White clothes are associated with Anne Catherick, who is the titular “woman in white.” The white clothes that Anne wears are symbolic of Anne’s innocence and highlight her victimhood throughout the novel. Anne’s determination to wear white is representative of her fragile mental health but also of her sweet, loyal nature. She believes that she must always wear white because of her time spent at Limmeridge (Laura’s family home) as a child, and the close bond that she formed with Mrs. Fairlie during this time. Believing little girls look best in white, Mrs. Fairlie gave Anne white clothes to wear, and Anne, who always remembers Mrs. Fairlie’s kindness, lives by this until the end of her days. At one point in the novel, Anne is saddened when Mrs. Clements makes her wear a dark cloak to disguise her identity, and this further symbolizes the erasure of Anne’s identity, as well as her anonymity and lowly social status in society because of her lack of social power as a woman and someone who is mentally ill. Later, when Count Fosco places Laura in the asylum in Anne’s place, Laura is given Anne’s white clothes to wear. Like Anne, Laura is also associated with purity, innocence, and victimhood. Anne’s innocence is further established when Walter learns that Sir Percival imprisoned her in the asylum solely because he believed that she had learned his secret. However, on speaking with Anne’s mother, Mrs. Catherick, Walter discovers that Anne only knew that there was a secret, not what the secret was about, which shows that she was literally innocent and knew nothing of Sir Percival’s crimes.
Get the entire The Woman in White LitChart as a printable PDF.
The timeline below shows where the symbol White Clothes appears in The Woman in White. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
The First Epoch: Part 1, Chapter 4
...feels a hand on his shoulder and is shocked to find a woman dressed in white clothes standing in the road behind him. She asks Walter if the road leads to...
(full context)
...going the right way and that the driver is not drunk, and the woman in white clothes climbs eagerly into the carriage. The cab drives away, and Walter continues his walk...
(full context)
The First Epoch: Part 1, Chapter 5
Walter is horrified to hear that the woman in white clothes has escaped from an asylum. He thinks back over their conversation and admits that,...
(full context)
The First Epoch: Part 1, Chapter 6
This reference to “adventures” reminds Walter of his meeting with the woman in white clothes. He tells Marian about the experience and Marian is shocked to hear that the...
(full context)
Marian feels that Walter has done the right thing by helping the woman in white clothes to escape as she is sure that she is a poor, persecuted woman rather...
(full context)
The First Epoch: Part 1, Chapter 8
...retires to the drawing room with the ladies after dinner and finds Laura dressed in white clothes.
(full context)
...and Marian continues to search through Mrs. Fairlie’s letters for mentions of the woman in white. It is a moonlit night and they have the drawing room doors open onto the...
(full context)
Mrs. Fairlie’s letter explains that she gave Anne several sets of white clothes, feeling that little girls look best in white, and that, when she heard this,...
(full context)
...relieve its eerie effect. He feels that this similarity between Laura and the woman in white is a bad omen for Laura’s future. Marian whispers to Walter that they should keep...
(full context)
The First Epoch: Part 1, Chapter 10
...from Hampshire too and he is unnerved by the constant reappearance of the woman in white in his circumstances. Marian tells him that the man’s name is Sir Percival Glyde. Walter...
(full context)
The First Epoch: Part 1, Chapter 12
...night before, in the graveyard behind the school, and that the ghost was all in white. Marian asks whose ghost it was, and the boy tells her that it was the...
(full context)
...him what he suspects, and Walter replies that he believes the figure, dressed all in white, was Anne Catherick. Marian tells Walter that she will show him to the grave and...
(full context)
The First Epoch: Part 1, Chapter 13
...a “bonnet and shawl” while the other wears a dark cloak. The hem of a white dress is visible beneath this.
(full context)
...as the woman with the bonnet tells the other woman that she looks strange wearing white clothes all the time, and that the dark cloak suits her. When they reach the...
(full context)
...The only thing she dislikes is that her companions tease her about dressing all in white clothes and she knows that Mrs. Fairlie would never do this. This leads Anne to...
(full context)
The First Epoch: Part 2, Chapter 1
...notes that it is not his job to judge the case of the woman in white, which Walter is compiling, but instead, to provide “new links” to continue the chain where...
(full context)
The Third Epoch: Part 2, Chapter 1
...their time at Limmeridge. She did this because Anne had taken to dressing all in white clothes and Mrs. Clements encouraged this, while Mrs. Catherick hated it. Mrs. Catherick notes that...
(full context)