A good day for short pants
Jul. 8th, 2007 07:20 pmOMG, it's too hot to breathe outside. The worst part is that it stays humid all day, but won't rain. And believe me, we could use the rain.
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I finished Dorothy Sayers's Gaudy Night early last week, and I have a question for those of you who've also read it. At the end, why does Harriet finally accept Wimsey's proposal? Just because of that odd little bit of introspection on the river in the middle? If so, that seems remarkably facile. It was a nice little scene, with the Magdalene Bridge and the "Placetne, magistra?"/"Placet," but...hmmm. Perhaps it would make more sense if I watched the BBC adaptation.
(Confession: I have yet to read Strong Poison. It all might become clearer once/if I do.)
I started Busman's Honeymoon, but Harriet and Wimsey have both become irritatingly sappy and smarmy in equal measures, and I don't think I'll end up finishing it. I might try the short story where they evacuate during WWII, though. I like Homefront stories.
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I finished Dorothy Sayers's Gaudy Night early last week, and I have a question for those of you who've also read it. At the end, why does Harriet finally accept Wimsey's proposal? Just because of that odd little bit of introspection on the river in the middle? If so, that seems remarkably facile. It was a nice little scene, with the Magdalene Bridge and the "Placetne, magistra?"/"Placet," but...hmmm. Perhaps it would make more sense if I watched the BBC adaptation.
(Confession: I have yet to read Strong Poison. It all might become clearer once/if I do.)
I started Busman's Honeymoon, but Harriet and Wimsey have both become irritatingly sappy and smarmy in equal measures, and I don't think I'll end up finishing it. I might try the short story where they evacuate during WWII, though. I like Homefront stories.
no subject
Date: 2007-07-09 06:39 am (UTC)Yes, it is because of the introspection on the river, which is her personal epiphany, but it builds on what came before: She does get along with him very well; she does like him a lot; they have got enough interests in common, but are different enough not to be joined at the hip during their marriage; there is a certain spark of attraction.
But Harriet is completely screwed over after her affair with her late lover, and she hates Peter for being the rich aristocrat who saves her from the gallows and then asks for her hand in marriage; she hates the burden of gratitude of a "damsel in distress" to a "white knight in shining armour". But she finally realizes that their relationship is not bound up
by these roles -- because of everything that happens in Gaudy Night.
Sorry for tl;dr comment; Harriet/Peter are one of my OTPs, and I easily get carried away on that subject.
no subject
Date: 2007-07-10 11:33 pm (UTC)I dunno.