Literary Characters
OF THE BABY NAME MILES
The Courtship of Miles Standish is a narrative poem written by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow in 1858. The poem is set in the early days of Plymouth Colony settled by pilgrims fresh off the Mayflower ship, and during a time of Native-American unrest (1621). It is the story of a love-triangle between Miles Standish, Priscilla Mullins, and John Alden, and is said to be true and passed to Longfellow (an Alden descendent) through oral tradition. Captain Miles Standish is the middle-aged, brave, swaggering military hero if a bit rough around the edges, and who just lost his wife and seeks to marry Pricilla. John Alden is Standish’s young and handsome roommate whom he asks to deliver his (Miles’) marriage proposal to the beautiful Pricilla on his behalf (fearing he lacks the right way with words). John Alden goes to Pricilla to deliver the proposal but is clearly enamored with the young beauty himself; thus, he innocently bumbles the message, clumsily attempts to recover, and muddles that effort until finally Pricilla makes her famous retort: “Prithee, John, why do you not speak for yourself?" In the end, John gets the girl and Miles “standishs” aside having given his blessing to the young lovers. It’s an optimistic ending; a fresh start for these new settlers in this new land.
The Courtship of Miles Standish is a narrative poem written by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow in 1858. The poem is set in the early days of Plymouth Colony settled by pilgrims fresh off the Mayflower ship, and during a time of Native-American unrest (1621). It is the story of a love-triangle between Miles Standish, Priscilla Mullins, and John Alden, and is said to be true and passed to Longfellow (a descendent of John Alden himself) through oral tradition. Captain Miles Standish is the middle-aged, brave, swaggering military hero if a bit rough around the edges, and who just lost his wife and seeks to marry Pricilla. John Alden is Standish’s young and handsome roommate whom he asks to deliver his (Miles’) marriage proposal to the beautiful Pricilla on his behalf (fearing he lacks the right way with words). John Alden goes to Pricilla to deliver the proposal but is clearly enamored with the young beauty himself; thus, he innocently bumbles the message, clumsily attempts to recover, and muddles that effort until finally Pricilla makes her famous retort: “Prithee, John, why do you not speak for yourself?" In the end, John gets the girl and Miles "standishs" aside having given his blessing to the young lovers. It’s an optimistic ending; a fresh start for these new settlers in this new land.
Miles is a central character in Henry James’ 1898 gothic suspense novella, “The Turn of the Screw”. He is a 10 year old precocious schoolboy, and one of the two children a governess is sent to care for at an English country estate. Miles is perhaps a precursor to Damien from “The Omen” in that he is an innocent, well-mannered, and handsome child who enchants the new governess. She overlooks his misbehavior due to his “positive fragrance of purity” and his unusual beauty. However, she begins to observe the disturbing detachment the boy exhibits, an impersonality that lends itself to the novella’s overall suspense. Supernatural events (visions of ghosts) are observed by the governess and she becomes suspicious over Miles’ connection to the otherworldly encounters. Her fear grows over his perceived “wickedness” assuming that he is just too “exquisite” to be normal. The reader is never quite sure if the horrors of the ghosts are real or a product of the governess’s declining mental state. One of the first suspense horror novels of its kind, we’ll never be certain of the true nature and intentions of this little boy.