Good and Prosperous Morning to all. I actually was productive the total week. As matters change in my life in relation to my Elizabeth character, Giselle, I have just sat back and played the spirit world of my version of Pride and Prejudice in my mind as an outsider. There aren't MAJOR changes, but some that will definitely make some P &P lovers heart skip a beat from not sticking too closely to the original.
Without giving away too much, well, just a little.
For those who aren't as familiar with Pride and Prejudice, the main character is a strong English woman who has of course as the title a lot of pride and refuses to let anyone into her world especially men. To me it seems everything about Mr. Darcy in appearance alone just made her angry.
He was rich, he was good looking, he was arrogant etc. and she was against what she prejudiced him to be by appearance alone. But in the Jane Austen version, Mr. Darcy gets rid of all of these character flaws to get closer to Elizabeth and pursues her twice after being rejected. And through Mr. Darcy softening his heart, Jane changes her pride and accepts the one man she said she would never love.
Okay, with all of that said. My story refuses for me to let Giselle, Elizabeth's bitter twin, off the hook. I have added several scenes where Giselle struggles with her pride to let Mr. Washington (Mr. Darcy) know how she feels. In fact, her father tells her that she already rejected him and unless she opens the door wide for him to know that he will not be rejected a second time, he would never walk through. So sort of a spoiler, Elizabeth and Mr. Darcy switch positions after her rejection where we focus more on Elizabeth trying to approach Mr. Darcy to open his heart.
So, the past few days I let Mr. Washington back off from Giselle and make her struggle with her own
character issues. Jane Austen is awesome, but she made it too easy for Jane to accept him the second time without too much struggle for her own character to change. I believe because I am telling it from a black experience point of view where there is hundreds of years of deep seated hatred between black men and women dealing with their pride, I made these changes.
I am again satisfied with my revisions. I will be focusing from now on reading my story as if I have never seen it before. I will be tweaking along the way, not trying to write grammatically correct yet or speak in high society manner. I will leave all the little details for my final edit next month.
Because I see more the people visiting starting to pick up, be prepared to get a seven page blurb of Black Pride in the coming weeks. Not soon though, I'm protective of my baby. It is the very first scene we all get to see Mr. Darcy. Yes, that one at the party.
Well, this is it for now. I will see you Wednesday or next year btw. Cheers and Happy everything else.
Love,
Denise Rochelle M.
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