Have His Carcase has one of the classic opening paragraphs of literature:
---L.
Subject quote from ABC, Jackson 5.
The best remedy for a bruised heart is not, as so many people seem to think, repose upon a manly bosom. Much more efficacious are honest work, physical activity, and the sudden acquisition of wealth. After being acquitted of murdering her lover, and, indeed, in consequence of that acquittal, Harriet Vane found all three specifics abundantly at her disposal; and although Lord Peter Wimsey, with a touching faith in tradition, persisted day in and day out in presenting the bosom for her approval, she showed no inclination to recline upon it.That’s up there with Pride and Prejudice.
---L.
Subject quote from ABC, Jackson 5.
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Date: 4 March 2026 04:27 pm (UTC)Sayers could write.
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Date: 4 March 2026 04:49 pm (UTC)Indeed -- very well. She was even a competent, if not inspired, poet.
(I did read her entire translation of Dante in part because it was the one readily available to me at the time. I found Paradise a bit of a slog and understood that many people did, and was about to give up when things got somewhat more lively and interesting, enough so that I persevered to the end. Which was, yes, transcendent enough to almost be worth the slog. Only afterward did I find out that the point where it got easier was where Sayers stopped, with the rest being completed after her death by Barbara Reynolds. I immediately tracked down Reynolds' other Penguin Classics translation, and her version of Orlando Furioso is the best I've found. I wish she'd translated more.)
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Date: 4 March 2026 05:07 pm (UTC)Have His Carcase remains one of the my all-time favourites.