mightymads: (holmeswatson)
[personal profile] mightymads posting in [community profile] victorian221b
Continuing to read The Victorian House: Domestic Life from Childbirth to Deathbed by Judith Flanders. The chapter about nursery touches upon child-rearing, and it’s pointed out that society and, as a consequence, family were adult-oriented, so children were to be out of the way. It seems that a vast distance between the parents and the children was the norm across the classes:
There is no question that, however much the Victorians loved their children, they spoke of them, and thought of them, in a very different way than we have come to expect today. How much was manner, how much representative of actual distance, needs to be considered. For it appears that some parents might have been not merely ignorant of their children’s daily routines and needs, but proud of such ignorance. Initially this might be thought of as a purely upper-class trait, fostered by large numbers of servants, yet it occurred across the social spectrum. Molly Hughes was the child of a London stockbroker who died in a road accident in 1879, at the age of forty, leaving his family perilously near to tipping down into the lower middle class. As a young woman, Molly had to go out to work as a schoolteacher. However, when she was married and able to leave paid employment, she was careful to note in her autobiography that she knew little about children, and relied for information on her servant. [...]

The higher up the social scale, the more open about this distance from their children the parents were. Ursula Bloom’s grandmother, at least in family legend, forgot to take her baby when leaving its grandparents’ in the country: ‘She had never cared too much for children,’ said her granddaughter, perhaps unnecessarily. Those lower down the ladder reflected the same views in smaller ways. Georgiana Burne-Jones, the wife of the then-struggling Pre-Raphaelite painter Edward Burne-Jones, referred to their first child as ‘the small stranger within our gates’.
It very much coincides with Jeremy Brett’s headcanon about the way Holmes was raised:
He was tied very tight as a child in the cot—as they used to do in those days to keep them quiet. Children were seen but not heard—especially in the Holmes household, which I’ve always placed in my mind in Cornwall... very remote. A bleak house. Never knew his father at all until he was 21. Saw him but never spoke to him. [...] They were kissed by their mother on her way down to dinner, but that’s all. Isolation from a very early age. Typical Victorian upbringing.
But let’s consider for a moment an idea that the Holmes household was not a conventional one. Given that both Mycroft and Sherlock defied convention, this trait might easily come from the family. What if, contrary to the contemporary norm, their parents were greatly involved in Mycroft’s and Sherlock’s upbringing and saw to development of their talents from an early age? Having such a different background from their peers, no wonder both brothers felt isolated afterwards. My personal headcanon is that the Holmes brothers were close with their parents but orphaned while still children.

In March there was a discussion of Holmes’s education, and [personal profile] colebaltblue shared the following view which I absolutely agree with:
I have immense respect for Jeremy Brett's interpretation of Holmes. Immense, so I'm just going to set that aside and think of it as Jeremy Brett's interpretation of Holmes that informed his portrayal of the character. [...] However, I take exception to the thought that Holmes's character was shaped by such negative experiences as Brett describes. Holmes is bright and full of light - kind and energetic and excitable and thoughtful. Holmes's eccentricities were part of his deep core values - they were fundamental to who he was as a person and he embraced them with only apologies to those who were unjustly harmed by them. I think he formed these early and strongly in his life and made no apologies for who he was. I also don't think that this is possible without having people in your life that love, support, and believe in you. And not just one either.

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