53 pages • 1 hour read
Daphne du MaurierA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Content Warning: This section of the guide discusses domestic abuse, sexual violence, and ableism.
“‘I don’t want to make trouble,’ he repeated, ‘and I don’t know anything. It’s only what people say. Respectable folk don’t go to Jamaica anymore. That’s all I know. In the old days we used to water the horses there, and feed them, and go in for a bit of a bite and drink. But we don’t stop there anymore. We whip the horses past and wait for nothing, not till we get to Five Lanes, and then we don’t bide long.’”
The reactions Mary receives when she tells people that her destination is Jamaica Inn foreshadow the difficulties that lie ahead for her. The inn’s bad reputation precedes itself, and honest locals avoid the area entirely.
“‘You mustn’t mind your Uncle Joss,’ she said, her manner changing suddenly, fawning almost, like a whimpering dog that has been trained by constant cruelty to implicit obedience, and who, in spite of kicks and curses, will fight like a tiger for its master.”
Aunt Patience’s obedience to her husband evokes pathos and is a mark of how deeply Joss has broken her spirit. Patience has little personality or spirit beyond her devotion to Joss. This is an indication of the abuse she suffers. Like with Francis Davey’s paintings, du Maurier uses the effects of the uncanny to unsettle the reader: Patience’s sudden change makes the reader encounter this familiar character in an oddly taboo and unfamiliar context.
“‘That’s very pretty,’ he said; ‘very prettily put indeed. Now we know just what sort of lodger we have. Scratch her, and she shows her claws. All right, my dear; you and I are more akin than I thought. If we are going to play, we’ll play together. I may have work for you at Jamaica one day, work that you’ve never done before. Man’s work, Mary Yellan, where you play with life and death.’”
Joss respects Mary for standing up for herself; her courage makes her a potential accomplice or at least a worthy adversary. His reference to “claws” juxtaposes with the oddly delicate physicality of his own hands. Joss also hints at the dark business going on behind the scenes at Jamaica Inn, which is a vital part of his character exposition since it demonstrates that he enjoys bragging about his dangerous life.
“There’s things that happen at Jamaica, Mary, that I’ve never dared to breathe. Bad things. Evil things. I can’t never tell you; I can’t even admit them to myself. Some of it in time you’ll come to know. You can’t avoid it, living here. Your Uncle Joss mixes with strange men, who follow a strange trade. […] You must never question me, nor him, nor anyone, for if you came to guess but half of what I know, your hair would go gray, Mary, as mine has done, and you would tremble in your speech and weep by night, and all that lovely careless youth of yours would die, Mary, as mine has died.’”
This is the second real hint that Mary receives about the danger lurking at Jamaica Inn. Patience’s warning also gives an insight into the changes in her character and appearance that Mary noticed when she arrived. This is the most information Mary ever receives from her reticent aunt. The hint that “[s]ome of it in time you’ll come to know” highlights the way du Maurier uses Mary as a proxy for the reader, both learning about the mysteries throughout the novel.
“Had she been a man, she would have gone downstairs and challenged Joss Merlyn to his face, and his friends with him. Yes, and fought them too, and drawn blood, if she were lucky. And then away on a horse from the stable, with Aunt Patience riding pillion, and so down to the south again, to the friendly Helford shore, setting up as a farmer in a small way up Mawgan way, or Gweek, with her aunt to keep house for her.”
Mary often bitterly opines about being a woman, which she believes puts her in a more precarious situation than if she were a man. Written through free indirect discourse which gives the reader an insight into Mary’s thoughts via third-person narration, this passage chimes with the sexual threat underscored by the gendered dynamics of life at Jamaica Inn. Because she cannot match Joss’s strength, she must beat him in a battle of wits, for which she is ill-prepared, as she is unaware of her uncle’s real business.
“Because he had a disarming smile and his voice was not unpleasing, she had been ready to believe in him, and he all the time perhaps laughing at her the other side of his face. There was bad blood in him; he broke the law every day of his life, and whatever way she looked at it there was no escaping from that one unredeemable fact—he was Joss Merlyn’s brother.”
Mary is conflicted by her impressions of Jem Merlyn. His lineage, and hints from Aunt Patience, suggest that he is just as bad as his brothers, underscored by the novel’s theme of bad blood. However, this passage foreshadows the romantic relationship that will grow between Mary and Jem, as well as Mary’s darker feelings of attraction to Joss.
“He spoke with such solicitude, and yet with such calm authority, that Mary sighed with relief, throwing all responsibility aside for the time being, content to trust herself in his keeping. He arranged the reins to her satisfaction, and, looking up at her, she saw his eyes for the first time from beneath the brim of his hat. They were strange eyes, transparent like glass, and so pale in color that they seemed near to white; a freak of nature she had never known before. They fastened upon her, and searched her, as though her very thoughts could not be hidden, and Mary felt herself relax before him, and give way; and she did not mind.”
Francis Davey, the Vicar of Altarnun, is presented as a “freak of nature” which utilizes the harmful tropes of disability corresponding to villainy. Du Maurier partially does this to divert suspicion from his character. Despite his disarming appearance, Mary feels that she can trust him, and this first meeting cements the vicar in Mary’s mind as her one hope and ally in a land of criminals; her relaxation is a red herring.
“They have a fascination unlike any other part of the county. They go back a long way in time. Sometimes I think they are the survival of another age. The moors were the first things to be created; afterwards came the forests, and the valleys, and the sea.”
Aside from his albinism, Francis Davey’s strange excitement as he and Mary cross the moors is another element of characterization that du Maurier uses to suggest that something may not be right about him. For a Christian preacher, he is oddly fascinated with “pagan” sentiments about the landscape.
“But when I’m drunk I see them in my dreams; I see their white-green faces staring at me, with their eyes eaten by fish; and some of them are torn, with the flesh hanging on their bones in ribbons, and some of them have seaweed in their hair… There was a woman once, Mary; she was clinging to a raft, and she had a child in her arms; her hair was streaming down her back. The ship was close in on the rocks, you see, and the sea was as flat as your hand; they were all coming in alive, the whole bunch of ‘em. Why, the water in places didn’t come above your waist. She cried out to me to help her, Mary, and I smashed her face in with a stone; she fell back, her hands beating the raft. She let go of the child and I hit her again; I watched them drown in four feet of water.”
Joss’s confession is an example of the suspense that du Maurier builds throughout the novel, from the ominous atmosphere surrounding Joss’s tale to the gruesome details of his murders of men, women, and children. Du Maurier constructs the speech with long sentences containing multiple clauses broken by semi-colons and ellipses, reflecting the torrent of confession that pours from Joss. She uses physical, vivid imagery (“torn,” “smashed”) to evoke disgust in the reader, yet his repeated appeals to “Mary” also appeal to sympathy.
“Dead men tell no tales, Mary.”
Joss’s drunken confession echoes the cryptic references that he and Jem have made about playing with life and death: As a wrecker, Joss has killed many people as they struggle to shore from their sinking ships. This iconic line is likely derived from a similar phrase in Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island, reflecting the fact that du Maurier uses elements of the adventure novel tradition, and has been used in other famous instances such as Disney’s Pirates of the Caribbean franchise (Stevenson, Robert Louis. Treasure Island. Oxford University Press, 2020).
“Mary did not consider her uncle anymore. She had lost her fear of him. There was only loathing left in her heart, loathing and disgust. He had lost all hold on humanity. He was a beast that walked by night. Now that she had seen him drunk, and she knew him for what he was, he could not frighten her. Neither he, nor the rest of his company. They were things of evil, rotting the countryside, and she would never rest until they were trodden underfoot, and cleared, and blotted out. Sentiment would not save them again.”
Learning of Joss’s involvement with the wreckers causes Mary to cast aside any human feeling for him. Though his drunken confession shows that he does indeed have some sort of conscience, that is not enough to atone for the blood on his hands. Ironically, du Maurier uses similar language to Joss’s confession when Mary determines that the world will be better off without him; she sees him as “rotting” and wants him “trodden underfoot, […] blotted out,” highlighting the pervasive brutality of this criminal environment even for those on its peripheries.
“Mary wrapped her shawl around her and folded her arms. She wished that women were not the frail things of straw she believed them to be; then she could stay this night with Jem Merlyn and forget herself as he could forget, and both of them part with a laugh and a shrug of the shoulder in the morning. But she was a woman, and it was impossible. A few kisses had made a fool of her already. She thought of Aunt Patience, trailing like a ghost in the shadow of her master, and she shuddered. That would be Mary Yellan too, but for the grace of God and her own strength of will.”
Mary recognizes that her heart would have her stay the night with Jem in Launceston, but it would violate her own principles. Her growing love for Jem threatens the resolve she needs to stoically pass her time at Jamaica Inn. She blames this on women’s “frailty,” and hence her resolve not to stay the night emphasizes the gendered dynamics of the novel in which the women are forced to elude sexual advances, whether for their safety or reputation.
“‘Our bright days are done, and we are for the dark,’ he said softly. ‘If it were permitted to take our text from Shakespeare, there would be strange sermons preached in Cornwall tomorrow, Mary Yellan. Your uncle and his companions are not members of my congregation, however, and if they were they would not understand me. You shake your head at me. I speak in riddles. “This man is no comforter,” you say; “he is a freak with his white hair and eyes.”’”
The enigmatic Vicar of Altarnun does not behave in the comforting way Mary expects of priests. The fact that he takes his “text from Shakespeare” highlights his deviation from the text of the Bible. His words reinforce Mary’s uncharitable thoughts about the nature of his albinism, since du Maurier makes him fulfill the trope of being different, villainous, and shunned—thoughts which make Mary feel ashamed.
“Drawn by a magnet, the sea hissed away from the strand, and a breaker running high above its fellows flung itself with a crash of thunder upon the lurching ship. Mary saw the black mass that had been a vessel roll slowly upon its side, like a great flat turtle; the masts and spars were threads of cotton, crumpled and fallen. Clinging to the slippery, sloping surface of the turtle were little black dots that would not be thrown; that stuck themselves fast to the splintering wood like limpets; and, when the heaving, shuddering mass beneath them broke monstrously in two, cleaving the air, they fell one by one into the white tongues of the sea, little black dots without life or substance.”
The horrific scene of the shipwreck is one of the iconic scenes in Jamaica Inn. Mary is forced to be a spectator to the catastrophe, and her horror is doubled by her powerlessness to stop the ship. The vivid language recalls that used by Joss in his earlier confession.
“Those who carried pistols now had the advantage, and the landlord, with his remaining ally Harry the pedlar by his side, stood with his back to the cart and let fly among the rabble, who, in the sudden terror of pursuit that would follow with the day, looked upon him now as an enemy, a false leader who had brought them to destruction.”
Joss’s position as a leader of the pirates was evidently not as ironclad as he liked to portray. The second he shows weakness by botching this final wreck, the men of the moorlands turn on him, and it is only the fact that Joss and Harry have pistols that saves them from a full-blown mutiny. Du Maurier draws attention to his weakness and precarious leadership by calling him “the landlord,” juxtaposing his official vocation with the war-like scene.
“‘He’ll come,’ he said; ‘he’s bound to come. I’ve cut my own throat; I’ve gone against him. He warned me once, and I laughed at him; I didn’t listen. I wanted to play the game on my own. We’re as good as dead, all three of us sitting here—you, Patience, and Mary, and I.’”
Joss’s terror at an unknown figure coming to punish him for the botched wrecking job confirms Mary’s suspicion that Joss is not the sole leader of the wrecked smugglers in the countryside. Du Maurier uses prolepsis—“[w]e’re as good as dead”—in order to heighten the suspense as to whether the characters will survive.
“She thought again of the laughing, carefree Jem who had driven her to Launceston, who had swung hands with her in the market square, who had kissed her and held her. Now he was grave and silent, his face in shadow. The idea of dual personality troubled her, and frightened her as well. He was like a stranger to her tonight, obsessed by some grim purpose she could not understand.”
Jem’s cryptic behavior forces Mary to confront the idea that he may be Joss’s collaborator, whom Joss now fears is coming to kill them. When Jem swears to kill Joss for what he did to Mary on Christmas Eve, it only increases Mary’s suspicion. This presentation of Jem as a “stranger” parallels Patience’s impacted mental health and sudden changes.
“When he was stabbed from behind he must have stretched out his hands, and stumbled, dragging at the clock; and when he fell upon his face the clock crashed with him to the ground, and he died there, clutching at the door.”
Joss’s dead body forms a grim spectacle as Mary returns to Jamaica Inn. Because the clock is broken, the inn is unnaturally silent—Mary could usually hear its ticking from the kitchen. The broken clock is a symbol that the time of Joss’s reign of terror in the inn is over.
“She knew that the evidence could be built against him piece by piece, with herself as witness; it would be a fence around him from which there would be no escape. She had only to go now to the squire and say, ‘I know who it is that has done this thing,’ and they would listen to her, all of them; they would crowd around her like a pack of hounds panting for the chase, and the trail would lead them to him, past Rushyford, and through Trewartha Marsh, to Twelve Men’s Moor.”
With Aunt Patience dead, Mary’s conflicted feelings toward Jem intensify. If he really is the murderer, she is left with two options: breaking her own heart by informing the authorities what she knows and sending Jem to the gallows, or keeping quiet and living with the guilt that Aunt Patience’s murderer will live a free man. The reference to “a pack of hounds” crowding her foreshadows the hounds that chase Mary and Francis on the moor, and this image inverts the real ending: The hounds do not ultimately chase Jem; they join him in the chase.
“This was not a drawing at all, but a caricature, grotesque as it was horrible. The people of the congregation were bonneted and shawled, and in their best clothes as for Sunday, but he had drawn sheep’s heads upon their shoulders instead of human faces. The animal jaws gaped foolishly at the preacher, with silly vacant solemnity, and their hoofs were folded in prayer.”
The vicar’s blasphemous sketch, coupled with his strange paintings and the utter lack of personality in his room, begin to cast doubt on his character. This painting references not only his congregation but Joss and his men, of whom Davey is also a leader.
“Your mind works slowly tonight, Mary Yellan, and I appear to talk in riddles. Did you not know that it was Jem Merlyn who informed against his brother?”
Throughout her tense supper with Francis Davey, Mary is agonized over the vicar’s questioning about Jem. Davey describes his speech as “riddles” just like he did when he takes to Mary on the moor (142), reflecting the enigmatic mysteries of the novel that have not yet been solved for the reader. Mary fails to recognize the actual danger in her situation.
“‘I’ll come with you, Mr. Davey,’ she said, ‘but you’ll find me a thorn in the flesh and a stone in your path. You will regret it in the end.’”
Mary has no choice but to go on the run with Francis Davey, even if she opposes him and promises to try to take him down. The “thorn” and the “stone” are references to Jesus’s crucifixion and resurrection, in which thorns were placed on his head and a stone was used to cover the entrance to his tomb. Davey’s ironic detachment from Christian teachings and desire to return to a pre-Christian way of living makes these references a threat to him; he is not on the path to Christian redemption.
“The hounds were worming in and out amid the bracken, and one of them leaped at the jutting rock beneath her, his great muzzle snuffling the stone. Then Jem fired once more; and, looking beyond her, Mary saw the tall black figure of Francis Davey outlined against the sky, standing upon a wide slab like an altar, high above her head. He stood for a moment poised like a statue, his hair blowing in the wind; and then he flung out his arms as a bird throws his wings for flight, and drooped suddenly and fell; down from his granite peak to the wet dank heather and the little crumbling stones.”
In the climactic scene of Jamaica Inn, Mary and Francis Davey flee from Squire Bassat’s hounds as Jem fires at them. The vicar’s dramatic death alludes to his ironic position as a preacher since he dies on an “altar,” and his outstretched arms recall the crucifixion, yet he ultimately falls. Du Maurier extends the avian imagery with which she describes him throughout the novel and his love of the moors as his body falls into the heather.
“In the kindness of their hearts they would have her enter into conversation when company was present, and strove that she should not sit aside; while she longed the while for the silence of her own bedroom or the homely kitchen of Richards the groom, whose apple-cheeked wife would make her welcome.”
Du Maurier explicitly explores the problems of class difference in a novel in which socioeconomic background shapes the events and yet is largely implicit. In the aftermath of the events of the novel, Mary is taken in by the Bassat family, who accepts her enthusiastically. However, Mary’s experiences have soured her to the region, and she does not feel that she fits in with the Bassats’ high-class society.
“‘Why are you sitting here beside me, then?’
‘Because I want to; because I must; because now and forever more this is where I belong to be,’ said Mary.
He laughed then, and took her hand, and gave her the reins; and she did not look back over her shoulder again but set her face towards the Tamar.”
In this final exchange, Mary chooses Jem over returning home to Helford. She loves Jem and is finally able to admit it; her histrionic speech of “now and forever more” indicates that her prior notions of romance have been overturned. Going along with her sense of adventure, Mary sets off with Jem for a life on the road.
By Daphne du Maurier