Transome
From a distance, with her romantic dreams, Esther Lyon thinks of Transome Court as a joyful center of luxury. However, after she discovers that she is the estate’s legal heir and visits it for several weeks, she becomes aware of the pain and despair within, of the uselessness and purposelessness as well as the dead but still agonizing souls there. The court thus represents the past feudal mansion that nineteenth century England is outgrowing.
Malthouse Yard. Name of the chapel of the independent church in Treby Magna presided over by the Dissenting minister Rufus Lyon, whom Esther grows up believing is her father. Lyon is actually her stepfather. It is these early ties, Eliot’s insistence on one’s true roots, that define radicalism as presented in Esther and in Felix Holt, opposed to the more common political radicalism that argued for sudden changes in Great Britain’s parliamentary system. When Esther renounces her legal inheritance of Transome Court and her earlier yearning to be a lady, thereby returning to Malthouse Yard, formerly a place that represented privation to her, she is affirming her own roots as well as her love for Felix.
Outdoors. Fresh, unconstraining open places in nature represent for both Felix and Esther a freedom of emotional and moral feelings and ideas that seems unattainable in close places. For example, Esther feels that Transome Court signals the “oppressive urgency of walls and upholstery.” Felix and Esther first develop feelings of love for each other when they walk together in an open place.
Sproxton. Mining village in which political campaign managers take local coal miners to the pubs to buy their votes. Felix proves to be right in his fear that too much ale may lead to rioting. The episode represents Eliot’s view that some members of English society may not be ready for the franchise and that some election conductors take unscrupulous advantage of the laborers’ susceptibility to free ale.
Treby Magna. Former market town for an agricultural area that is now an election center. As such, it is vulnerable to violent actions by workers who have been filled up with ale by campaign workers. The novel’s scenes of civil disorder show the frightening possibilities of premature extension of the franchise, especially when the mob will no longer follow Felix and moves instead in the direction of Treby Manor.
Loamford. Town in the fictional county of Loamshire that is the scene of Felix’s trial for appearing to have killed a man he meant only to bring down in his attempts to control the rioters. The trial affords Esther the opportunity to speak publicly in defense of Felix’s sterling character, making both of them aware of her love for him. The court scene provides some of Eliot’s best satire on the ways of lawyers, just as the election practices she depicts show the evils that political reforming intentions can lead to.