Agnes Grey

Agnes Grey

by

Anne Brontë

Teachers and parents! Our Teacher Edition on Agnes Grey makes teaching easy.
Flowers Symbol Icon

In Agnes Grey, flowers represent the difference between Agnes Grey’s beliefs about love and those of her flirtatious student Rosalie Murray: whereas Agnes believes that love derives from shared values and mutual support, Rosalie thinks of love as the result of a struggle in which a woman “conquers” a man with her charms. When Agnes is missing her loving, religious home while working for the status-obsessed, superficial Murray family, she sees primroses that remind her of home blooming high up in some tree roots. When Agnes tries and fails to reach the primroses by herself, the village curate Mr. Weston stops, picks them for her, and asks her about her favorite flowers. Agnes tells him that her favorite flowers are those that remind her of her loving home. This explanation makes explicit the symbolic link between flowers and love while also foreshadowing that Mr. Weston—with whom Agnes falls in love and eventually marries—will give Agnes a new loving home based on shared moral and religious commitments. In contrast, Rosalie Murray later flirts with the lovesick village rector Mr. Hatfield by toying with a sprig of myrtle (a flowering plant) while he detains her with conversation. When he asks her for the myrtle—symbolically asking for her love—Rosalie refuses to give it to him until he begs for it. After he takes the flower and goes, Rosalie immediately criticizes him to Agnes, revealing that she is only interested in “conquering” Mr. Hatfield, not in loving him herself. Love is, to Rosalie, a game. The different ways Agnes and Rosalie exchange flowers with men thus illustrate their divergent beliefs about what romantic love should be.

Flowers Quotes in Agnes Grey

The Agnes Grey quotes below all refer to the symbol of Flowers. 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:
Education, Authority, and Class Theme Icon
).
Chapter 13: The Primroses Quotes

As for the primroses, I kept two of them in a glass in my room until they were completely withered, and the housemaid threw them out; and the petals of the other I pressed between the leaves of my Bible—I have them still, and mean to keep them always.

Related Characters: Agnes Grey (speaker), Agnes’s Mother/Alice Grey, Agnes’s Father/Richard Grey, Mr. Weston, Rosalie Murray
Related Symbols: Flowers
Page Number: 87
Explanation and Analysis:
Get the entire Agnes Grey LitChart as a printable PDF.
Agnes Grey PDF

Flowers Symbol Timeline in Agnes Grey

The timeline below shows where the symbol Flowers appears in Agnes Grey. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Chapter 13: The Primroses
Money vs. Love in Marriage Theme Icon
Power and Cruelty Theme Icon
...hangs back from the walking party to enjoy the spring weather when she sees some primroses blooming high up in an oak’s roots on a bank. Agnes tries to pick them,... (full context)
Money vs. Love in Marriage Theme Icon
Religion Theme Icon
...to God for “another’s welfare” along with her own. She also presses one of the primroses into her Bible. (full context)
Chapter 14: The Rector
Money vs. Love in Marriage Theme Icon
Power and Cruelty Theme Icon
...just beyond the Murrays’ property. Rosalie is holding a book in one hand and some myrtle in the other, looking coquettishly at her admirer. The terrier Snap, running ahead of Agnes,... (full context)
Chapter 18: Mirth and Mourning
Money vs. Love in Marriage Theme Icon
Power and Cruelty Theme Icon
...But on the way back, they run into him again, and he picks Agnes some bluebells, having remembered that they’re one of her favorite flowers. Agnes goes home happy and hopeful—but... (full context)