Fleda has no artifice about her: she is frank, honest, and acts with an unwavering sense of ethical commitment that is almost as single-minded -- though naturally more varied and nuanced -- as Mrs. Gereth's sense of artistic appreciation. She is a woman of ideas just as much as Mrs. Gereth is a woman consumed by her passion with things. In fact, the dichotomy that these two women represent can be seen in the opening chapter of the novel, when Mrs. Gereth "thingifies" Fleda by saying (or rather, with the narrator saying, though seeming to deliver Mrs. Gereth's inner thoughts), "Fleda Vetch was dressed with an idea, though perhaps not with much else" (Ch. I, par. 2). The near-nakedness of Fleda's ideas and ideals is seen time and time again throughout the Spoils of Poynton, as she attempts to manipulate Owen and Mrs. Gereth, by turns and one at the behest of the other, but does so with near total honesty to each. Even when she is not being entirely forthcoming her face reveals everything, especially to Mrs. Gereth, as Fleda's sensibilities run towards the internal world of ideas rather than the external world of things -- she is as incapable of betraying her inner sense of self and her ethical perspective as Mrs. Gereth is incapable of failing to maintain composure and control over herself. Fleda, to refer to Brown's distinction of terms, is more concerned with theory as opposed to either things or objects.
This is not to suggest that Fleda carries no traffic with the material world, hwoever, and in fact her friendship with Mrs. Gereth is built in no small part on the ingenue's appreciation for the elder woman's deft hand and eye when it comes to aesthetic presentation. Alan H. Roper describes Fleda's disgust on her first night at Ricks, the home to which Mrs. Gereth has retired so that Owen can occupy Poynton with his eventual wife, when she sees and feels it crammed full of the art collection that Mrs. Gereth refused to part with (p. 189). Left in Poynton, in the place it had been purposefully collected to fill and in which it had all been carefully placed and positioned, the effect had been awesome and had impressed Fleda; the same collection here was worse than tasteless but in refutation of taste. That it is emblematic of Mrs. Gereth's selfishness and lack of ethicality is no doubt a source of repugnance and doubt to Fleda, as well, but there is also a sheer aesthetic aversion to seeing works of art treated in this manner -- an aesthetic aversion that is tied to Fleda's ideas and not to Mrs. Gereth's concept of "things." Fleda wants a beautiful world just as much as Mrs. Gereth, and possibly even more so, and it pains her to an even greater degree than it does Mrs. Gereth to see the conscious ruining or degradation of that which in the proper context and with the proper freedom would be beautiful. It is an ethical wrong in the Aristotelian sense to see artworks treated thus, and it is through this idea of beauty and art that Fleda's sense...
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