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“Do you think I find it pleasant to know that my foot is shrouded by veils of your saliva? By the mists of your swamps?”
Acting as Madame in the ceremony, Claire admonishes Solange-as-Claire for polishing her shoes with her saliva. Claire-as-Madame repeatedly complains about the maids’ filthiness, as if they soil everything they touch. This expresses a deep self-loathing by which both Claire and Solange feel fundamentally unclean.
“Avoid pawing me. You smell like an animal. You’ve brought those odors from some foul attic, where the lackeys visit us at night.”
“The fall of your dress. I’m arranging your fall from grace.”
At this early point in the play, Solange’s statement sounds cryptically poetic, particularly since it isn’t yet clear that they are both maids playing roles as part of a ritual. Ultimately, Solange is concisely articulating the goals of the ceremony. The sisters are spreading their perceived filth by touching and wearing Madame’s dresses and orchestrating acts to pull Madame down to their level and into death.
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