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An Analysis of "The Secret Garden"
A Garden of Revival: Healing Through Nature in "The Secret Garden"
Frances Hodgson Burnett's "The Secret Garden" is a timeless classic, both in its
captivating storyline and deep psychological and emotional symbolism. Against the seclusion of
a Yorkshire estate, the novel is a powerful parable of Mary Lennox, Colin Craven, and Archibald
Craven—all of whom bear emotional baggage, traumas, and loss. The garden, previously sealed
and barren, symbolizes inner revival. As the children and the father all reconnect to nature, they
slowly heal psychologically in addition to their literal blossoming surrounding them. This paper
will examine how "The Secret Garden" symbolizes new life, healing, and emotional healing
through nature and the garden motif for the three main characters, linking their psychological
healing to the literal flowering life that surrounds them.
The Children: Dead Inside but Not Beyond Hope
At the start of the book, Mary Lennox is presented as a sick, sour, unloved child raised in
India by intemperate parents. Similarly, Colin Craven is isolated, weak, and convinced he is
going to die. They are barren, uncultivated land, symbolic of a closed, unwanted land,
unproductive, and disassociated from life. Not surprisingly, Mary's transformation begins when
she is sent to Misselthwaite Manor, an isolated place of natural mystery where she discovers, and
for the first time, how to dream with and about the garden, thereby extending its reach into the
life of the ideally engaged living plant.
, Surname 2
Without a doubt, one can notice the parallel between the children's initial psychological
conditions and the neglected garden. Mary starts to discover the locked garden of the estate as
she begins to change herself physically and emotionally. She gets physically better and
emotionally more empathic, and her curiosity awakens. "The garden was coming alive, and Mary
had come alive with it" (Burnett 109). It is not a backdrop but a living metaphor portraying Mary
and Colin's growth. This matches Elizabeth Lennox Keyser's assertion that "Burnett makes the
garden a representation of the children's psyches" (Keyser 3). Buried emotions, such as the
hidden door, are uncovered and healed in a therapeutic garden space.
Colin's recovery is perhaps the most sensational. Believed to be crippled, he internalized
that perception, exhibiting psychosomatic effects that reflect his father's grief-stricken emotional
abandonment. His recovery, too, is directly related to his time in the garden, and his bodily
transformation replicates his emotional resurrection. Colin's coming of age comes not through
medicine, however, but through laughter, sun, movement, and friendship. Nature steps in as a
therapeutic force, enabling Colin to perceive himself as whole and strong. Jackie C. Horne and
Joe Sutliff Sanders cite this in noting, "The children's immersion in the garden is a therapeutic
model of healing in which agency, care, and connection are at the center" (Horne & Sanders xiv).
Colin's epiphany that he is not cursed is reflective of the garden's own rebirth—a yard that had
previously been deemed dead made whole by care and attention.
The Garden as a Space of Environmental Therapy
Nature is also the therapeutic symbol in "The Secret Garden," and it is both
environmentally and psychologically speaking; the idea is that there is something profoundly
healing emotionally and spiritually about being in nature. In addition, the secret garden in the
novel itself is a metaphoric site of regeneration not just for the novel's central characters (Colin