Dear Reader
Rest assured that DELAFORD is still alive and growing on the writer's personal computer. Other postings will be available on Mary Maire's Twitter Page. Do keep in Touch! Just to reassure everyone that all is as Jane, I think, would approve...
An e-book is planned, to make it easier to read. Thanks to Ali Luke's 'Publishing E-Books for Dummies' , which sobriquet I think Jane would not like. I do not like it much myself, but the book is useful. Not to be confused with the older 'E-publishing for Dummies' which has out-of-date information.
No doubt the meaning of the word 'dumb' has changed from meaning 'mute' to 'stupid'. And the unfortunate deaf-mutes were often referred to as being 'deaf and dumb' - not meaning deaf and stupid but 'deaf and silent'. Somewhere, the 'dumb' part transitioned into 'stupid.' This is thought to be the German use of the word 'dumm' which actually means 'stupid' and apparently has nothing to do with lacking the power of speech. It is what people call an 'Americanism'. That is, it comes from another language or is early modern English!
(Many people don't know that 'dumb' used to mean 'silent', prompting a young educated professional to ask me once why the little elevator into which we placed documents to go to our office on the next floor was called a 'dumb waiter'. These little elevators were used widely for food in old houses, hence the 'waiter' part.)
DELAFORD Sequel to SENSE & SENSIBILITY
Tuesday, June 25, 2013
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
INTRODUCTION
I do not hold a candle to the great and amusing Jane Austen, nor will I try to emulate her writing, for not only is that an impossibilty, but I have my own style, and any other would be visibly false.
How sad it is to finish a good book! How sad to say goodbye to all your new friends, and leave the place that has become beloved! Jane would understand that her characters have to live on in our imaginations...and this sequel I is what I imagine happened to Elinor, Marianne, Margaret (who I call Meg, for simplicity), their mother Mrs. Dashwood, the shy Edward preaching from his pulpit; the adoring Colonel Brandon, penny-pinching relatives John and Fanny; and the other characters, not forgetting the love-lorn Miss Steele, her scheming sister Lucy and husband Robert.
There are new friends to be made; perhaps old ones to lose. PART 1 sees the ups and downs of Elinor and Edward's new life together, their many visitors (for newlyweds must be visited!) and life among a few gentrified families in a village, as Jane so ably taught us, can never be dull.
I would like to acknowledge David M Shapard's Annotated Sense & Sensibility, which was a great help and an inspiration in writing this sequel.
How sad it is to finish a good book! How sad to say goodbye to all your new friends, and leave the place that has become beloved! Jane would understand that her characters have to live on in our imaginations...and this sequel I is what I imagine happened to Elinor, Marianne, Margaret (who I call Meg, for simplicity), their mother Mrs. Dashwood, the shy Edward preaching from his pulpit; the adoring Colonel Brandon, penny-pinching relatives John and Fanny; and the other characters, not forgetting the love-lorn Miss Steele, her scheming sister Lucy and husband Robert.
There are new friends to be made; perhaps old ones to lose. PART 1 sees the ups and downs of Elinor and Edward's new life together, their many visitors (for newlyweds must be visited!) and life among a few gentrified families in a village, as Jane so ably taught us, can never be dull.
I would like to acknowledge David M Shapard's Annotated Sense & Sensibility, which was a great help and an inspiration in writing this sequel.
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