The Good Soldier

by

Ford Madox Ford

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Florence Dowell Character Analysis

Florence Dowell is John Dowell’s wife and Edward Ashburnham’s mistress. She comes from a notable Pennsylvania family with a significant fortune. For reasons that are not entirely clear, Florence’s aunts and uncles did not want Florence to marry John. However, Florence’s desire to travel to England—where her family is from—leads her to accept John’s hand in marriage. Although innocent on the surface, Florence can be duplicitous and cruel. She fakes a heart condition so that she does not have to have sex with John and then carries out multiple affairs, the most notable of which is with Edward. Though intelligent and knowledgeable about history, Florence is intellectually inferior to Leonora, which bothers her deeply. She regularly tries to outdo Leonora by acting as a tour guide for the group, but Leonora always knows more. However, Florence feels superior to Leonora in two ways; first, she is Protestant, and second, she is having sex with Edward. Although she can be cruel, Florence is genuinely in love with Edward. Unfortunately, Edward views Florence just another checkmark on his long list of affairs. Eventually, he grows sick of Florence and pursues Nancy Rufford instead. When Florence discovers Edward’s interest in Nancy, she takes her own life.

Florence Dowell Quotes in The Good Soldier

The The Good Soldier quotes below are all either spoken by Florence Dowell or refer to Florence Dowell. 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:
Marriage and Infidelity Theme Icon
).
Part 1, Chapter 2 Quotes

I don’t know how it is best to put this thing down—whether it would be better to try and tell the story from the beginning, as if it were a story; or whether to tell it from this distance of time, as it reached me from the lips of Leonora or from those of Edward himself.

So I shall just imagine myself for a fortnight or so at one side of the fireplace of a country cottage, with a sympathetic soul opposite me.

Related Characters: John Dowell (speaker), Edward Ashburnham, Florence Dowell
Page Number: 8
Explanation and Analysis:

I inherited his money because Florence died five days after him. I wish I hadn’t. It was a great worry. I had to go out to Waterbury just after Florence's death because the poor dear old fellow had left a good many charitable bequests and I had to appoint trustees. I didn't like the idea of their not being properly handled.

Related Characters: John Dowell (speaker), Florence Dowell, Uncle John
Page Number: 13
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 1, Chapter 3 Quotes

Yes, that is how I most exactly remember her, in that dress, in that hat, looking over her shoulder at me so that the eyes flashed very blue—dark pebble blue...

And, what the devil! For whose benefit did she do it? For that of the bath attendant? of the passers-by? I don't know. Anyhow, it can't have been for me, for never, in all the years of her life, never on any possible occasion, or in any other place did she so smile to me, mockingly, invitingly. Ah, she was a riddle; but then, all other women are riddles.

Related Characters: John Dowell (speaker), Florence Dowell
Related Symbols: Weak Hearts
Page Number: 15
Explanation and Analysis:

Good God, what did they all see in him? for I swear there was all there was of him, inside and out; though they said he was a good soldier. Yet, Leonora adored him with a passion that was like an agony, and hated him with an agony that was as bitter as the sea. How could he arouse anything like a sentiment, in anybody?

Related Characters: John Dowell (speaker), Edward Ashburnham, Florence Dowell
Page Number: 18
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 1, Chapter 4 Quotes

It really worried poor Florence that she couldn’t, in matters of culture, ever get the better of Leonora. I don't know what Leonora knew or what she didn't know, but certainly she was always there whenever Florence brought out any information. And she gave, somehow, the impression of really knowing what poor Florence gave the impression of having only picked up.

Page Number: 28
Explanation and Analysis:

She continued, looking up into Captain Ashburnham’s eyes: “It's because of that piece of paper that you're honest, sober, industrious, provident, and clean-lived. If it weren’t for that piece of paper you’d be like the Irish or the Italians or the Poles, but particularly the Irish....”

And she laid one finger upon Captain Ashburnham’s wrist.

Related Characters: Florence Dowell (speaker), John Dowell (speaker), Edward Ashburnham, Leonora Ashburnham
Related Symbols: Martin Luther’s Protest
Page Number: 31
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 1, Chapter 5 Quotes

But just think of that poor wretch.... I, who have surely the right, beg you to think of that poor wretch. Is it possible that such a luckless devil should be so tormented by blind and inscrutable destiny? For there is no other way to think of it. None. I have the right to say it, since for years he was my wife's lover, since he killed her, since he broke up all the pleasantnesses that there were in my life. There is no priest that has the right to tell me that I must not ask pity for him, from you, silent listener beyond the hearth-stone, from the world, or from the God who created in him those desires, those madnesses....

Related Characters: John Dowell (speaker), Edward Ashburnham, Florence Dowell
Page Number: 35
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 1, Chapter 6 Quotes

You ask how it feels to be a deceived husband. Just Heavens, I do not know. It feels just nothing at all. It is not Hell, certainly it is not necessarily Heaven. So I suppose it is the intermediate stage. What do they call it? Limbo. No, I feel nothing at all about that. They are dead; they have gone before their Judge who, I hope, will open to them the springs of His compassion.

Related Characters: John Dowell (speaker), Florence Dowell, Edward Ashburnham
Page Number: 50
Explanation and Analysis:

And, do you know, at the thought of that intense solitude I feel an overwhelming desire to rush forward and comfort her. You cannot, you see, have acted as nurse to a person for twelve years without wishing to go on nursing them, even though you hate them with the hatred of the adder, and even in the palm of God. But, in the nights, with that vision of judgement before me, I know that I hold myself back. For I hate Florence. I hate Florence with such a hatred that I would not spare her an eternity of loneliness. She need not have done what she did. She was an American, a New Englander. She had not the hot passions of these Europeans.

Related Characters: John Dowell (speaker), Florence Dowell
Page Number: 51
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2, Chapter 1 Quotes

Well, Julius was so overcome with grief at being left behind that he must needs go and drop the precious grip. I saw red, I saw purple. I flew at Julius. On the ferry, it was, I filled up one of his eyes; I threatened to strangle him. And, since an unresisting negro can make a deplorable noise and a deplorable spectacle, and, since that was Florence’s first adventure in the married state, she got a pretty idea of my character. It affirmed in her the desperate resolve to conceal from me the fact that she was not what she would have called “a pure woman.” For that was really the mainspring of her fantastic actions. She was afraid that I should murder her....

Page Number: 65-66
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2, Chapter 2 Quotes

A long time afterwards I pulled myself out of the lounge and went up to Florence’s room. She had not locked the door—for the first time of our married life. She was lying, quite respectably arranged, unlike Mrs. Maidan, on her bed. She had a little phial that rightly should have contained nitrate of amyl, in her right hand. That was on the 4th of August, 1913.

Related Characters: John Dowell (speaker), Florence Dowell, Edward Ashburnham
Page Number: 73
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 3, Chapter 1 Quotes

I must have talked in an odd way, as people do who are recovering from an anaesthetic. It is as if one had a dual personality, the one I being entirely unconscious of the other. I had thought nothing; I had said such an extraordinary thing.

I don't know that analysis of my own psychology matters at all to this story. I should say that it didn't or, at any rate, that I had given enough of it. But that odd remark of mine had a strong influence upon what came after. I mean, that Leonora would probably never have spoken to me at all about Florence’s relations with Edward if I hadn’t said, two hours after my wife’s death:

“Now I can marry the girl.”

Related Characters: John Dowell (speaker), Florence Dowell, Nancy Rufford
Page Number: 74
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 4, Chapter 1 Quotes

And, when one discusses an affair—a long, sad affair—one goes back, one goes forward. One remembers points that one has forgotten and one explains them all the more minutely since one recognizes that one has forgotten to mention them in their proper places and that one may have given, by omitting them, a false impression. I console myself with thinking that this is a real story and that, after all, real stories are probably told best in the way a person telling a story would tell them. They will then seem most real.

Related Characters: John Dowell (speaker), Edward Ashburnham, Florence Dowell
Page Number: 131
Explanation and Analysis:

And the longer I think about them the more certain I become that Florence was a contaminating influence—she depressed and deteriorated poor Edward; she deteriorated, hopelessly, the miserable Leonora. There is no doubt that she caused Leonora’s character to deteriorate.

Related Characters: John Dowell (speaker), Edward Ashburnham, Florence Dowell
Page Number: 132
Explanation and Analysis:

I have told you, I think, that Edward spent a great deal of time, and about two hundred pounds for law fees on getting a poor girl, the daughter of one of his gardeners, acquitted of a charge of murdering her baby. That was positively the last act of Edward’s life. It came at a time when Nancy Rufford was on her way to India; when the most horrible gloom was over the household; when Edward himself was in an agony and behaving as prettily as he knew how. Yet even then Leonora made him a terrible scene about this expenditure of time and trouble. She sort of had the vague idea that what had passed with the girl and the rest of it ought to have taught Edward a lesson—the lesson of economy. She threatened to take his banking account away from him again. I guess that made him cut his throat.

Page Number: 139
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 4, Chapter 6 Quotes

For I can’t conceal from myself the fact that I loved Edward Ashburnham—and that I love him because he was just myself. If I had had the courage and virility and possibly also the physique of Edward Ashburnham I should, I fancy, have done much what he did. He seems to me like a large elder brother who took me out on several excursions and did many dashing things whilst I just watched him robbing the orchards, from a distance. And, you see, I am just as much of a sentimentalist as he was...

Related Characters: John Dowell (speaker), Edward Ashburnham, Florence Dowell
Page Number: 182
Explanation and Analysis:

When he saw that I did not intend to interfere with him his eyes became soft and almost affectionate. He remarked:

“So long, old man, I must have a bit of a rest, you know.”

I didn’t know what to say. I wanted to say, “God bless you,” for I also am a sentimentalist. But I thought that perhaps that would not be quite English good form, so I trotted off with the telegram to Leonora. She was quite pleased with it.

Related Characters: John Dowell (speaker), Edward Ashburnham (speaker), Florence Dowell, Leonora Ashburnham, Nancy Rufford
Page Number: 184
Explanation and Analysis:
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Florence Dowell Character Timeline in The Good Soldier

The timeline below shows where the character Florence Dowell appears in The Good Soldier. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Part 1, Chapter 1
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
...tell the saddest story he’s ever heard. The story relates to the narrator, his wife Florence (who is now dead), and the Ashburnhams, another married couple. John and Florence are Americans,... (full context)
Class and Traditional Morality  Theme Icon
Both Florence and Edward Ashburnham have heart problems. Florence’s issues are the result of a difficult sea... (full context)
Marriage and Infidelity Theme Icon
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
...he did not know about the decay until it was too late. Although John thought Florence was always by his side, now he realizes that she wasn’t. He doesn’t blame her... (full context)
Part 1, Chapter 2
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
...sympathetic soul” willing to lend an ear. Feeling satisfied with this image, John begins describing Florence in more detail. Florence is a loquacious woman with a great mind; she loves traveling... (full context)
Marriage and Infidelity Theme Icon
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
Although John would prefer to visit the same places repeatedly, Florence only wants to go everywhere once. After a single trip, Florence feels she’s understood the... (full context)
Class and Traditional Morality  Theme Icon
Florence’s closest relatives do not like John because they think he is lazy. John admits that... (full context)
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
Coincidentally, Uncle John died just five days prior to Florence herself. However, as it turns out, he did not have a heart condition. In the... (full context)
Part 1, Chapter 3
Marriage and Infidelity Theme Icon
John shifts his focus to August 1904, when he and Florence first met the Ashburnhams. At the time, Florence was routinely taking spa baths, and it... (full context)
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
...boredom, John remembers meeting the Ashburnhams in the dining room of their hotel. Leonora and Florence were the first to become acquainted, and the two of them suggested that the couples... (full context)
Marriage and Infidelity Theme Icon
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
...night they met, as though he was the one with the heart condition and not Florence. Nonetheless, he insists that he loves Leonora and would happily give his life for hers. (full context)
Part 1, Chapter 4
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
Class and Traditional Morality  Theme Icon
When the group travels together, Florence always acts as a tour guide. She knows a lot about history and likes to... (full context)
Marriage and Infidelity Theme Icon
Religion Theme Icon
...Martin Luther’s bedroom and look at his Protest, a document which differentiates Protestantism from Catholicism. Florence lectures the group about the importance of the document and in doing so makes disparaging... (full context)
Marriage and Infidelity Theme Icon
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
Religion Theme Icon
...she needs an explanation for her behavior, Leonora tells John that she is offended that Florence would speak disparagingly about Irish Catholics because she is a member of the faith. (full context)
Part 1, Chapter 5
Marriage and Infidelity Theme Icon
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
John thinks that his mission in life is to care for Florence and ensure her heart stays healthy. He constantly optimizes their travel plans around Florence’s health.... (full context)
Marriage and Infidelity Theme Icon
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
...too far for Leonora, and she hit Maisie on the side of the head. Coincidentally, Florence came upon this scene just in time to see Leonora hit Maisie. Not wanting to... (full context)
Part 1, Chapter 6
Marriage and Infidelity Theme Icon
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
...to Prussia and Leonora’s sudden outburst. In the moment, John is struck by how much Florence’s comments about Catholicism bother Leonora. For a moment, John thinks there is even something threatening... (full context)
While John was blissfully unaware, Leonora and Florence openly discussed Florence’s affair with Edward. Despite her attachment to Edward, Florence promised Leonora that... (full context)
Part 2, Chapter 1
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
...coincidentally, it is when significant events tend to happen. August 4th is when John and Florence were married, it is the day of Maisie’s death, and it is Florence’s birthday. Something... (full context)
Marriage and Infidelity Theme Icon
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
...his story, John once again delves deeper into the past to explain how he and Florence came to be married. John met Florence at the home of a famous family and... (full context)
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
Although John is not English, he knows he can provide Florence with the European lifestyle she desires. Eventually, Florence decides that this is good enough and... (full context)
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
Only after their marriage did Florence mention her heart condition to John. At the time, John assumes that Florence’s weak heart... (full context)
Marriage and Infidelity Theme Icon
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
Class and Traditional Morality  Theme Icon
Florence and John arrive in Paris where Florence begins an affair with Jimmy, a cabin boy... (full context)
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
While reflecting on Florence’s affairs, John tells a story that he thinks set the tone for their relationship. Before... (full context)
Marriage and Infidelity Theme Icon
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
Class and Traditional Morality  Theme Icon
John returns to contemplating Florence’s affairs. He cannot fathom how she would fall in love with Jimmy. He considers Jimmy... (full context)
Part 2, Chapter 2
Marriage and Infidelity Theme Icon
John suspects Florence got rid of Jimmy as her lover by getting Edward to assault him physically. Regardless,... (full context)
Marriage and Infidelity Theme Icon
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
After contemplating Edward and Florence’s affair, John returns to August 4th, 1913. On the evening of the 4th, Nancy and... (full context)
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The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
When Bagshawe sees Florence, he recognizes her and tells John about her affair with Jimmy. Bagshawe doesn’t know John... (full context)
Part 3, Chapter 1
Marriage and Infidelity Theme Icon
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
On the night of Florence’s death, John considers marrying Nancy. He even says this out loud to Leonora. He assures... (full context)
Marriage and Infidelity Theme Icon
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
...Leonora begins revealing her knowledge to John. By this point, Leonora assumed John knew about Florence and Edward’s affair, so she talked about it openly. According to John, this is the... (full context)
Marriage and Infidelity Theme Icon
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
Eventually, John figures out what led to Florence’s suicide. Apparently, Florence followed Edward and Nancy (as instructed by Leonora) who went to a... (full context)
Marriage and Infidelity Theme Icon
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
Florence runs back to the hotel where she sees John with Bagshawe. John thinks that the... (full context)
Part 3, Chapter 2
Class and Traditional Morality  Theme Icon
In the wake of Florence’s suicide, Leonora pieces together what she saw in the park and does her best to... (full context)
Marriage and Infidelity Theme Icon
Class and Traditional Morality  Theme Icon
Religion Theme Icon
...as difficult as normal to keep Edward away from Nancy because he’s grown weak following Florence’s death. As the days stretch on, Edward continues to lose strength and drink heavily. Eventually,... (full context)
Part 3, Chapter 5
Marriage and Infidelity Theme Icon
...day Edward will come back to her; or, at least, she did until Edward met Florence. (full context)
Part 4, Chapter 1
Marriage and Infidelity Theme Icon
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
...be told. As he reflects on what has been said so far, John thinks about Florence’s place in the whole affair. At this point, he feels she is greatly responsible for... (full context)
Marriage and Infidelity Theme Icon
Before Florence and Edward’s affair, Leonora was making good progress in bringing Edward back to her. They... (full context)
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
After Florence’s death, Leonora and Edward returned to Branshaw Manor, their primary estate. At this point, their... (full context)
Part 4, Chapter 2
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
...turns the focus of his tale to his own life story in the wake of Florence’s death. As was previously mentioned, after Florence died, he had to go to Connecticut to... (full context)
Part 4, Chapter 5
The Manipulation of Reality Theme Icon
...John realizes, no one in his life ended up happy. He is rich, but alone, Florence and Edward killed themselves, and Leonora settled for Rodney Bayham, a man she considered having... (full context)