Tammy’s Reviews > The Age of Innocence > Status Update
Tammy
is 8% done
This novel won the Pulitzer in 1921. She won a legion medal for her work with refugees. Living in Europe during the war was hard and close friends died in combat. Her mentor Henry James renounced his American citizenship and then died in 1914. Readers had lost interest in WWI stories so Wharton chose to look at an innocent time for America, but she thinks innocence was lost before the war began.
— 9 hours, 57 min ago
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Tammy’s Previous Updates
Tammy
is 10% done
There is a line about Rushworths making imprudent marriages and foolish matches and it just cracked me up! She has be thinking about Mansfield Park<\i>. There are also families that have a habit of intermarrying. In addition to the forest of family trees, he knows all there is to know about scandals and smoldering mysteries that lie beneath New York society. His memory is prodigious.
— 22 minutes ago
Tammy
is 10% done
The guy who is the best in form makes an exclamation when Ellen (Helen of Troy) walks into May’s box. She wears an blue-velvet empress dress held by a brooch and a diamond band around her close-cropped curls. He lets out a loud exclamation about the cheek of the Mingott family. She seems like she has no idea anyone is watching and yet her slight smile makes one wonder. He hands the glass to the geneaologist.
— 28 minutes ago
Tammy
is 9% done
Now get this. He had a fancy for a charming married lady for two years. She distracted him and it came close to marring her life and confused his plans for a whole winter. Then he wants a virgin for his wife. He has not thought deeply about how he can pull off this miracle of fire and ice, but he is the most traveled and most well-read in his set. His friends each have a singular quality but that’s about it.
— 33 minutes ago
Tammy
is 9% done
The set of the opera is artificial. Is she hinting to us that Newland is setting up a false paradise? Is the daisy grafted into a rose a symbol of innocence being paired with sin (thorns)? Do the crochet hoops signify a game and people are going to be whacked and moved around like balls? The hoops are shaped like arches. This arch man sees himself as enlightening his bride with worldly wisdom.
— 1 hour, 2 min ago
Tammy
is 9% done
Mind blown. So there are many examples of people looking at each other and seeing. Even the daisy is a symbol of the eye and the singer is plucking away at them. There are ginormous pansies on the stage (faces looking out at faces). However, do they see themselves as they are? Newland Archer (so many thoughts come to mind about his name) sees May as a possession to acquire before sealing the deal. Is he Faust?
— 1 hour, 15 min ago
Tammy
is 9% done
Newland gives a “bless her heart” comment about May. Now wouldn’t it be funny if she is far more knowing than he is and he is the true simpleton. He has some sort of wishdream that she is a Pygmalian that he can transform into the cosmopolitan woman of his making. A blank slate. An oyster. What is intriguing is that we have no idea of what she thinks yet, except that she is enjoying the play and she said yes.
— 4 hours, 24 min ago
Tammy
is 8% done
Many symbols of innocence surround May: dropped eyes, lily of the valley in her lap, white gloves, a stage that looks like the Garden of Eden. Archer is vain about her purity. She is like one of the flowers. However, the roses have thorns. Is that a caution? Is he supposed to be her prince or is he a usurper like Faust? Yup, right there, it says it’s an enchanted garden. Are we to see Gretchan as May?
— 4 hours, 32 min ago
Tammy
is 8% done
I wonder if they are doubles for May and Newland. He looks from his box to Mrs. Mason Mingott who is morbidly obese and can’t get out anymore. On fashionable nights, it always has someone out of her generosity. In the box are her daughter-in-law, Lovell Mingott, her daughter, Mrs. Welland, and, behind them, May Welland. She is the picture of innocence like the daisy picker.
— 4 hours, 43 min ago
Tammy
is 8% done
He understood the social forms and he could be fashionably late. It wasn’t the cigar that made him dawdled. It was thinking about his betrothed, the picture of innocence. Conventions like the German text of a French opera, translated into Italian, for English-speaking audiences dominates his life. He does not mind following them. He sees the innocent pure maiden singing about the villian who is trying to look pure.
— 4 hours, 55 min ago
Tammy
is 8% done
The audience is New York’s most brilliant. They come in the most respectable carriages. The brown coupe (lower status) only was accepted for its speed. Newland Archer (what a name) arrives late, during the garden scene in which the singer pulls petals off a daisy while singing “He loves me, he loves me not!” What timing! He was late because he was enjoying a cigar. He enjoyed the little pleasures.
— 5 hours, 9 min ago

