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Virginia is nowhere to be found. At first, the Otis family does not worry, because Virginia has a habit of visiting the gardens to collect flowers before supper. However, when suppertime comes and no one can find her, they begin to panic. Hiram assumes that the local gypsies have kidnapped her, and brings Washington and two of the servants on the farm with him to find them. The Duke of Cheshire wants to come, but Hiram refuses because he is worried the Duke will get hurt.
When they reach the gypsy campsite, the gypsies have left—but they left in a rush. Thinking they have taken Virginia and moved on, Hiram sends Washington and the servants to search the district while he contacts the police. Then, Hiram decides he will ride to the train station in Ascot to see if anyone there has recognized Virginia. The Duke of Cheshire catches up to him and insists on accompanying him, and says that if Hiram had let him and Virginia become engaged the previous year, “there would never have been all this trouble” (28). Hiram agrees to let the Duke accompany him, but comments that he will have to get him a hat at Ascot. The Duke jokes, “Oh, bother my hat! I want Virginia!” (28).
After Hiram’s and the Duke’s search produces no leads, they return home, where Washington and the servants are waiting. The gypsies, they discovered, did not take Virginia, and left in a hurry for fear of missing a fair. They were so sorry to hear that Virginia was missing that four of them came back to Canterville Chase to help with the search.
Their search turns up nothing and, at midnight, they are ready to sleep despite their distress. It’s then that Virginia reappears and explains that Sir Simon is dead now, and that, for her help, he has given her a small casket full of jewels. She leads them to a secret room where Sir Simon is entombed, and the twins see that the withered almond tree outside is flourishing with new blossoms. Virginia declares that God has forgiven Sir Simon, and the Duke declares her an angel and kisses her.
There are several important ideas to take away from this chapter. The first is that Virginia’s absence mobilizes her family and drives the Duke to seek permission to marry her again from Hiram. Though initially not alarmed by the fact that Virginia is missing, her family quickly takes action to find her. Hiram wrongly assumes that the gypsies have kidnapped her and fled, when in reality they have just left quickly to get to the fair.
This sequence of events shows that although Hiram was gracious and gave them permission to camp near Canterville Chase, he immediately casts suspicion on them when his daughter is missing. This touches on the idea of otherness in a new way. Until this chapter, those subscribing to Old World ideas thought of the Otis family as others. Hiram turns around and does the same thing to the gypsies. This shows a level of hypocrisy on Hiram’s part, and, since Hiram represents America, on the nation’s part as well, particularly regarding the government’s treatment of First Nations peoples in America.
On a different track, the reader learns that Virginia was not only unharmed while helping Sir Simon, but rewarded for her efforts with the jewels he gives her. She declares that God has forgiven him, and that he now rests in peace. When she leads the family to his remains, they see the evidence of his wife’s brothers having starved him to death—and that his starvation was more than that. The brothers had placed food and water within the same room as him, just out of reach, and chained his body so that he could not obtain sustenance. This calls to mind not only their cruelty, though justice of some sort may have been due for Sir Simon murdering his wife, but also the presence of his chains in his ghostly existence.
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