So I've been jossed
Feb. 28th, 2004 03:30 pmand over some pathetic small detail that nevertheless completely destroys my almost-finished fic. I spent some time thinking about possible re-writes this morning, but they would all involve me starting almost from scratch, beginning with my background research. Any half-hearted edit would lose the pacing and tension of the current version.
Besides, the point on which I've been jossed seems quite unbelievable to me. Why, during ten decades of powered flight, would Spike never have been on an aeroplane? I can understand Angel not having flown before, as he occasionally suffers from a mild form of technophobia and he was just a little preoccupied for most of the twentieth century, but Spike? He likes his modern conveniences and he's always out for a thrill. He has great physical courage, no known fear of heights (please don't tell me that's why he fell from the tower), nor any other reason why he wouldn't get on a plane.
Oh, I understand why an intercontinental flight might pose a vampire a bit of a problem, even to one willing to hide under blankets and snarl at anyone pulling up a blind, but can anyone not imagine 1930s Spike, with goggles on and a little leather Biggles hat, scamming his way into a night flight and a near-death experience or two? Like fast cars -- but in the air!
So I think Spike was lying. Of course he's been on a plane, just as he's been on a submarine and a zeppelin and a motorcycle. He was just saying that so be kind to Angel.
[And for my next rant: Spike and languages. An explanation as to why he can speak Fyarl but doesn't know Latin, German or Chinese, despite a nineteenth century education and a century of travel.]
Besides, the point on which I've been jossed seems quite unbelievable to me. Why, during ten decades of powered flight, would Spike never have been on an aeroplane? I can understand Angel not having flown before, as he occasionally suffers from a mild form of technophobia and he was just a little preoccupied for most of the twentieth century, but Spike? He likes his modern conveniences and he's always out for a thrill. He has great physical courage, no known fear of heights (please don't tell me that's why he fell from the tower), nor any other reason why he wouldn't get on a plane.
Oh, I understand why an intercontinental flight might pose a vampire a bit of a problem, even to one willing to hide under blankets and snarl at anyone pulling up a blind, but can anyone not imagine 1930s Spike, with goggles on and a little leather Biggles hat, scamming his way into a night flight and a near-death experience or two? Like fast cars -- but in the air!
So I think Spike was lying. Of course he's been on a plane, just as he's been on a submarine and a zeppelin and a motorcycle. He was just saying that so be kind to Angel.
[And for my next rant: Spike and languages. An explanation as to why he can speak Fyarl but doesn't know Latin, German or Chinese, despite a nineteenth century education and a century of travel.]
no subject
Date: 2004-02-29 11:19 am (UTC)Didn't Roger Wyndham-Price say they'd last met when Spike was attacking an orphanage in Vienna? I agree with Kita, though, that Spike would hardly need to be able to speak the language in order to eat the orphans. Incidentally, 19th century English speakers thought German was very beautiful, just not very manly (the language was ideal for talking about music, fairy tales and 'love in all its forms' according to Mark Twain, but useless for anything martial) so William probably would have found it delightful. The modern perception of German as an ugly language is a post-WWI development.
no subject
Date: 2004-03-01 05:09 am (UTC)I think I've been presuming that Spike has some capability with languages because of the fact that he'd picked up Fyarl, a language he clearly did not learn at school. I'm just having to revise my perception of him.
19th century English speakers thought German was very beautiful, just not very manly
Very interesting; I did not know that. It is remarkable how fluid these sorts of perceptions are.