Lauren Willig recently referenced a post I wrote for Valentine’s Day a few years ago, which prompted me to go back to the post, one of my favorites. In honor of last week’s holiday, this seemed a good time to re-post it.
I’ve wanted to do this blog for a while and Valentine’s Day seemed the perfect time to write it. Favorite romantic scenes–first declarations of love, resolutions of seemingly insurmountable conflicts, and other heart stopping moments. Here are a few of my favorites, scenes that bring an ache to my throat and put a smile on my face, many of them scenes I’ve reread so many times I know them by heart.
In no particular order:
1. “Oh, Damerel, must you be foxed just as this moment? How odious you are , my dear friend!”
The extended sequence at the end of Georgette Heyer’s Venetia in which Venetia and Damerel work out their differences has it all–conflict, humor, passion, and poignancy. Damerel is a world-weary rake and Venetia is a sheltered, unmarried woman, yet they’re so uniquely themselves that they pop off the page, and so obviously soul mates that you can’t but feel a catch in your throat as they battle through to their happy ending.
2. “I’ve just won a wager with myself.”
The scene in Freedom & Necessity by Steven Brust & Emma Bull in which Susan and James confess their feelings (and do rather more than confess them) may be my favorite literary love scene. It’s character-driven, emotionally fraught, erotically frank, and yet still filled with mystery. The final scene between the couple in the book is also lovely, and then there’s that fabulous last letter James writes to Susan, not to mention all the moments in between.
3. “Monseigneur, I would so much rather be the last woman than the first.”
These Old Shades is a comfort read for me, but it isn’t my favorite Georgette Heyer. It isn’t even in my top three. And yet I’ve reread the last scene between Avon and Léonie countless times. It’s beautifully written and structured, with a wonderful economy of gesture and emotion that speaks volumes. There’s very little inner monologue, and yet the emotional shifts are crystal clear.
4. “Now forget your responsibility to everyone else for once in your life and give me a straight answer. Do you want me to stay?”
The final scene in The Armies of Daylight, the third book in Barbara Hambly’s Darwath trilogy, may be the most satisfying lovers-getting-together-against-the-odds scene I’ve ever read, largely because the odds seem so very high and the happy ending so very much not guaranteed. There’s also something about this scene that to me is very much parallel to the Léonie/Avon scene, though the words are very different as are the characters. Yet both stories involve heroes who are considerably older than the heroines and who men capable of shaping the world round them (Ingold is a wizard, Avon a wealthy, powerful duke). Both men are convinced they’ll only bring unhappiness to the woman they love and are trying to do the noble thing and give her up (as is Damerel in scene 1. Doing the right thing can be very sexy). The heroines, Léonie and Gil, are very different women. Yet both are trying to convince the man they love that they know what they want and would much rather face the future with him, hand in hand. Like the scene from These Old Shades, this one has beautifully delineated emotional shifts and wonderful tension between desire and perceived duty and the competing objectives of the two characters.
5. “I do love nothing in the world so well as you: is not that strange?”
I got to do the church scene between Beatrice and Benedick from Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing in acting class in high school. My fellow sophomore Benedick and I barely scratched the surface of what the scene has to offer. But we had a lot of fun, and I still know most of the lines by heart. And every time I see the play, I find new things in this incredibly rich scene, which is funny, touching, romantic, and fraught with dark emotion. In the History Hoydens discussion, Pam Rosenthal said, It stops my heart now, as completely as it did when I first read it in my late teens. And Leslie Carroll, who is also an actress, said, That admission always takes my breath away. And it did when I played the role, every time we got to that moment. It’s a moment that is so well crafted; it manages to be totally earned and yet steals up on the lovers unawares.
6. “Placetne, magistra?”
“Placet.”
I think I studied Latin college partly so I could understand the dialogue between Peter and Harriet in the final scene of Dorothy Sayers’s Gaudy Night (thanks to which I now know that Peter phrases the question in a neutral way, rather than a way that expects a yes or no answer). That this scene manages not to be trite or anticlimactic or trite after three books of angst and adventure, countless marriage proposals, and several brushes with death is no small feat. You can really believe in the balance these two characters have fought their way to, yet there’s still enough tension to keep the reading anxiously turning the pages. Harriet’s done a great deal of thinking in the pages before, but here, as in some of the other scenes I’ve mentioned, there’s very little inner monologue. And yet every word and detail is weighted with subtext, down to the traffic lights blinking Yes; No; Wait. And as Janet Mullany said in the History Hoydens discussion, it’s a book that has a breathtaking amount of sexual tension in it.
7. Too late, too late, too late. It had happened.
My mom and I used to call this the “Gigi” moment–where the hero suddenly realizes, with the force of a thunderclap, that he’s madly in love with the heroine who’s been right there under his nose for years and years or pages and pages. The moment when Francis Crawford of Lymond comes to this realization, in The Ringed Castle, book five of the Lymond Chronicles is all the more powerful for the world “love” never being used.
8. “I prefer you as you are–tainted and tarnished.”
The scene where Mary casts caution and calculation aside and crawls into bed with the wounded Lord Vaughn in Lauren Willig’s The Seduction of the Crimson Rose is just lovely. A truly romantic confession of feeling on both sides, made all the stronger by the fact that you know just what it costs these two people to let their guard down and make themselves vulnerable. Both maintain their wonderfully acerbic sides, which makes their confession of their feelings (couched or allude to in character-appropriate terms) all the more powerful.
9. “A bath and some inoculations are called for, Holmes.”
I think the “dock scene” from Laurie King’s A Monstrous Regiment of Women may be my favorite proposal scene. Intensely romantic in large part because so much about it is is quite the opposite. Holmes and Russell are filthy and soaking wet and in the midst of an argument about his having gone after the villain without her. There’s a wonderful juxtaposition of acerbic dialogue and passionate breaking free of restraint. As with Gaudy Night and the Darwath Chronicles, and the Lymond Chronicles, it has extra power from being the culmination of
more than one book of longing. It sends chills up my spine every time I read it (play on words intended, to those familiar with the scene).
10. “Well,” he said, with a transitory gleam of himself, “you’re my corner and I’ve come to hide.”
Peter and Harriet are the only couple to appear twice on this list. Much as I love the last scene of Gaudy Night, I think I may be even more fond of the final scene between them in Busman’s Honeymoon. It grapples with a question I’m fond of addressing in my own writing, “what happens after happily ever after?” And it balances the scales by letting Peter need Harriet. As Lauren Willig said in the History Hoydens Discussion, I think it’s the first book I read that really took the time to deal with what happened after that initial, hard won resolution. She then made a nice comparison to Charles and Mélanie and watching the struggle of two people struggling to find a way to fit together on an ongoing basis, achieving small victories and dealing with the occasional reversal. Which prompted me to mention that The last scene in Busman’s Honeymoon was my inspiration for the last scene in Beneath a Silent Moon, which was my starting place for the book. I knew I wanted to get Charles and Mélanie to that scene, and I worked backwards 🙂 .
Ten very different scenes. And yet, as I revisited them to write this post, I realized that the very differences in scenes and characters are something the scenes have in common. Each is unique to the characters involved, in the setting and circumstances in which the scene occurs (a sitting room in the French countryside, a rocky hollow in an alternate universe the London docks, an Oxford street) to the circumstances to the words and gestures the characters find to express their feelings. There’s also a wonderful tension to all of them, a sense of the fragility of emotions and the bonds between two people and the risk of letting down one’s guard. None of them seem quite certain in advance and yet once the characters find their way to each other, you absolutely believe in the possibility of their happiness.
Have you read any of the books above? Did any of these scenes resonate with you? What are some favorite literary heart stopping moments of yours? What is it that makes them particularly effective?
This week’s Fraser Correspondence addition is Raoul’s reply to Lady Elizabeth’s letter from last week.
February 22, 2011 at 3:59 am
I know I’ll think of more later, but Connie Brockway has written a number of heartstopping moments. There’s Harry’s Egypt speech to Dizzy in “As You Desire”, Eliot’s line to Letty after they’ve been together for the first time “We’ve had sex, now let’s make love”, and the last line from “All Through the Night. Be still my beating heart.
February 22, 2011 at 4:41 am
Thanks for commenting, Susan! I love Connie Brockway, but believe it or not I haven’t read “As You Desire” or “All Through the Night.”
February 22, 2011 at 7:28 pm
I would have to add Mr Knightley’s impulsive confession to Emma Woodhouse, and his understated declaration of: ‘If I loved you less, I could talk about it more’. Johnny Lee Miller and Romola Garai also act that scene beautifully in the 2009 adaptation of Emma.
February 22, 2011 at 11:09 pm
Great suggestion, Sarah! Such a wonderful scene, both in the book and on film. Jane Austen declarations are fascinating, because she tends to cut away (or at least move into distanced narrative) as soon as the man declares himself, leaving a lot tantalizingly to the reader’s imagination. When I was younger it frustrated me. Now I rather like it.
February 22, 2011 at 11:10 pm
I’m not that far in the Sayer’s series, but eventually…
One of my favorites is from Married by Morning. Leo tells Catherine, “You have my heart, and unfortunately for you the rest of me comes with it.”
After everything Leo has been through, it’s a very fitting declaration. Loved their story.
February 22, 2011 at 11:17 pm
Oh, dear, Susan, hope that wasn’t a bad spoiler! The scenes are so worth it when you get to them! Have you got to the Harriet books yet?
Love the line you quoted from Married by Morning!
February 23, 2011 at 12:04 am
I’ve just read the first one with Harriet. I read a few before that one, and tried to read the next one in the series, but couldn’t get into it. I prefer to read things in order, so I’ll just pick it up at the next one.
The ‘spoiler’ just makes me want to keep reading!
February 23, 2011 at 12:11 am
Oh, good! With the Sayers books, I think just reading the four with Harriet in order works well.
March 4, 2011 at 11:33 pm
Great post Tracy, was interested to see which Francis/Philippa quote you would chose. There are so many..What about the “tant que je vive” speech -it sends shivers down my back reading it. Or the simple “Junitsa”
March 5, 2011 at 9:00 am
So true, Caitriona, about the multitude of great Francis/Philippa quotes. There’s also the moment at the end of the chase through Lyons where she realizes she loves him and their embrace at the end. Considering their love affair doesn’t really start until the fifth book in the series, and then they both spend a good deal of time denying it, there are an amazing number of emotion-rich moments. Of course, perhaps that’s partly because they both work so hard to suppress the emotion…
March 21, 2011 at 12:14 am
As happens all too often in my life, I’m hours/days/weeks late. But I did want to add another heartstopping scene, this one from C.S. Harris’ “Where Serpents Sleep” one of her Sebastian St. Cyr mysteries. For those who have not yet read the books, stop here, as a SPOILER follows
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Sebastian and Hero are trapped in an underground vault. The water level is rising, and they fear they will drown. Not friends, not lovers, they find comfort in each others’ arms. “He heard her breath catch, felt her body arch against his as the bells of St. Clements echoed away into stillness. He knew a strange sense of wonder, like a man awakening from a long, drugged sleep. And he thought, This is what life feels like. This is what a woman feels like.” Sebastian, so wounded by the war, by his family, by the murders he has tried to avenge, is brought to life and awareness of another in this moment with Hero, and I for one find it deeply, utterly romantic.
March 21, 2011 at 3:53 am
So glad you posted, Susan! I love it when people return to topics and keep the conversation going. The scene you reference is a great scene to mention. I’m currently about a third of the way through When Maidens Mourn and finding it addictive. Have you read it yet?
March 24, 2011 at 2:40 am
I think “When Maidens Mourn” is the next, as yet unpublished book, but I understand your eagerness to read it. I finished “Where Shadows Dance” last week and liked it. Harris has created so many intriguing characters, and it is lovely to return to their world to see what has happened to them and how they have developed. Central, of course, are Sebastian, his father, Kit, and Hero. I’m a fan of Hero’s because she has so many facets/layers to her. She has more often surprised me in her actions or thoughts than the generally predictable Kit, and I’ve liked her for it. I did want to shake her in the last book because she did not see how perfect Sebastian was for her, but I got over that impulse. Enjoy the rest of the book!
March 24, 2011 at 2:53 am
Oh, dear, I must have had the next book on my mind, as you say, and muddled the. I’m now about 2/3 of the way through “Where Shadows Dance” and totally engrossed. I love the mystery with all the diplomatic intrigue. I’ve always been very fond of Kat, but I’ve come to quite like Hero. I so know what you mean about being frustrated with not seeing the positives in her relationship with Sebastian, but I think it’s frequently easier for readers to see that characters should be together than for the characters themselves. From Hero’s perspective, Sebastian is in love with someone else and she never wanted to marry. I understand her reluctance.