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Victorian Ghosts, 1852-1907: EN 4573 Collection

Braddon_SE_02

The serpent biting its own tail, also known as an Ouroboros, is a recurrent symbol throughout Braddon’s text. Despite its conventional connotation as a nefarious figure, for Victorians, the Ouroboros was a representation of infinite romantic affection. Its cyclical formation was perceived as an “[expression of] the unity of all things, material and spiritual,” in that it possesses the capacity to continuously regenerate itself.
Though seemingly unique in Braddon’s story, the symbol was fairly popular amongst women at the time. Queen Victoria's serpent betrothal ring, for instance, gifted to her by her fiancé Prince Albert, influenced a surge in "[imitations] by many jewellers." [SE]

Basdeo, Stephen. “The Serpent; or, the Real King of the Jungle.” Animals and Their Children in Victorian Culture, 27 Nov. 2019. Routledge, https://www.academia.edu/39675396/The_Serpent_or_the_Real_King_of_the_Jungle.

"Ouroboros." Britannica Academic, Encyclopædia Britannica, 16 Aug. 2016, academic-eb-com.ezproxy.library.yorku.ca/levels/collegiate/article/Ouroboros/57736.

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