That's Too funny. You must think most women in 18th century fiction had big jugs. I would think that being large chested might actually make it difficult to have a "fine carriage". Their balance would be thrown off, wouldn't it?
Yeah, I think this is right. Fire, red, and crimson are all brought up in the story. I think they point to the ideal passion and romance that she wished she had. We get these words most in the garden before either of her lovers arrive. The garden is her idealized world, and those words are often linked to passionate love. I don't think it's too far-fetched to make the connection.
I think she does idealize her former lover toward the end of the story, but I think she does so by mistake. It seems like she's making him the fixed symbol of her most abstract desire for romance.



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"It's so mysterious, the land of tears."

It makes for confusing discussion. Do you think we're done with the scene with the roses?
