reads those as well. The papers
contain stories of the previous evening’s events at the Cricketers along with a
rather badly written account of Marvel’s experience. Marvel doesn’t tell how he
came upon the money in his pockets, nor does he mention the location of the
three books. Kemp becomes alarmed at the possibilities of what Griffin could do
and writes a note to Colonel Adye at Port Burdock.
Notes - Kemp experiences his first apprehension because of what his
own intelligence reveals to him rather than from the hysterical reports in the
papers. He is motivated, however, from personal interest. When he recalls the
behavior of Marvel, he realizes that Marvel-a mere tramp-was being pursued by
Griffin. He suddenly realizes that Griffin is insane to the point of being
homicidal.
CHAPTER 19: Certain First Principles
Griffin explains how he became
invisible. He had been a medical student, but had dropped medicine and taken up
physics. He discovered a formula of pigments that lowers the refractive index
of a substance, allowing light to pass through it rather than being reflected
or refracted. After experimenting with pigments for three years, he came upon
the secret whereby animal tissue could be rendered transparent. He was
continuously trying to hide his work from another professor. He was finally
brought to a halt in his experimenting by a lack of funds, a problem he solved
by robbing his own father. Because the money did not belong to him, his father
shot himself.
Note- From this chapter through XXIII, the point of view changes
as Griffin tells his own story. He explains how he became invisible and tells
the story up to the time when he had first entered the Coach & Horses. He
explains his use of and contempt for Marvel, justifying his own behavior as
necessary to his survival.
CHAPTER 20: Doctor Kemp’s Visitor
Griffin explains how he had found
lodging in a boarding house on Great Portland Street. After his father’s
funeral, he went to his apartment to continue with his experiments. He
successfully made a piece of cloth disappear, then he tried his process on a stray
cat. The cat was not entirely successful, as the animal’s eyes and claws never
completely disappeared.
Later the next day he had a minor
altercation with the landlord who brought reports of Griffin tormenting a cat
in the night. The landlord wanted to know what Griffin was doing in the room
and what all the paraphernalia was for. The two argued and Griffin shoved the
landlord out of the room. Griffin knew he would have to act quickly, so he made
arrangements to have his belongings stored, then he drank some of his own
potion. In the evening the landlord returned with an ejection notice, but was
too terrified at the stone white face of Griffin to serve it. In spite of
extreme illness and pain, Griffin finished his treatment and watched himself
gradually disappear.
In the morning, the landlord, his
stepsons and the elderly neighbor lady who had complained about the cat enter
Griffin’s apartment and are astonished to see no one. A day later, afraid, lest
his equipment reveal too much information, Griffin smashes the items and sets
fire to the house. Believing that he has covered his tracks with impunity, he
begins to imagine all sorts of “wild and wonderful” things he will be able to
do under the cover of invisibility.
Notes - Griffin’s explanations are completely absent of any sense
of humanity or conscience. His intentions suggest anarchy or lawlessness resulting
from an absence of social restriction. Killing his own father seems to have
killed his conscience, and the novelty of invisibility highlights his
immaturity and seems to divorce him from a normal sense of responsibility.
CHAPTER 21: In Oxford Street
Griffin continues to explain his
experiences with invisibility. He soon discovered that being invisible had as
many drawbacks as advantages. People ran into him and stepped on him. He had to
be continually on guard as to the movements and positions of others in order to
avoid accidental contact. To make matters worse, although people could not see
him, dogs could detect him with their keen sense of smell. As he had to remain
naked, he was soon uncomfortable. Also, he could not eat, as food was visible
until it was fully assimilated into his system.
At one point, he had run up the
steps of a house in order to avoid a unit of a marching Salvation Army band.
While he waited, two youngsters spotted the prints of his bare feet in the mud.
Soon a crowd of people had gathered to look at the “ghost prints.” He leapt
over the railing and ran through a bunch of back roads to avoid the press.
Fortunately for him, his escape at that time was aided with the distraction
created by conflagration engulfing his former dwelling.
Notes - Griffin’s initial error was that he became so obsessed with
a single scientific notion that he failed to take consequences into
consideration. No doubt, he was not concerned about people reacting to him as
though he were some kind of mutation or monster. As an albino human, he was
already a marginalized individual who did not fit into ordinary society.
College was the perfect place for him, but he was so concerned about the
possibility of any one getting credit for his discovery that he failed to take
advantage of collaboration and more mature knowledge that he might have had
access to.
CHAPTER 22: In the Emporium
Griffin explains his first attempts
to get clothing and render his situation more tolerable. He had gone into the
Omniums, a large apartment type store where one could buy everything from
groceries to clothing. He made his way to an area of bedsteads and mattresses,
hoping that once the store closed for the night, he would be able to sleep on
the mattresses and steal some clothes with which to mask his condition.
In the night he procured a complete
set of clothes for himself, helped himself to food in a refreshment department,
and then slept in a pile of down quilts. He failed to awaken before the morning
crew had entered, however, and was unable to escape as long as they could see
him. Thus he was forced to shed the clothing and run, naked, back out into the
cold.
Notes - Griffin was preoccupied with getting his food and clothes
by illicit means. His plans are continually evil even as the reactions of other
people are consistently behaviors of suspicion and rejection. At no point does
he consider trying to get anyone to understand his situation. His imagination
drives him only toward evil, as if the grotesque and the evil are natural
partners.
CHAPTER 23: In Drury Lane
Griffin’s peril increased daily. He
had no clothes or shelter and dared not eat. Also, he soon realized that
walking through the streets of London was going to result in an accumulation of
dirt on his skin- which would make him visible in a grotesque way.
He made his way into a costume shop,
hoping to make way with some clothes and dark glasses after the proprietor had
gone to bed. In the shopkeeper’s room, he had to stand and watch the man eat
his breakfast. Furthermore, the man had exceptionally acute hearing and nearly
discovered Griffin several times. When evening came, he was finally able to
explore the house and found a pile of old clothes. In his excitement, he forgot
about the noise he was making and was nearly caught when the shopkeeper
investigated the noise. Unable to see the source, but positive someone was in
the house, the proprietor went about locking all the doors in the house and
pocketing the keys. In desperation, Griffin struck the old man on the head,
then gagged and tied him with a sheet. Then he put together a costume of old
clothes, stole all the money he could find and went out into the street.
Believing his troubles were over,
Griffin went into a restaurant and ordered a meal, but soon realized he
couldn’t eat it without exposing his invisible face. He ordered the lunch and
left, telling the proprietor that he would be back in ten minutes.
Griffin went to “another place”
(which happens to be the Coach & Horses Inn) and demanded a private room,
explaining that he was “badly disfigured.” Thus he had set himself up at Iping,
hoping to find a way to reverse the process of invisibility. Here he was
finally discovered.
Notes - This chapter brings us current with events in the first
chapter of the book.
CHAPTER 24: In Oxford Street
Griffin tells how his original plan,
after being discovered by the people of Iping, had been to get his books and
get out of the country, but that plan had changed upon meeting Kemp. He thinks
that Kemp can work with him. Together they can set up a “reign of terror” to
take full advantage of the Invisibility. Griffin does not realize that Kemp has
already betrayed him and is only trying to keep him talking until the police
arrive. Kemp stands in front of the window to keep Griffin from seeing the
police, but Griffin soon hears them on the stairs and realizes he has been
deceived.
Griffin quickly begins to disrobe
even as Kemp springs to the door and attempts to lock him in. A dropped key
spoils the effort as the now invisible Griffin shoves him aside, then hurls his
weight at Colonel Adye, the chief of the Burdock Police who is approaching on
the stairs. Griffin escapes past two more policemen in the hall; they hear the
front door of the house slam violently.
Notes - In assuming that he can make demands and others will simply
capitulate to him, Griffin has misjudged Kemp. Kemp is self-centered, but is
not a murderer. As for Griffin himself, he appears to have abandoned any
intention of searching for an antidote and is only interested in trying to
terrorize as much of the country as he can. He wants to set himself up as a
vindictive god with Kemp as his personal henchman.
CHAPTER 25: The Hunting of the Invisible man
Kemp explains the situation to the
police, informing them of Griffin’s intentions to cause general mayhem. They
talk of using dogs to sniff him out and of putting powdered glass in the
streets.
Notes - The narrator tells us that if he had used his time more
wisely, Griffin may have been able to escape during the 24 hours it took the
countryside to organized. He slept instead, however, and by the time he had
awakened there was no escape possible.
CHAPTER 26: The Wicksteed Murder
By 2:00 in the afternoon, the entire
countryside around Burdock has been mobilized. Men set out with guns, clubs and
dogs, and the police warn the village people to lock their doors and stay
inside. Griffin manages to evade his pursuers for a 24-hour period except for
one encounter with a middle-aged man who had apparently cornered him. Griffin
kills the man by beating him with an iron rod.
Notes - None necessary
CHAPTER 27: The Siege of Kemp’s House
Kemp receives a letter telling him
that the Reign of Terror is beginning and that Kemp himself will be the first
execution for the sake of an example. Kemp decides that he himself will be the
bait and that Griffin will be caught because he will have gone too far. A knock
at the door turns out to be Adye with news that Kemp’s housekeeper-who was
carrying notes for the police-had been attacked and the notes taken from her.
Griffin makes his presence known by
smashing windows in Kemp’s house. During the battle that follows, Adye is shot.
Griffin gets inside the house and tries to tell the police to “stand away” as
he is after only Kemp. He swings an ax at them, but one of them manages to
strike him with an iron poker. By this time Kemp has followed his housekeeper
through a window and is nowhere to be found.
Notes - The police express contempt for Kemp, believing he has run
off and left them to face Griffin alone. The truth is, he has, because he knows
Griffin will follow through on his threats. However, even though Kemp tries to
escape, he does not forget his earlier idea of using himself as bait. It is
ironic that he runs the same course he watched Marvel run just a couple days
earlier. He, too, is white faced and terrified, but keeps his wits; whenever he
finds a bit of uneven ground or a patch that is scattered with broken glass, he
takes it, knowing it will slow down the invisible, barefooted Griffin.
CHAPTER 28: The Hunter Hunted
Griffin chases Kemp through the
town. People begin to join in the chase. When Kemp realizes that the people are
chasing Griffin, he stops running, which allows the Invisible Man to catch him.
Even though people cannot see him, they are able to grab hold of him and keep
him down. The effort is not needed for long as Griffin has been fatally injured
and seems to have lost a lot of blood. As the town people watch, the effect of
invisibility is gradually reversed, and soon, Griffin, now dead, is visible.
Notes - When Griffin becomes visible, his albino condition is also
revealed. It is interesting that the people are not horrified or even
surprised. Nor is there any speculation about how this bizarre incident could
have happened. The people watch as his broken, battered body slowly becomes
visible from his extremities to the center of his being. It is only when his
white face and hair and staring garnet eyes are revealed that someone calls for
them to “cover that face” before the children in the town can see it.
EPILOGUE
Mr. Marvel, formerly the tramp, has
become the landlord of the little inn near Port Stowe and the “owner” of all
the information about Griffin. He has been able to keep all the money Griffin
stole because lawyers could not identify the sources accurately. The books seem
to have disappeared entirely; at least whenever anyone asks Marvel about them,
he denies knowing anything. However, when the inn is closed and he is alone, he
takes the books out of their hiding place and tries to study the “wonderful
secrets.”
Notes - The epilogue implies that the people, represented by the
tramp-turned-innkeeper, not only have learned very little from the experience
of the invisible man, but that they would not be above trying the invisibility
themselves if only they knew how to do it. Regardless of the horrors
perpetrated by Griffin, it seems to be part of human nature to want to be able
to cause chaos and commit obscenities with impunity. While Marvel says that he
would not do the same things Griffin did, there is little doubt that anyone,
given such advantage over others, would resist the temptation to dabble in
behaviors that are unacceptable in normal civilized society.
Study
Questions
1.) Why does Mrs. Hall tolerate the
Invisible Man as long as she does?
2.) Why do you think Griffin smashes bottles and swears behind the locked door of his room?
3.) How do the speculations of the people in town exemplify human nature?
4.) Which characters have realistic reactions to the Invisible Man? Which ones have unrealistic reactions?
5.) Explain why Teddy Henfry decides the Man is trying to hide something from the police.
6.) What do Huxter’s actions say about him as a member of the town?
7.) At what point is Griffin truly insane?
8.) How do you think you would react if you saw your money disappear in front of you, but couldn’t see who was taking it?
2.) Why do you think Griffin smashes bottles and swears behind the locked door of his room?
3.) How do the speculations of the people in town exemplify human nature?
4.) Which characters have realistic reactions to the Invisible Man? Which ones have unrealistic reactions?
5.) Explain why Teddy Henfry decides the Man is trying to hide something from the police.
6.) What do Huxter’s actions say about him as a member of the town?
7.) At what point is Griffin truly insane?
8.) How do you think you would react if you saw your money disappear in front of you, but couldn’t see who was taking it?
9.) Marvel ends up with all the
money because the lawyers couldn’t tell definitively whom it belonged to. How
is this similar to our court systems today?
10.)Marvel is introduced as a tramp
and ends up a business owner. How realistic is this? What does it say about
Marvel himself?
Essay Topics & Book Report Ideas
1.) Research modern scientific
discoveries. When has science proceeded without regard to the sanctity of life?
Write a paper about the responsibilities of valid research. (Hint: how about
animal experimentation, strip coal mining, etc.)
2.) Locate at least one other story
that uses the idea of an invisible person. How does that story differ from The
Invisible Man?
3.) Critics have said that Wells’
novel lacks character depth. Write a paper in which you explore the concepts
that Wells could have elaborated on more specifically with his characters.
4.) Wells has been called the Father
of Science Fiction. What characteristics enhance the story as a science fiction
novel? Does the element of insanity put the story more or less into the realm
of science fiction?
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