A Cup of Tea

by Katherine Mansfield

Rosemary Fell Character Analysis

The protagonist of “A Cup of Tea,” Rosemary Fell is a wealthy and (according to the narrative) moderately attractive woman who has seemingly grown bored with the comfort and predictability of the privileged life she shares with her husband of two years, Philip Fell. When the antique shop owner presents her with a beautiful but expensive enamel box, Rosemary decides not to purchase the item outright, deriving a small thrill from resisting her usual impulse to satisfy every whim. Stepping into the sad and rainy winter afternoon, she is approached by a poor, thin young girl named Miss Smith, who quietly asks for a cup of tea. Rather than giving her money, Rosemary brings Miss Smith home, eager to be viewed as a generous benefactor among her social circles. However, as the women sit down for tea and sandwiches, Rosemary’s charitable impulses slowly wane as she grows annoyed with the young woman’s lack of energy, gratitude, and positivity. When Philip comes home and remarks privately that Miss Smith is too beautiful for Rosemary’s “help,” Rosemary is consumed by envy and disbelief. Instead of arranging further assistance for Miss Smith, as she had promised, Rosemary is rattled by her husband’s comment and sends the girl away with just three pounds. She then returns to Philip and asks him to buy her the antique box, to which he agrees, though it was never what she honestly desired. As Rosemary proceeds to ask her husband if he thinks she is pretty, it becomes exceedingly clear that the thing she really craved all along was her husband’s validation.

Rosemary Fell Quotes in A Cup of Tea

The A Cup of Tea quotes below are all either spoken by Rosemary Fell or refer to Rosemary Fell. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Beauty, Wealth, and Power Theme Icon
).

A Cup of Tea Quotes

She was young, brilliant, extremely modern, exquisitely well dressed, amazingly well read in the newest of the new books, and her parties were the most delicious mixture of the really important people and [. . .] artists—quaint creatures, discoveries of hers, some of them too terrifying for words, but others quite presentable and amusing.

Related Characters: Rosemary Fell
Page Number and Citation: 362
Explanation and Analysis:

[S]he couldn’t help noticing how charming her hands were against the blue velvet. The shopman, in some dim cavern of his mind, may have dared to think so too. For he took a pencil, leant over the counter, and his pale bloodless fingers crept timidly towards those rosy, flashing ones . . .

Related Characters: The Antique Store Shopman, Rosemary Fell
Related Symbols: The Antique Enamel Box
Page Number and Citation: 363
Explanation and Analysis:

Rain was falling, and with the rain it seemed the dark came too, spinning down like ashes. There was a cold bitter taste in the air, and the new-lighted lamps looked sad. Sad were the lights in the houses opposite. Dimly they burned as if regretting something. And people hurried by, hidden under their hateful umbrellas.

Related Characters: Rosemary Fell
Page Number and Citation: 363
Explanation and Analysis:

There are moments, horrible moments in life, when one emerges from shelter and looks out, and it’s awful. One oughtn’t to give way to them. One ought to go home and have an extra-special tea.

Related Characters: Rosemary Fell
Related Symbols: Tea
Page Number and Citation: 363-364
Explanation and Analysis:

And suddenly it seemed to Rosemary such an adventure. It was like something out of a novel by Dostoevsky, this meeting in the dusk. [...] Supposing she did do one of those things she was always reading about or seeing on the stage, what would happen? It would be thrilling.

Related Characters: The Girl/Miss Smith, Rosemary Fell
Page Number and Citation: 364
Explanation and Analysis:

[...] Rosemary drew the other into the hall. Warmth, softness, light, a sweet scent, all those things so familiar to her she never even thought about them, she watched that other receive. It was fascinating. She was like the rich little girl in her nursery with all the cupboards to open, all the boxes to unpack.

Related Characters: Rosemary Fell, The Girl/Miss Smith
Page Number and Citation: 365
Explanation and Analysis:

“Oh, please,”—Rosemary ran forward—“you mustn’t be frightened, you mustn’t, really. Sit down, and when I’ve taken off my things we shall go into the next room and have tea and be cosy. Why are you afraid?” And gently she half pushed the thin figure into its deep cradle.

Related Characters: Rosemary Fell (speaker), The Girl/Miss Smith
Related Symbols: Tea
Page Number and Citation: 365-366
Explanation and Analysis:

[...] she held on to the chair with one hand and let Rosemary pull. It was quite an effort. The other scarcely helped her at all. [...] the thought came and went through Rosemary’s mind, that if people wanted helping they must respond a little, just a little, otherwise it became very difficult indeed. And what was she to do with the coat now? She left it on the floor, and the hat too.

Related Characters: The Girl/Miss Smith, Rosemary Fell
Page Number and Citation: 366
Explanation and Analysis:

“It’s a beastly afternoon,” he said curiously, still looking at that listless figure, looking at its hands and boots, and then at Rosemary again.

“Yes, isn’t it?” said Rosemary enthusiastically. “Vile.”

Related Characters: Rosemary Fell (speaker), Philip Fell (speaker), The Girl/Miss Smith
Page Number and Citation: 367
Explanation and Analysis:

Half an hour later [...] Rosemary came in.

“I only wanted to tell you,” said she, and she leaned against the door again and looked at him with her dazzled exotic gaze, “Miss Smith won’t dine with us tonight.”

Philip put down the paper. “Oh, what’s happened? Previous engagement?”

[...] “She insisted on going,” said she, “So I gave the poor little thing a present of money. I couldn’t keep her against her will, could I?” she added softly.

Related Characters: Rosemary Fell (speaker), Philip Fell (speaker), The Girl/Miss Smith
Page Number and Citation: 368
Explanation and Analysis:
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Rosemary Fell Character Timeline in A Cup of Tea

The timeline below shows where the character Rosemary Fell appears in A Cup of Tea. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
A Cup of Tea
Beauty, Wealth, and Power Theme Icon
Class and Social Identity Theme Icon
Vanity, Materialism, and Kindness Theme Icon
Although Rosemary Fell is not the kind of woman who most would describe as beautiful or even... (full context)
Beauty, Wealth, and Power Theme Icon
Class and Social Identity Theme Icon
Rosemary has been married for two years to her husband, Philip Fell, who worships her. They... (full context)
Beauty, Wealth, and Power Theme Icon
Class and Social Identity Theme Icon
One winter’s day, Rosemary visits an antique shop on Curzon Street that she frequents for its privacy and exclusivity.... (full context)
Beauty, Wealth, and Power Theme Icon
Class and Social Identity Theme Icon
Vanity, Materialism, and Kindness Theme Icon
As Rosemary steps outside into the rainy and sad winter afternoon, she thinks about how lovely a... (full context)
Beauty, Wealth, and Power Theme Icon
Class and Social Identity Theme Icon
Vanity, Materialism, and Kindness Theme Icon
Rosemary brings the girl inside her large, decadent home and into her bedroom, hiding her from... (full context)
Beauty, Wealth, and Power Theme Icon
Class and Social Identity Theme Icon
Vanity, Materialism, and Kindness Theme Icon
Just as Rosemary is about to begin her inquisition into the woman’s life story, her husband Philip enters... (full context)
Beauty, Wealth, and Power Theme Icon
Class and Social Identity Theme Icon
Vanity, Materialism, and Kindness Theme Icon
Prompted by her husband’s comments about Miss Smith’s beauty, and in a fit of jealousy, Rosemary resolves to pay her and send her away immediately. She first grabs her checkbook, but... (full context)