The Stories
Story 03 of 10
The Tiger’s Bride
Carter tells Beauty and the Beast a second time, in the first person and in reverse. Where ‘The Courtship of Mr Lyon’ tames its Beast into a husband, this tale turns its heroine into a tiger. Liberation here is not being made human and married, but shedding the borrowed ‘skins’ that a world of men has dressed her in, and choosing the animal over the wife.
The story
Arriving in a bitter Italian winter, a young woman watches her dissolute father gamble away everything at cards to a masked local nobleman known only as La Bestia, until, with nothing left to stake, he wagers and loses his own daughter on the turn of a single card and weeps over the loss of her rather than of his fortune. At their parting he presses on her a white rose, which she tears apart in her anger until a thorn pricks her finger and marks the petals with blood. The Beast, a tiger who hides his true nature behind a beautifully painted human mask, a black wig of curls, gloves and stiff, over-formal clothes, and who reeks faintly of the animal beneath his scent, carries her off to his echoing, half-empty palace, where his one delicate, apologetic valet interprets his few muttered words. She is attended by a clockwork maid, a mechanical soubrette that ticks as it powders her cheeks and mirrors back to her exactly what she has been made into: a manufactured, imitative thing wound up to perform the motions of a lady.
The Beast makes one request, delivered through his valet with painful embarrassment: he wishes to see her naked, once. She refuses, reading the demand as pornographic humiliation, and offers instead only to raise her skirts with the lamp put out, the mechanical, unlooking terms men have taught her. The Beast weeps at the offer. He takes her out instead to ride across his wintry estate, and there, trembling, drops the human disguise altogether to show the great tiger beneath; seeing him strip first, she understands the original request as an exchange rather than a conquest, and chooses to unpin her own clothes and show him ‘the fleshly nature of women’. Back in the palace his rough tongue licks away her human skin to reveal a shining pelt of fur underneath. In a final, telling stroke she sends the clockwork maid back to her father in her place, dressed in her own clothes so that the automaton takes over the imitation life she is leaving; she becomes a tiger, and rejects the chance to return to the world of men that had bought and sold her.
A closer look
Inversion, voice and flesh as capital
Placed directly after ‘The Courtship of Mr Lyon’, this tale reads as a deliberate answer to it, and the first difference is the voice. Chris Power points out that where the earlier Beauty is narrated in the third person and ‘robbed of agency’, the heroine of ‘The Tiger’s Bride’ tells her own story and is ‘fully aware’ of her situation. From the start she names her condition in the cold vocabulary of the market: her body is ‘my sole capital in the world’ (The Tiger’s Bride), and she reflects on ‘how I had been bought and sold, passed from hand to hand’ (The Tiger’s Bride). The clockwork maid makes this literal: the automaton is what a woman becomes when she is treated purely as property, an imitation of life performing the motions of femininity, and the narrator recognises herself in it. Her clear-sightedness is the source of her power; she is the Juliette to Mr Lyon’s Justine, refusing to pretend the transaction is romance.
The reciprocal gaze and the disrobing
The Beast’s demand to see her naked is the story’s crux, and it divides critics in a way that is especially useful for the NEA. Patricia Duncker reads the scene as the ‘ritual disrobing of the willing victim of pornography’, arguing that Carter, for all her intentions, has simply staged another woman undressed for a male eye. Merja Makinen, in her essay on ‘the decolonization of feminine sexuality’, reads it in the opposite direction: because the Beast strips first, the encounter is founded on ‘reciprocal’ exposure rather than one-way looking, and the tiger the narrator eventually reveals is not for the male gaze but her own reclaimed libido. Carter keeps the physical detail sharp enough to unsettle either reading: a candle drips hot wax onto the heroine’s bare shoulder as she stands exposed, a small burn that keeps the scene bodily and uncomfortable rather than safely symbolic. Whichever way you argue it, the method is the point: Carter stages the contrast with the Marquis’s voyeurism in the title story precisely so that the gaze can be shown becoming mutual, and with mutuality the balance of power shifts.
Transformation as liberation, and the house that falls
The ending is one of the most quoted moments in the collection because it makes transformation mean the opposite of what fairy tale usually intends. Each stroke of the Beast’s tongue strips away ‘all the skins of a life in the world’ (The Tiger’s Bride), the social costumes of daughter, property and demure bride, to leave ‘a nascent patina of shining hairs’ (The Tiger’s Bride). The manufactured self dissolves with it: ‘My earrings turned back to water and trickled down my shoulders’ (The Tiger’s Bride), the jewels that priced her melting away as she stops being an object. Carter stages the change as the collapse of a whole order: the reverberations of the Beast’s purr shake the palace until ‘the walls began to dance’ (The Tiger’s Bride), the architecture of a world built on buying women coming down around her. To become animal, here, is to become free, though a sceptical reader might ask, with the critic Lewallen, whether Carter has really escaped the binary of predator and prey or only swapped the heroine’s place within it.
Key quotations
| Quotation | Method | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| ‘my sole capital in the world’ (The Tiger’s Bride) | Economic metaphor | The narrator names her own body as property in the language of trade; her clarity about being a commodity is the beginning of her power, not her defeat. |
| ‘bought and sold, passed from hand to hand’ (The Tiger’s Bride) | Metaphor, tricolon rhythm | Marriage and the card table are shown to be the same transaction; women circulate between men as goods, a system the story sets out to reject. |
| ‘the fleshly nature of women’ (The Tiger’s Bride) | Euphemism reclaimed | Her self-revelation to the Beast is offered as an equal exchange, not a humiliation; she claims her body as her own to show, reversing the pornographic gaze. |
| ‘all the skins of a life in the world’ (The Tiger’s Bride) | Metaphor | The human skin is recast as social costume; being licked clean of it strips away the imposed roles of daughter, property and demure bride. |
| ‘My earrings turned back to water and trickled down my shoulders’ (The Tiger’s Bride) | Surreal imagery, symbolism | The jewels that priced and decorated her dissolve as she ceases to be an object; ornament melts once she is no longer for sale. |
| ‘the walls began to dance’ (The Tiger’s Bride) | Personification | The transformation shakes the very house apart; the collapse of the palace stages the collapse of the patriarchal order that trapped her. |
Think it through
- Duncker sees the disrobing as pornography; Makinen sees it as reclaimed desire. Which reading does Carter’s handling of the reciprocal nakedness support, and where exactly does the text tip the balance?
- The heroine becomes a tiger rather than the Beast becoming a man. Why is that the more radical ending, and what does it say about what ‘human’ society offers women?
- What is the clockwork maid for? How does the automaton help the narrator understand her own condition?
- Is becoming animal a real liberation, or does it simply move the heroine to the stronger side of a predator and prey binary she never escapes?
Towards the coursework
Paired with the right novel, this tale is one of the strongest in the collection for the comparative essay because it turns on identity, agency and the refusal of an imposed self. On women as property and the reclaiming of the self, the narrator’s knowledge that she is ‘bought and sold’ maps onto Nazneen’s movement from arranged wife to independent woman in Brick Lane, and Carter’s dissolving of the human into the animal offers a vivid comparison for Monica Ali’s question of how far a self can be remade. On belonging and transformation, the heroine’s choice to stay with the Beast rather than return to ‘the world of men’ speaks to the migrants who choose new lives over old ones in Exit West. On the gaze and shame, the reciprocal disrobing makes a pointed contrast with the assault and humiliation in The Kite Runner. Aim to compare methods, not just themes: first-person voice, transformation imagery and the reciprocal gaze against the equivalent techniques in your novel. Build the argument on the coursework page.