Could be worse
You are Elinor Dashwood of Sense & Sensibility! You are practical, circumspect, and discreet. Though you are tremendously sensible and allow your head to rule, you have a deep, emotional side that few people often see.
Take the Quiz here!
Thanks Tigtog.
15 comments:
Could be worse? That's doing pretty well, I reckon. I suppose you mean you would not like to have come up with Fanny Price. Fair enough.
Elinor and Anne are the durable ones. It would be a bit masochistic to want to 'be' either one given what they go through but
I've just been reading a really interesting book about Sense & Sensibility which argues that Elinor is the first true intellectual depicted in the English novel, because of the way she thinks inductively about the meanings of her experiences, without hiving off her moral or emotional faculties.
By the way it said I was Anne Elliot.
'what they go through but...'
...but it's been a long week.
So who did you end up as, Ms Tartan?
Hmm an interesting stuff indeed!!
And hey, have a look at this too
pet ecards
Marianne Dashwood, I'm afraid.
And Laura, have you seen the Penguin "Red" edition of S&S? Duck said you might be interested if you hadn't - it's a bit odd.
voojp
I haven't Zoe, but I am intrigued now.
I am Elizabeth Bennett, but for all the wrong reasons, methinks.
Yes, L-- erm, Anne, 'could be worse' was a cautious Elinorean assessment, as in 'Thank God I'm not Harriet Smith, or Mrs Elton/Clay/Jennings, or the Bennet sister who is so colourless I can't remember her name, the one who isn't Elizabeth or Jane or Mary or Lydia.'
That book looks intriguing. I've come to trust Ellen Moody's critical judgement over years and years of reading her posts to VICTORIA, but I'd still like to see it.
Zoe, Marianne is never afraid, least of all of being Marianne. Besides, you score Alan Rickman, though I know there are some people who do not understand this. (And then there's Ciaran Hind, oh my.)
... and of course everything ends for Marianne most suitably! Heh.
Laura, I'll send you some images when I get a mo.
That was a bit of fun, thanks for the link, pc.
"...or the Bennet sister who is so colourless I can't remember her name, the one who isn't Elizabeth or Jane or Mary or Lydia."
Kitty, I believe. She was Lydia's shadow and, as Mr. Bennett would say, a silly miss.
I'm Elinor too. Which is fine, heh.
I unleashed my inner girl's blouse and achieved an Anne Elliot.
Apparently I'm easily persuaded, or fancy Ciarán Hinds*. Or I like whale sashimi. I forget where I followed the necessary critical path to arrive at this juncture, but all I can say is that I'm heartily underwhelmed with myself.
* Incidentally, isn't he just fucking fantastic as Gaius Julius Caesar in that "Rome" series? Hands-down Best. Kaiser. Ever.
foxmpot
Fyodora, that has got to be some kind of first. Congratulations on checking out the girly quiz, even if you had to unleash your inner girl's blouse to do it. (I gave a class today in which we had a brief discussion of mixed metaphor, but I don't think they're quite ready for that one.) You could have done much worse than Anne Elliot; she is practically the only person in her particular book with any brains, for a start.
Oh, I'm not too miffed. I rather like the character, and I suspect she's the one closest to Austen herself. However, she's not representative of me, and nor are any of the alternatives, which I must say are predictably girly. What happened to Charlotte Lucas or Jane Fairfax or Caroline Bingley or Miss Bates, FFFS? A bit less than the full arse, this quiz, IMHO.
I don't think a male version would work too well, either, as most of the male characters are archetypes, he says, taunting Laura mischievously.
If anyone's interested I found a website for the Penguin "reds". You'll find all of Austen in the romance section. Heh.
http://www.penguinclassics.co.uk/static/cs/uk/10/minisites/penguinreds/roundups.html
PS Fyodorina, you are the bomb.
Taunt away!
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