entredeuxguerres wrote:But the part of the story that fascinates me is the deliberately ambiguous scene of Diana alone in her room with brutish husband Colin Clive--are we meant to understand that she (after the horsewhipping!) yielded her "chaste treasure to his unmastered importunity"? (Laertes' warning to Ophelia.) That interpretation would certainly support Clive's dastardly contention that some women like to be "roughly handled."
Tried to find the answer in Galsworthy's original story (Over the River), but nothing that specific is available online that I could find. So what really happened?
Galsworthy doesn't baldly state what happens, but he makes it plain throughout the novel. "Yield" is the wrong word, Gerald Craven is a sadist and it's rape, and it's not just once, it's SOP for their marriage. "She liked it" is a standard defense.
I don't much care for Wynyard in the role, but that's because the characterization differs sharply from that in the novel. Since I like the novel, I don't care for the changes. But ymmv on that, and Whale is always worth watching.
