Differences between Mireille and Catherine

Mireille and Catherine are similar in many ways; they are both very intelligent and courageous. They are adventurous and not afraid to take risks. Also, they are somewhat reluctant at first. Catherine is especially reluctant; at the beginning she does not want to have anything to do with the chess set; Mireille is a little reluctant, too, though; you can see this especially in the scene where Corday comes to rescue her from the guillotine and tells her that she, Mireille, is the Black Queen. At first Mireille seems reluctant to accept such an important role. But I think it is even more interesting to look at the differences, instead of the similarities, between Mireille and Catherine. The differences might not be as obvious to the reader as the similarities, but they are definitely there.

In my opinion, the main difference between Mireille and Catherine is that Mireille is more emotional. She cries eight times (I counted); Catherine never cries. Of course, Mireille's experiences are more emotional than Catherine's; she sees her cousin murdered, she kills Marat, she spends years trying to find the Abbess and finds her only when the Abbess is about to die; I can think of many other examples. But even though their experiences are different, I still think Mireille is the more emotional of the two heroines. Also, Catherine is more analytical and scientifically-minded than Mireille; this probably comes from her background as a computer expert. Mireille, however, becomes more scientifically-minded as the book goes on; we can see this especially in the last chapter, when she's figuring out the formula. (In another article, I will discuss the changes in Mireille's character, and how she becomes more like Catherine later in the book.)

Mireille is quieter than Catherine. Interestingly, in this way she might be closer to Katherine Neville's personality than Catherine is. In the Publishers Weekly interview, when asked whether Catherine was an autobiographical character, Katherine Neville said that Catherine represents the more aggressive side of her personality, and that she is really much quieter than Catherine is. Catherine may be tougher than Mireille, but I am not sure of this; Catherine certainly uses more bad language than Mireille, but that is probably because of the difference in the times in which they live.

Mireille becomes more obsessed with the formula than Catherine does; this is probably why she makes, and drinks, the elixir, while Catherine does not. But, of course, Mireille has spent more of her life in the search for the chess set. She is fifteen years old when the book begins in 1790, and it is not until nine years later, in 1799, that she starts solving the formula and making the elixir. The formula is not complete until more than thirty years later, in 1830. That means she has spent forty years in the search for the formula, and then she lives in danger until 1973, when she leaves the Game. Catherine spends less than a year in the search; her story begins in December 1972 and ends in September 1973.

Also, Mireille's life is more tragic than Catherine's. Catherine does not lose anyone who is close to her, but Mireille loses the two people who were closest to her before the story begins: Valentine and the Abbess. She sees them both die tragically, because of the chess set. If you think about it, by living to be 200 years old, Mireille outlives everyone who was ever close to her: Talleyrand, Shahin, and her children. No wonder she decided to live as a recluse after she drank the elixir, and that she wanted to leave the Game! Catherine decides not to make the elixir; that decision means that Catherine's life will not be as long as Mireille's, but it will be less tragic. Of course, Catherine also had the advantage of knowing what the elixir did; when Mireille drank the elixir, she had no idea what it would do.

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Copyright 1997 Vicki Kondelik.

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