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{{Tab
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|tab1=[[Offred's Daughter (Novel)|Agnes (Novels)]]
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|tab2=[[Offred's Daughter (Series)|Hannah (Series)]]
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|tab3=[[Offred's Daughter (Film)|Jill (Film)]]
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|maxwidth=20
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}}<br />
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{{Infobox character
 
{{Infobox character
|title =Unknown
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|title =
 
|image =
 
|image =
|aka =
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|aka =Aunt Victoria
 
|gender =Female
 
|gender =Female
 
|status =
 
|status =
|age =8 <small>(if alive)</small><ref>Chapter 12</ref>
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|age =8 <small>(The Handmaid's Tale)</small><br>23 <small>(The Testaments)</small>
 
|birth =
 
|birth =
 
|death =
 
|death =
|relatives =[[Offred (Novel)|Offred]] (mother)<br />[[Luke]] (father)<br />[[Offred's mother]] (maternal grandmother)
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|relatives =[[Offred (Novel)|Offred]] (mother)<br />[[Luke]] (father)<br />[[Offred's Mother (Novel)|Agnes's Grandmother]] (maternal grandmother)<br>[[Daisy]] (maternal half-sister)<br>[[Tabitha]] (adopted mother)<br>[[Commander Kyle]] (adopted father)<br>[[Paula Saunders]] (adopted step-mother)<br>[[Mark]] (adopted half-brother)
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|class =[[Daughter]] (formerly)<br>[[Aunt]] (formerly, escaped)<br>[[Pearl Girl]] (formerly, escaped)
|class =
 
|allegiance =
+
|allegiance =[[Gilead (Novel)|Gilead]]
 
|occupation =
 
|occupation =
  +
}}
}}Offred's daughter is a minor, yet important character in ''[[The Handmaid's Tale (Novel)|The Handmaid's Tale]]''. She is the daughter of Offred (June) and [[Luke]]. She was born prior to the rise of the Republic of Gilead, and was separated from her parents after the regime came to power. Her real name is never mentioned in the novel.
+
'''Agnes Jemima '''is a minor, yet important character in ''[[The Handmaid's Tale (Novel)|The Handmaid's Tale]]''. She is the daughter of [[Offred]] and [[Luke]]. She was born prior to the rise of Gilead, and was separated from her parents after a [[Offred's first escape attempt|failed escape attempt]]<ref name=":sec13"/><ref name=":sec7"/>. She later becomes an Aunt, and is referred to by her rank as '''Aunt Victoria'''. She is one of the three narrators of ''[[The Testaments]], ''where her story is chronicled as the "Transcript of Witness Testimony 369A."
==Profile==
 
===Appearance===
+
==Name==
  +
Tabitha teaches Agnes that her name means "lamb." This not entirely untrue; Agnes actually derives from a Greek name meaning "holy" or "pure", but is associated with Saint Agnes of Rome, who in art is depicted with a lamb as the Greek "Agnes" (Ἁγνή) is often conflated with the Latin "agnus" (lamb).
===Personality===
 
==Story==
 
One day, when she was eleven months old, just before she began to walk, a woman
 
stole her out of a supermarket cart. It was a Saturday, which was when Luke and I did
 
the week’s shopping, because both of us had jobs. She was sitting in the little baby seats
 
they had then, in supermarket carts, with holes for the legs. She was happy enough, and
 
I’d turned my back, the cat-food section I think it was; Luke was over at the side of the
 
store, out of sight, at the meat counter. He liked to choose what kind of meat we were
 
going to eat during the week. He said men needed more meat than women did, and that
 
it wasn’t a superstition and he wasn’t being a jerk, studies had been done. There are
 
some diʃerences, he said. He was fond of saying that, as if I was trying to prove there
 
weren’t. But mostly he said it when my mother was there. He liked to tease her.
 
I heard her start to cry. I turned around and she was disappearing down the aisle, in
 
the arms of a woman I’d never seen before. I screamed, and the woman was stopped.
 
She must have been about thirty-ɹve. She was crying and saying it was her baby, the
 
Lord had given it to her, he’d sent her a sign. I felt sorry for her. The store manager
 
apologized and they held her until the police came.
 
She’s just crazy, Luke said.
 
I thought it was an isolated incident, at the time.<ref>Chapter 12</ref>
 
   
  +
Jemima is an Arabic and Hebrew name meaning "little dove." In the Bible, Jemima was one of the three daughters of Job and she and her sisters were described as the most beautiful women in the land. She was born to Job after God killed his first set of children and took away all his prosperity. This name may foreshadow her being an Aunt, as Aunt Jemima is a famous pancake mix.
   
  +
Her Aunt name, Victoria, means victory, and is chosen as a reference to Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom. Due to Aunts' names referring to things appealing to women, it may also be a reference to Victoria's Secret, a lingerie company.
We wait, the clock in the hall ticks, Serena lights another cigarette, I get into the car.
 
It’s a Saturday morning, it’s a September, we still have a car. Other people have had to
 
sell theirs. My name isn’t Oʃred, I have another name, which nobody uses now because
 
it’s forbidden. I tell myself it doesn’t matter, your name is like your telephone number,
 
useful only to others; but what I tell myself is wrong, it does matter. I keep the
 
knowledge of this name like something hidden, some treasure I’ll come back to dig up,
 
one day. I think of this name as buried. This name has an aura around it, like an
 
amulet, some charm that’s survived from an unimaginably distant past. I lie in my
 
single bed at night, with my eyes closed, and the name ɻoats there behind my eyes, not
 
quite within reach, shining in the dark.
 
It’s a Saturday morning in September, I’m wearing my shining name. The little girl
 
who is now dead sits in the back seat, with her two best dolls, her stuʃed rabbit, mangy
 
with age and love. I know all the details. They are sentimental details but I can’t help
 
that. I can’t think about the rabbit too much though, I can’t start to cry, here on the
 
Chinese rug, breathing in the smoke that has been inside Serena’s body. Not here, not
 
now, I can do that later.
 
She thought we were going on a picnic, and in fact there is a picnic basket on the
 
back seat, beside her, with real food in it, hard-boiled eggs, thermos and all. We didn’t
 
want her to know where we were really going, we didn’t want her to tell, by mistake,
 
reveal anything, if we were stopped. We didn’t want to lay upon her the burden of our
 
truth.
 
I wore my hiking boots, she had on her sneakers. The laces of the sneakers had a
 
design of hearts on them, red, purple, pink, and yellow. It was warm for the time of
 
year, the leaves were turning already, some of them; Luke drove, I sat beside him, the
 
sun shone, the sky was blue, the houses as we passed them looked comforting and
 
ordinary, each house as it was left behind vanishing into past time, crumbling in an
 
instant as if it had never been, because I would never see it again, or so I thought then.
 
We have almost nothing with us, we don’t want to look as if we’re going anywhere
 
far or permanent. We have the forged passports, guaranteed, worth the price. We
 
couldn’t pay in money, of course, or put it on the Compucount: we used other things,
 
some jewellery that was my grandmother’s, a stamp collection Luke inherited from his
 
uncle. Such things can be exchanged, for money, in other countries. When we get to the
 
border we’ll pretend we’re just going over on a day trip; the fake visas are for a day.
 
Before that I’ll give her a sleeping pill so she’ll be asleep when we cross. That way she
 
won’t betray us. You can’t expect a child to lie convincingly.
 
And I don’t want her to feel frightened, to feel the fear that is now tightening my
 
muscles, tensing my spine, pulling me so taut that I’m certain I would break if touched.
 
Every stoplight is an ordeal. We’ll spend the night at a motel, or, better, sleeping in the
 
car on a sideroad so there will be no suspicious questions. We’ll cross in the morning,
 
drive over the bridge, easily, just like driving to the supermarket.
 
We turn onto the freeway, head north, ɻowing with not much traɽc. Since the war
 
started, gas is expensive and in short supply. Outside the city we pass the ɹrst
 
checkpoint. All they want is a look at the licence, Luke does it well. The licence matches
 
the passport: we thought of that.
 
Back on the road, he squeezes my hand, glances over at me. You’re white as a sheet,
 
he says.
 
That is how I feel: white, ɻat, thin. I feel transparent. Surely they will be able to see
 
through me. Worse, how will I be able to hold on to Luke, to her, when I’m so ɻat, so
 
white? I feel as if there’s not much left of me; they will slip through my arms, as if I’m
 
made of smoke, as if I’m a mirage, fading before their eyes. Don’t think that way, Moira
 
would say. Think that way and you’ll make it happen.
 
Cheer up, says Luke. He’s driving a little too fast now. The adrenalin’s gone to his
 
head. Now he’s singing. Oh what a beautiful morning, he sings.
 
Even his singing worries me. We’ve been warned not to look too happy. (Chapter 14).
 
   
 
==Profile==
  +
She is described as Caucasian and having blonde hair.
   
  +
Agnes considers herself to not be very pretty, having a "dough face," "raisin eyes" and "pumpkin-seed teeth."
 
==Story==
  +
==== Before Gilead ====
  +
While shopping in a supermarket, a crazy woman tries to kidnap [[Offred]]'s baby daughter <ref name=":sec12">[[Section 12]]</ref>.
   
  +
==== After [[the Takeover]] ====
  +
[[Luke]] and Offred purchase fake passports in order to escape. They tell their daughter they are going on a picnic and plan to give her a sleeping pill when they cross the border so that she would not be questioned or give them away. <ref> [[Section 14]]</ref>.
   
  +
They reach the border and give the guard their passports. When the guard picks up the phone, they speed away in the car, and then get out and try to run through the woods<ref> [[Section 35]]</ref>. Offred cannot run very fast, because her 5-year-old child slows her down. She remembers hearing shots. She and her daughter fall to the ground, hiding; Offred begs her daughter to be quiet, but she is too young to understand. After getting caught, her daughter is dragged away from her<ref name=":sec13">[[Section 13]]</ref>.
   
  +
Offred wakes up screaming, demanding to know what they have done with her daughter. The authorities tell Offred she is unfit, and her daughter is with those fit to care for her. They show her a photograph of her child wearing a white dress, holding the hand of a strange woman <ref name=":sec7">[[Section 7]]</ref>.
I’m running, with her, holding her hand, pulling, dragging her through the bracken,
 
  +
==== In ''The Handmaid's Tale'' ====
she’s only half awake because of the pill I gave her, so she wouldn’t cry or say anything
 
  +
[[Serena]] shows Offred a photograph of her daughter. In the photo, she wears a white dress and smiles. Offred senses that her daughter hardly remembers her. This tears at her heart.<ref name=":sec35">[[Section 35]]</ref>
that would give us away, she doesn’t know where she is. The ground is uneven, rocks,
 
dead branches, the smell of damp earth, old leaves, she can’t run fast enough, by myself
 
I could run faster, I’m a good runner. Now she’s crying, she’s frightened, I want to carry
 
her but she would be too heavy. I have my hiking boots on and I think, when we reach
 
the water I’ll have to kick them oʃ, will it be too cold, will she be able to swim that far,
 
what about the current, we weren’t expecting this. Quiet, I say to her angrily. I think
 
about her drowning and this thought slows me. Then the shots come behind us, not loud,
 
not like ɹrecrackers, but sharp and crisp like a dry branch snapping. It sounds wrong,
 
nothing ever sounds the way you think it will, and I hear the voice, Down, is it a real
 
voice or a voice inside my head or my own voice, out loud?
 
I pull her to the ground and roll on top of her to cover her, shield her. Quiet, I say
 
again, my face is wet, sweat or tears, I feel calm and ɻoating, as if I’m no longer in my
 
body; close to my eyes there’s a leaf, red, turned early, I can see every bright vein. It’s
 
the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen. I ease oʃ, I don’t want to smother her, instead I
 
curl myself around her, keeping my hand over her mouth. There’s breath and the
 
knocking of my heart, like pounding, at the door of a house at night, where you thought
 
you would be safe. It’s all right, I’m here, I say, whisper, Please be quiet, but how can she?
 
She’s too young, it’s too late, we come apart, my arms are held, and the edges go dark
 
and nothing is left but a little window, a very little window, like the wrong end of a
 
telescope, like the window on a Christmas card, an old one, night and ice outside, and
 
within a candle, a shining tree, a family, I can hear the bells even, sleighbells, from the
 
radio, old music, but through this window I can see, small but very clear, I can see her,
 
going away from me, through the trees which are already turning, red and yellow,
 
holding out her arms to me, being carried away (Chapter 13).
 
 
 
 
Offred's daughter was born a few years before Gilead came to power, when Offred was twenty-five years old. Offred does not mention her daughter's name, presumably to protect her identity, though she often speaks about her throughout the story. When Offred's daughter was an infant, her mother took her to a store, where a delusional woman who was implied to have lost her own baby attempted to abduct her, believing her to be her own child. Fortunately, Offred realized her daughter was missing and caught up to the woman, who was apprehended, and the little girl was returned to her mother unharmed.
 
 
When Gilead toppled the US government, Offred's daughter was around five years old and was unaware of the upheaval and growing danger to her family. Her parents attempted to flee across the border with her to Canada, telling her only that they were going on a day trip and giving her a light sedative during the journey, so that she would not panic or inadvertently give them away to the authorities. Unfortunately, as they were attempting to cross the border, they were ambushed by soldiers. Luke told Offred to take their daughter and run, and Offred fled with the girl, half-carrying her due to the sedative still wearing off. Unfortunately, they were caught and the soldiers took Offred's daughter away from her, saying she would be given to a 'worthy' family<ref>Chapter 7</ref>.
 
   
  +
==== 15 Years Later ====
Three years later, Offred has neither seen or heard of her daughter. [[Serena Joy]] offers to get information on her daughter, if she will sleep with [[Nick]] to conceive a child, and Offred agrees, eager to learn what has become of her child. Serena Joy is able to get a photograph of Offred's daughter; she is now around eight years old, wearing a long white dress, and has apparently been adopted by a family loyal to the regime, who are taking good care of her. Offred breaks down in tears; although she is happy to see her daughter is alright, she has missed out on her growing up, can never see her and realizes that her daughter may have forgotten about her. It is unknown if Offred and her daughter were ever reunited, or if her daughter had truly forgotten about her real parents.
 
  +
Offred's daughter has been adopted by a Wife and Commander, and renamed Agnes. Her new mother, [[Tabitha]], told her a story of saving her from a witch. She had a doll's house that was like her own, where the pages were blank - she was taught to believe that books were simply decorations, like vases.
   
  +
At school, Agnes was taught Religion by the fearsome [[Aunt Vidala]] and taught Crafts by the pleasant [[Aunt Estée]]. Despite Estée's assurances of her parents arranging for a good husband in time, Agnes grew up believing Vidala's warnings about men. She regularly had nightmares, and dreaded her future marriage as she grew up. When she was old enough to understand what pregnancy was, she asked Tabitha if she came from her stomach rather than being saved by the witches - believing that Tabitha was her biological mother. Tabitha did not answer her. Her best friend, [[Shunammite]], told her that Tabitha was dying only two days before Tabitha passed away.
   
  +
At her mother's funeral, she was introduced to the [[Widow]], [[Paula Saunders]], who her father married several months later. Her father and step-mother were assigned a Handmaid, [[Ofkyle]], who soon fell pregnant. When going for a dental checkup, Agnes was sexually assaulted by [[Dr. Grove]]. Agnes reaches menarche just before Ofkyle dies in childbirth, though her half-brother, [[Mark]], survives. She is shunned at school due to a superstition among Daughters that girls whose Handmaids die are cursed.
   
  +
Commander Kyle and Paula plan to marry Agnes to Commander [[B. Frederick Judd]]. As the wedding approaches, Agnes is filled with dread, and contemplates suicide. Eventually, Aunt Lydia catches wind of Agnes's feelings, and asks her to reach out to Aunt Estée if she wishes to become a Supplicant of the Aunts. Agnes makes her way to her old school, and finds sanctuary at [[Ardua Hall]]. Aunt Lydia convinces Kyle and Paula to sign her over to the Aunts, and she is reunited with her friend, Becka - now called Aunt Immortelle - who also joined the Aunts due to trauma caused by sexual assault. Her best friend, Shunammite, is arranged to marry the pedophilic Judd in her place.
So tall and changed. Smiling a little now, so soon, and in her white dress as if for an
 
olden-days First Communion.
 
Time has not stood still. It has washed over me, washed me away, as if I’m nothing
 
more than a woman of sand, left by a careless child too near the water. I have been
 
obliterated for her. I am only a shadow now, far back behind the glib shiny surface of
 
this photograph. A shadow of a shadow, as dead mothers become. You can see it in her
 
eyes: I am not there.
 
But she exists, in her white dress. She grows and lives. Isn’t that a good thing? A
 
blessing?
 
Still, I can’t bear it, to have been erased like that. Better she’d brought me nothing.
 
   
  +
Agnes takes the name Aunt Victoria and spends nine years as a Supplicant. Shortly before she is ready to be elevated to a [[Pearl Girl]], she is instructed to settle a Canadian homeless girl - [[Daisy|Jade]] - who has come to Gilead as a "Pearl." Agnes is unaware that Jade is the legendary Baby Nicole, who, in turn, is her biological half-sister.
   
  +
==References==
{{NovelCharacters}}
 
  +
<references/>
 
[[Category:Characters (Novel)]]
 
[[Category:Characters (Novel)]]
  +
[[Category:Characters]]
  +
[[Category:Females]]
  +
[[Category:Children]]
  +
[[Category:Narrators]]
  +
[[Category:Aunts]]
  +
[[Category:Pearl Girls]]

Revision as of 21:52, 24 September 2019


Agnes Jemima is a minor, yet important character in The Handmaid's Tale. She is the daughter of Offred and Luke. She was born prior to the rise of Gilead, and was separated from her parents after a failed escape attempt[1][2]. She later becomes an Aunt, and is referred to by her rank as Aunt Victoria. She is one of the three narrators of The Testaments, where her story is chronicled as the "Transcript of Witness Testimony 369A."

Name

Tabitha teaches Agnes that her name means "lamb." This not entirely untrue; Agnes actually derives from a Greek name meaning "holy" or "pure", but is associated with Saint Agnes of Rome, who in art is depicted with a lamb as the Greek "Agnes" (Ἁγνή) is often conflated with the Latin "agnus" (lamb).

Jemima is an Arabic and Hebrew name meaning "little dove." In the Bible, Jemima was one of the three daughters of Job and she and her sisters were described as the most beautiful women in the land. She was born to Job after God killed his first set of children and took away all his prosperity. This name may foreshadow her being an Aunt, as Aunt Jemima is a famous pancake mix.

Her Aunt name, Victoria, means victory, and is chosen as a reference to Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom. Due to Aunts' names referring to things appealing to women, it may also be a reference to Victoria's Secret, a lingerie company.

Profile

She is described as Caucasian and having blonde hair.

Agnes considers herself to not be very pretty, having a "dough face," "raisin eyes" and "pumpkin-seed teeth."

Story

Before Gilead

While shopping in a supermarket, a crazy woman tries to kidnap Offred's baby daughter [3].

After the Takeover

Luke and Offred purchase fake passports in order to escape. They tell their daughter they are going on a picnic and plan to give her a sleeping pill when they cross the border so that she would not be questioned or give them away. [4].

They reach the border and give the guard their passports. When the guard picks up the phone, they speed away in the car, and then get out and try to run through the woods[5]. Offred cannot run very fast, because her 5-year-old child slows her down. She remembers hearing shots. She and her daughter fall to the ground, hiding; Offred begs her daughter to be quiet, but she is too young to understand. After getting caught, her daughter is dragged away from her[1].

Offred wakes up screaming, demanding to know what they have done with her daughter. The authorities tell Offred she is unfit, and her daughter is with those fit to care for her. They show her a photograph of her child wearing a white dress, holding the hand of a strange woman [2].

In The Handmaid's Tale

Serena shows Offred a photograph of her daughter. In the photo, she wears a white dress and smiles. Offred senses that her daughter hardly remembers her. This tears at her heart.[6]

15 Years Later

Offred's daughter has been adopted by a Wife and Commander, and renamed Agnes. Her new mother, Tabitha, told her a story of saving her from a witch. She had a doll's house that was like her own, where the pages were blank - she was taught to believe that books were simply decorations, like vases.

At school, Agnes was taught Religion by the fearsome Aunt Vidala and taught Crafts by the pleasant Aunt Estée. Despite Estée's assurances of her parents arranging for a good husband in time, Agnes grew up believing Vidala's warnings about men. She regularly had nightmares, and dreaded her future marriage as she grew up. When she was old enough to understand what pregnancy was, she asked Tabitha if she came from her stomach rather than being saved by the witches - believing that Tabitha was her biological mother. Tabitha did not answer her. Her best friend, Shunammite, told her that Tabitha was dying only two days before Tabitha passed away.

At her mother's funeral, she was introduced to the Widow, Paula Saunders, who her father married several months later. Her father and step-mother were assigned a Handmaid, Ofkyle, who soon fell pregnant. When going for a dental checkup, Agnes was sexually assaulted by Dr. Grove. Agnes reaches menarche just before Ofkyle dies in childbirth, though her half-brother, Mark, survives. She is shunned at school due to a superstition among Daughters that girls whose Handmaids die are cursed.

Commander Kyle and Paula plan to marry Agnes to Commander B. Frederick Judd. As the wedding approaches, Agnes is filled with dread, and contemplates suicide. Eventually, Aunt Lydia catches wind of Agnes's feelings, and asks her to reach out to Aunt Estée if she wishes to become a Supplicant of the Aunts. Agnes makes her way to her old school, and finds sanctuary at Ardua Hall. Aunt Lydia convinces Kyle and Paula to sign her over to the Aunts, and she is reunited with her friend, Becka - now called Aunt Immortelle - who also joined the Aunts due to trauma caused by sexual assault. Her best friend, Shunammite, is arranged to marry the pedophilic Judd in her place.

Agnes takes the name Aunt Victoria and spends nine years as a Supplicant. Shortly before she is ready to be elevated to a Pearl Girl, she is instructed to settle a Canadian homeless girl - Jade - who has come to Gilead as a "Pearl." Agnes is unaware that Jade is the legendary Baby Nicole, who, in turn, is her biological half-sister.

References