The House of the Spirits

by

Isabel Allende

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The House of the Spirits: Chapter 2 Summary & Analysis

Summary
Analysis
In the dining room of what had been a superb Victorian home, Esteban sits at the breakfast table with Férula. Their mother, Doña Ester Trueba, does not join them. Doña Ester Trueba spends her mornings immobile in a chair, watching from the window as the neighborhood declines. After breakfast, she is assisted back to bed, where she stays in a semi-seated position until the next morning, when the process begins again. Esteban places his silverware on his empty plate. He sits stiffly, just as he walks. He is strong, and he is known for his quick temper and violence. Esteban tells his sister that he won’t be returning to the mine.
The Truebas’ rundown home, which was once a great Victorian house, suggests the Truebas were very wealthy at one point. The declining neighborhood, however, implies that the Truebas are not the only people to suffer from an economic downturn, which again points to widespread class struggle. Doña Ester is obviously a very sick woman and likely needs someone to care for her 24 hours a day. Since the Truebas don’t have much money, it can be assumed that Férula must take care of her mother.  
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Férula reminds Esteban that he must do something to make money. Doña Ester’s medications are expensive, she says. Esteban looks at his sister. She is still a beautiful woman, but she has resigned herself to the role of their mother’s fulltime nurse. Férula is a miserable woman, and while she will never tell Esteban, she has already turned down two marriage proposals. She adored Esteban as a child, but he has been pulling away from her since the first time he put on “long pants.” Now, Férula sits and watches the clock, waiting for mother’s scheduled medication times, angry that her brother isn’t obligated to the same fate.
The roles that Esteban and Férula assume again speak to the nature of their patriarchal society. As a man, Esteban is expected to make money, and as a woman, Férula is expected to be a caretaker. Férula’s role is confined and oppressive—it doesn’t allow her to live for herself, which she clearly resents. Furthermore, from the moment Esteban wore “long pants”—meaning from the moment he became a man—he has pulled away from Férula, which suggests that he views himself as superior to her. 
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Esteban tells Férula that he has decided to go to Tres Marías, but Férula tries to talk him out of it. The place is in ruins, she says, and Esteban would do well to sell it for the price of the land. Esteban refuses. Land, he says, is all that is left when everything else is gone. “I would like to have been born a man,” Férula says with venom and hatred in her voice, “so I could leave too.” Esteban can’t relate; he has never wanted to be a woman.
Férula’s comment, and the resentment with which she says it, again reflects their sexist society. She isn’t free in the same way Esteban is to live her life as she pleases—she can’t just up and move to Tres Marías on whim because she must care for Doña Ester. Esteban, on the other hand, is unsympathetic to his sister’s complaints and takes his freedom completely for granted.
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Doña Ester has suffered with crippling arthritis for several years, but she was once heir to the highest surname of the viceroyalty of Lima. That all changed, however, when she met and feel in love with Esteban and Férula’s father, a “good-for-nothing immigrant” who wasted her dowry and inheritance. Now, there isn’t enough money to pay the grocer, and Tres Marías, a country hacienda, is all that is left of their once-great fortune. Esteban leaves two days later for the country, and Férula kisses him coldly on the cheek. Esteban tells his sister that he will never be poor again and climbs onto the train.
Lima is the capital city of Peru, but Allende implies that the story takes place in a different country. The House of the Spirits is a semiautobiographical novel, and Allende herself was born in Lima, Peru, before moving to Chile as a child. Allende never explicitly states that the story takes place in Chile; however, she refers to many events in Chilean history. Regardless of the book’s setting, the experience of Esteban and Férula’s father is universally experienced by immigrants around the world. Immigrants are often of the lower classes, and the description of Esteban and Férula’s father as a “good-for-nothing immigrant” suggests the classist nature of their society. Férula’s cold kiss further reflects her resentment of Esteban’s freedom as a man.
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Esteban arrives in the town of San Lucas, a terrible place nestled in the valley of a large volcano. He played at Tres Marías during school breaks as a boy, but that was a long time ago and memory has all but erased those summers. San Lucas is like a ghost town, and Esteban walks around the entire town without seeing another soul. Then, he notices a woodcutter in a wobbly cart and asks for a ride to Tres Marías. The man tells Esteban that Tres Marías is “a no-man’s-land,” but Esteban insists. As they approach the hacienda, the inhabitants come out of their huts and watch. 
Several countries in Central and South American have cities named San Lucas, including Mexico, Guatemala, Nicaragua, and Honduras, which implies that Allende’s story could take place anywhere in that general location. San Lucas’s placement at the foot of a large volcano suggests it isn’t a sought-after location to live or own property—if the volcano erupts, the people and the town will be wiped out. Meanwhile, Esteban’s inability to remember Tres Marías reflects the unreliably of memory when trying to recall the past.
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The cart pulls up to the main house of Tres Marías, and Esteban goes inside. The house is covered in dust and cobwebs, and he marvels at how time has worn the house away, leaving only dirt and poverty. To Esteban, Tres Marías looks worse than the mine. He walks through the entire house, and when he is done, Esteban goes outside. Looking around, he sees only women and children and asks where the men are. A man, Pedro Segundo García, steps forward and tells Esteban that all the other men have left. Esteban says he is the new patrón, and he tells them all that it is time to get to work. 
A patrón is a wealthy landowner, although the condition of Tres Marías doesn’t exactly reflect wealth. The men have likely gone in search of work elsewhere, which underscores the extreme poverty of the peasants living on Tres Marías. This, too, reflects patriarchal ideals, as it is the men who are expected to go out and earn. Esteban wastes no time telling the peasants he is charge, and this further feeds into his feelings of superiority.
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No one can convince Esteban that he isn’t a good patrón, which is why he refuses to believe in “class struggle.” Esteban thinks the peasants are much better off with him than without him. He uses all the money he saved to marry Rosa to fix up Tres Marías, and with hard work and organization, it begins to resemble the estate it once was. The livestock flourishes, and they rebuild the main house. The peasants’ wives take turns working in the main house, and they tend to the orchards as well. The old fields are replanted, and they build stables and chicken coops, and even a new irrigation system. Anyone who falls ill is taken to the hospital, and Esteban even arranges for a priest to come bless the property and people and perform baptisms.
Esteban’s refusal to believe in “class struggle” and his belief that the peasants are better off with him again underscores his feelings of superiority. To Esteban, the peasants need him to ensure a better life. In his opinion, he isn’t oppressing the peasants, and they don’t “struggle” because of him. He orders the women to work in the main house, which again reflects traditional gender roles within their patriarchal society. The women are expected to keep mostly to the domestic sphere while the men work in the fields.   
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Soon, Esteban begins to feel at home at Tres Marías, and he especially enjoys the solitude and the work. Despite this, however, Esteban’s bad character only grows worse, and he treats the peasants and their children badly. The only thing that calms Esteban’s foul mood is hunting, and he takes frequent horseback rides with his rifle. Still, Esteban maintains that he is a very good patrón, and no one will ever convince him otherwise.
Esteban is convinced he is a good patrón because he provides the peasants with healthcare and a priest, but he clearly doesn’t treat them well. Allende implies that a good patrón both provides such services and treats his peasants well. If Esteban subjects the peasants to his violence and temper, he isn’t a good patrón at all.
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During his first months at Tres Marías, Esteban goes to bed exhausted each night and wakes before dawn ready to work. However, the nights soon grow difficult, and the blankets feel too heavy and the sheets too thin. Esteban’s horse begins to play tricks on him and turns into “a formidable female,” which he rides until his body aches. At night, he wakes from terrible nightmares of “rotten shellfish, of enormous slabs of raw beef, of blood, semen, and tears,” always with a massive erection that he must jump into the icy river to relieve. It is clear to Esteban that he needs a woman, and he smiles for the first time in months.
Esteban speaks of his horse in near-erotic terms, and his description of the animal as “a formidable female” further reflects his sexism. He views women—and even female animals—as difficult and troublesome, yet he needs women to fulfill his sexual desires. His dreams of raw meat and semen are also highly animalistic and sexual, which reflects Esteban’s selfishness: he doesn’t desire a woman until he desires sex. It seems, then, that Esteban largely views women as sexual objects rather than as people.
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Esteban has seen the peasant girl, Pancha García, many times on the hacienda, washing clothes in the river, and it is late afternoon when he goes out to look for her. He finds her, bent over a kitchen hearth. She doesn’t look up at him (peasant women always bow their head as a sign of respect in front of Esteban), but he rides his horse right up to the hearth and, placing his arm firmly around her waist, pulls Pancha up into the saddle.
Pancha’s chores at the kitchen hearth again reflect society’s gender roles, as laundry and cooking are largely viewed as a woman’s job. Esteban’s actions again reflect his feelings of superiority. He desires a woman, so he finds one and takes her—without even thinking to ask her permission.
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Esteban rides with Pancha in the saddle down to the river, and they climb down from the horse. Without removing his clothes, Esteban attacks her, “savagely thrusting himself into her without preamble, with unnecessary brutality.” He can tell she is a virgin, but Pancha makes no attempt to resist him, as both Pancha’s mother and grandmother before her “suffered the same animal fate.” When Esteban is satisfied, he stops and whistles as Pancha weeps. From that day on, Esteban orders Pancha to work in the main house, where he takes his time with her, making sure she enjoys their sexual encounters, too.
Esteban doesn’t just rape Pancha—he “savagely” rapes her with “unnecessary brutality.” What’s worse, Pancha isn’t the least bit surprised by the violent assault, as both her mother and grandmother were raped as well. This implies that women are frequently subjected to such horrendous treatment in the society of the novel, which again speaks to the overall oppression of women in a patriarchal system.
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Esteban begins construction on a six-room schoolhouse so that everyone on Tres Marías will know how to read, write, and do simple arithmetic. Esteban isn’t exactly comfortable with the peasants learning and filling their minds with new ideas, but he builds the school anyway, and he even finds a teacher to work for him. He considers building a dining hall where all the hacienda’s children can get one good meal a day, but he doesn’t think the children will come from all over the property just for a plate of food, so he scraps the idea. Instead, Esteban builds a sewing workshop and introduces Pancha to her first sewing machine. 
Esteban isn’t comfortable with the peasants learning to read and write because such skills open them up to new ideas like equality and justice, which could lead to a revolt and trouble for Esteban. The fact that Esteban doesn’t think the children will come from all over to eat reflects his own privilege. Esteban has likely never been hungry and is too selfish to realize the children would probably go to great lengths to get a good meal. 
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Esteban builds a general store, where the peasants can buy whatever they need, and he sets up a voucher system using pink slips of paper. The pink paper serves as legal tender on the hacienda, and Esteban pays each of the peasants with the small pieces of paper. Women are expected to work just like the men, but Esteban doesn’t pay them. He only pays the widows, who are considered heads of family. Esteban gives everyone free soap, knitting wool, and medicine, since he doesn’t want dirty, cold, or sick peasants. He even gets a short-wave radio and listens to news of a great war, but Pedro Segundo García is the only peasant interested in outside events.
Esteban’s system of paying the peasants with pink vouchers ensures that the peasants can never be free. The pink paper is worthless anywhere besides Tres María, and this makes the peasants completely dependent upon Esteban, just as he wants them to be. Furthermore, he only provides the peasants with things that make them more valuable to him, since healthy peasants who can work harder. Everything else they must pay for, which again reflects Esteban’s selfishness. 
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Esteban and Pedro Segundo spend a lot of time together, listening to the radio and working, and he is the closest Esteban has to a friend. Esteban’s pride, however, won’t recognize a peasant as a friend. Pedro Segundo was the unofficial foreman of the hacienda in the years before Esteban arrived, and sometimes Esteban thinks he can see “murderous hatred” in Pedro Segundo’s eyes. Still, Pedro Segundo is honest and loyal, and says nothing when he sees his sister, Pancha, in the main house.
Esteban’s inability to consider a peasant a friend again reflects his classism, while the “murderous hatred” in Pedro’s eyes implies that he resents Esteban and that Esteban isn’t a good patrón like he believes. Pedro is forced to work for Esteban for little pay, and he must sit back as Esteban mistreats his sister. Pedro has every reason to hate Esteban.
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Soon, Esteban realizes that Pancha is obviously pregnant, although he is certainly the last one to notice. He cares very little and only uses her to relieve tension and get a good night’s sleep. In truth, he is “repulsed” by Pancha, and he can’t view any child she gives birth to as his own. Esteban looks out the window to another young peasant girl, about 13 or 14 years old, and smiles.
This passage is further proof of Esteban’s classism and sexism. He is “repulsed” by Pancha and won’t acknowledge their child because she is a peasant and beneath him in class standing. Esteban sees Pancha and the other peasant girls as little more than objects to fulfill his sexual desires.
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Over the next ten years, Esteban continues to improve Tres Marías. He builds brick houses for the peasants and raises their standard of living, but his bad temper is well-known. There isn’t a peasant girl around that isn’t taken into the woods by Esteban, and the entire region is soon overflowing with Esteban’s “bastard offspring.” Pedro Segundo tries to convince Esteban that it isn’t brick houses and free milk that makes a good patrón, but a good salary not paid in pink paper and a workload that doesn’t break one’s back. Esteban refuses to listen. Such ideas are “Bolshevik” nonsense, Esteban says. Peasants are like children, he maintains. What would they do without him?
Again, Esteban clearly thinks he is better than the peasants. He refuses to associate with any of the peasant women he rapes and impregnates, and his reference to their babies as “bastard offspring” further reflects society’s patriarchal ideals. Children are only considered legitimate if they come from marriage between two people of the same class. A “Bolshevik” is a member of Russia’s Marxist Party, which implies that Esteban considers fair pay for fair work a strictly communist idea. 
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Esteban claims that the peasants can’t properly care for themselves, yet they want the right to vote. They will likely vote for communists, Esteban thinks, because they don’t understand that governments must be ran by strong men. It is nice to think that all humankind is created equal, but Esteban knows this isn’t true. In fact, the idea of equality is so ridiculous, it makes Esteban laugh.
Esteban does not believe in equality and freedom—he clearly doesn’t support communist ideals, which seek to make everyone in society equal. To Esteban, equality is a joke worth laughing at, and any political ideology which seeks to place Esteban on equal ground with peasants is likewise a joke.
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In the meantime, Esteban sends Férula and Doña Ester money and food, because he has plenty, but he has no desire to see them. He can tell them whatever he wants by letter, but he doesn’t mention his string of illegitimate children. Every peasant girl Esteban conquers seems to get pregnant, although he doesn’t believe they are his children. He does believe that Pancha’s son (also named Esteban) is his—Pancha was a virgin before they began having sex, after all. But Esteban still doesn’t take responsibility for the boy. Whenever a new peasant girl accuses him of fathering her child, he gives her a few banknotes, threatens her with his whip, and tells her never to come back. Esteban wants a woman of his own class to birth his children, so they can have his surname and the blessing of the church. 
Esteban claims to want the blessing of the church, but he never personally attends church, and he later says that religion is a feminine pursuit. Esteban only wants the blessing of the church because it is important to society and furthers the sexist assumption that only children born from married mothers are worth recognizing. Esteban’s abuse of the women he rapes is made worse by his threats to beat them if they dare ask help in raising their children—the very children he fathered. He kicks them out and essentially accuses them of sleeping with multiple men, since he denies that the children are his.
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Esteban thinks of Rosa’s mother, Nívea, who campaigned for women’s rights with the other suffragettes. Such women made their husbands look ridiculous, and Esteban always thought Nívea was “sick in the head.” A woman’s role is in the home, Esteban believes, not as doctors or presidents of nations. What women like Nívea really need, according to Esteban, is a “strong hand.” That year, the country begins “waking up,” and discontent spreads far and wide that strikes fear in their oligarchic society. The upper classes, however, are largely unaware of this looming threat. Esteban and the other landowners devise a plan for dealing with the upcoming presidential election. Their peasants still live like they did in colonial times, and the landowners want to keep it that way. Still, there is talk of unions, and Marxist pamphlets somehow find their way into circulation.
Esteban implies that Nívea and other suffragettes (women who fight for the rights of other women) are insane—“sick in the head”—for daring to believe they can and should have the same rights as men. Esteban further implies that women should be beaten (they need a “strong hand”) for such beliefs, which again reflects his misogyny and violence. The country is “waking up” because the country, which is largely made up the working and peasant classes, is coming to the realization that they deserve the exact same rights as their wealthy counterparts. This belief is reflected in the Marxist pamphlets, which advocate for class equality and warfare—notions that make the wealthy oligarchy nervous. 
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Esteban begins to frequent the Red Lantern, a local brothel, where the best dancer, Tránsito Soto, is his favorite. Even though he hates paying for something he can simply take whenever he wants, Esteban likes Tránsito because she isn’t afraid of the “brutalities of love.” One day, Tránsito asks to borrow 50 pesos, so she can move on. She is meant for bigger things, Tránsito says, and she promises to pay him back with interest. Esteban agrees, disappointed that he won’t see her anymore, but Tránsito says their paths will cross again. Life is full of the unexpected twists, she says. 
Esteban hates paying for a prostitute because he can simply rape his peasants for free; however, the fact that Tránsito isn’t afraid of the “brutalities of love” suggests that she lets Esteban abuse her without putting up a fuss. Tránsito, like Esteban, is looking to climb in social status, which is reflected in her desire for greater things. She wants more in life and isn’t content to remain at the Red Lantern.
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In the meantime, Esteban and the other landowners promise the peasants a bonus if the conservative candidate wins the presidential election, and they promise to fire them if their candidate doesn’t win. They rig ballot boxes and bribe the police, and they even transport the peasants to vote “under careful observation.” Liberals and radicals, Esteban says, are idiots, and communists are “atheist bastards who eat little children.”
The Liberal Party is concerned with the needs of the lower classes, so Esteban and the other landowners resort to intimidation and corruption to ensure the Conservative Party stays in power, keeping the upper classes rich and the lower classes poor. Communism, which doesn’t recognize formal religion, is branded as evil (they “eat little children,” after all) by the Conservative Party.
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One morning, after a particularly disturbing dream in which a tiny girl without eyes keeps calling him “Papa,” Esteban wakes to a telegram from Férula. Doña Ester is sick, the telegram says, and she wants to see her son before she dies. Esteban doesn’t really love his mother, but the telegram still bothers him. He calls Pedro Segundo, explains the situation, and leaves him in charge. As Esteban hands over the keys—except the keys to the wine cellar—Pedro Segundo smiles without happiness.
Esteban’s dream of the little girl calling him “Papa” suggests that deep down, he feels guilty about denying the children he’s fathered with peasant women. Furthermore, Esteban’s desire to go home even though he claims not to care about his family also suggests he feels guilty for abandoning Férula and Doña Ester. If Esteban truly didn’t care, he likely wouldn’t waste his time going back, which speaks to the infallible strength and depth of familial connections. 
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