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  1. The White Dress. The most obvious and evocative symbol in Rebecca is Manderley, the manor house in which Maxim, and later the narrator, live. Manderley is a centuries-old estate, ruled by the de Winter family for generations. At the most basic symbolic level, Manderley is an embodiment of the past: a huge, sprawling place where tradition and ...

    • Rebecca's Boat

      Manderley In the second half of the book, it’s revealed that...

  2. The moon is shining—it’s night, apparently—and the moonlight illuminates long, tangled ivy vines. As the narrator stares up at the house, she has the sense that the house is alive. She remembers the dog, Jasper, the newspapers she used to read, and other intimate details of the house. As the narrator wakes up, she decides not to tell ...

  3. Rebecca (Chap. 1) Lyrics. Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again. It seemed to me I stood by the iron gate leading to the drive, and for a while I could not enter, for the way was barred to ...

  4. Summary. Rebecca begins with the sentence, "Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again." The heroine, dreaming, sees herself as a ghost, flitting through the charred ruins of the once-beautiful mansion Manderley, where she once lived. When she awakes, she resolves not to speak of the dream, for "Manderley was ours no longer.

  5. There was Manderley, our Manderley, secret and silent as it had 10 always been, the grey stone shining in the moonlight of my dream. Time could not spoil the beauty of those walls, nor of the place itself, as it lay like a jewel in the hollow of a hand. The grass sloped down towards the sea, which was a sheet of silver lying

  6. Dec 2, 2021 · Manderley was no more’ (p. 4). If we are to take this literally, it must mean that Manderley does not physically exist… yet we have been told that it does. The lines between memory and the physical world are very blurred throughout the chapter, but what is definitely clear, is that the narrator’s memory of Manderley is impenetrable.

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  8. Rebecca Summary and Analysis of Chapters 1-4. Summary: The novel opens with the narrator describing a dream that she had the night before. In the dream, the narrator travels in ghost form through the grounds of Manderley. The drive is overrun with grass and moss and the rhododendrons have overtaken the garden, but the beautiful house is still ...

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