DUTY AND DESIRE
Pamela Aidan
Touchstone
ISBN: 0743291360
October 2006
Historical Fiction
www.simonsays.com
Reviewed By Wendall Sexton
|
DUTY AND DESIRE by Pamela Aidan is subtitled “"A
Novel of Fitzwilliam Darcy, Gentleman”." Fitzwilliam Darcy, for
those not acquainted with the characters of classic literature,
is the “Mr. Darcy” of Jane Austen'’s famously popular work “Pride
& Prejudice”. This novel is a retelling of that same tale,
but this time from the perspective of Fitzwilliam Darcy, rather
than Elizabeth Bennett and her family.
This is the expectation I carried with me into my
reading of DUTY AND DESIRE, and to a point it is a true picture,
but it is not a complete visual of what Pamela Aidan has done.
She has not just given a possible scenario as to what Jane
Austen might have written of Mr. Darcy's point of view, she has
created her own unique tale on what a man goes through,
especially a man of standing from the early 19th
century of England, when a woman unknowingly enraptures him to
the point of, even though he seeks to vanquish her image from
his mind, nearly else. Somehow she has become a part of him,
though he wishes it were not so.
So what is a man to do? Darcy starts this
particular tale in church. It is the first Sunday in Advent.
He is where his duty leads him. However, his mind is not on the
service or the minister’s sermon. His thoughts have him angrily
musing over the sighting of George Wickham and the traitorous
memories to Darcy’s family that man’s visage returns. He
seriously hurt Darcy's young sister, Georgiana, with his
attempted seduction of her virtue. Does a man like Wickham
deserve the forgiveness the minister seems to be preaching
about? Should his egregious actions against Georgiana, and
against Darcy's family, be excused for reasons of the natural
frailty the minister infers?
Fortunately, Georgiana is in an apparent recovery
from the ordeal and heading home to Pemberly, the family estate
– that which Darcy is now master over since the death of his
father. Her letters, and her subsequent appearance, reveals a
joyous new creature who carries a renewed exuberance for life --
along with an odd interest in those of less fortunate means that
herself.
This is naturally an appalling proposition to
Darcy. The poor people of his lands, who welcome him home as he
arrives, are people he carries sympathy for; but this is point
where their separate stations in life must keep them separate –
and Georgiana is apparently resolved to cross that line for some
unknown reason. To interact with those who fail to carry his
same standards is to invite disaster and rebuke upon his family
name, which he sworn to protect. For Georgiana to be around
them, in the capacity she is seeking, is firmly out of the
question. Such was far too dangerous to ever take seriously.
Yet, as it is known to those who have read
“Pride & Prejudice”, Darcy has done exactly what he seeks to
protect Georgiana from – he has associated with those beneath
his status, and Elizabeth Bennett enraptured his thoughts and
his heart.
The only thing for Darcy to do is to find a woman
who can replace her vision with one even more palatable to his
situation, a woman of standing who is just as lovely, just as
charming, to vanquish his memory of her sight.
The opportunity comes with the invitation from
some old college friends for a week together at one’s
residence. Normally, such romps in frivolity would repel him,
but as Darcy believes only another woman, one of his own
standing, can extricate the sight of
To remark that DUTY AND DESIRE was simply an
astounding read for me would be to sell the triumph of this tale
short. This is not simply a book extremely well-written; it is
sublimely constructed, logically placing the necessary people
and events in Darcy’s path to show him
|
Roundtable Reviews design is created by Crystal Cloud Graphics