The relationships portrayed
in this book are quite interesting. They are very telling of the overall themes
it presents. Throughout most of the story Louis spends his time agonizing over internal
conflicts on morality and his existence; He tends to project these onto others
to fit certain roles within his life. For example, he considers Lestat to be a
sort of “higher power” that can punish him for his wrongdoings and alleviate
his sins. Louis would rather be “thoroughly damned" rather than seek
forgiveness or redemption. Being damned requires less effort than redeeming
oneself through action, after all.
Lestat,
on the other hand, is completely detached from human emotion. This highlights
the contrast between Louis and Lestat. Lestat has completely given in to his
vampire nature, while Louis clings to his humanity. Louis and Lestat represent
a double-edged sword: one refuses to examine his nature, the other obsesses
about it, yet neither actually understands himself.
Later, the addition of Claudia to the “family”
brings another layer to Louis’ relationships and general outlook on life.
Overall, he will have tremendously mixed emotions about Claudia. Even though he
was partly responsible for taking away her humanity and feels guilty about her existence,
she reminds him about his humanity and makes him feel love. As Claudia ages the
love relationship between her and Louis becomes complicated. The innocent
father-daughter relationship develops into something resembling a romantic
relationship, although not sexual. All Louis wants is to make her happy. Despite
giving Lestat time and opportunity, he couldn’t be the benevolent, guiding
"creator" Louis and Claudia long for. Without a benevolent creator,
Louis clings to Claudia as the only escape from the crippling loneliness of
immortality.
Armand is another key character in
Louis’ life. He is the "creator" of Louis’ dreams—a powerful being, here
to take away Louis's responsibility, to free him from an obligation to a higher
power. Armand is an intelligent, detached vampire who uses logic to unravel
Louis's arguments, and can help Louis get rid of his lingering guilt of wanting
to be punished for his sins. Louis makes the choice to make a companion for
Claudia to give himself the luxury of spending eternity passively following
Armand, and experience a deeper love with him instead.
Armand craves Louis's human curiosity and
soul searching because it allows him to engage in the modern world. Armand's
desire forces Louis to choose between his two loves, basically having to confront
his duality and choose which "nature" to embrace, human or vampire.
Yet, after Claudia’s murder, Louis loses what little humanity he had left. Louis
becomes like any other vampire: an observer. He no longer feels attachment to
anyone or anything. Armand’s impression of Louis also changes, even though he
was the one who caused it. Louis says goodbye to both Armand and Lestat, in the
same detached, unemotional way. Both "creator" vampires have spent
the novel urging Louis to embrace his vampire essence, but when he does, they
are stunned by the heartbreak it causes both of them.
Awesome analysis! I really enjoyed Louis as a character and you did a great job digging into it.
ReplyDelete