- From: Benjamin Hawkes-Lewis <bhawkeslewis@googlemail.com>
- Date: Thu, 21 Dec 2006 22:04:37 +0000
Michel Fortin wrote: > The current spec only allows <dt> and <dd> inside <dialog>, so the > markup for something like this would require closing <dialog> each > time an action paragraph is added and reopening it afterward. > Wouldn't it make more sense to allow regular paragraphs in <dialog> > for situational information and action descriptions? Maybe. Or perhaps the narrator/stage descriptions should be part treated as another interlocutor. Or perhaps we need an element (<action />, <stage-direction />, <narration /> ?) for such descriptions; which should be capable of being both block and inline. You can have short stage descriptions actually intermixed with dialogue. Here's a good example from Oscar Wilde's Lady Windermere's Fan: > MRS. ERLYNNE. [With a note of irony in her voice.] To bid good-bye > to my dear daughter, of course. [LORD WINDERMERE bites his under lip > in anger. MRS. ERLYNNE looks at him, and her voice and manner become > serious. In her accents at she talks there is a note of deep tragedy. > For a moment she reveals herself.] Oh, don?t imagine I am going to > have a pathetic scene with her, weep on her neck and tell her who I > am, and all that kind of thing. I have no ambition to play the part > of a mother. Only once in my life like I known a mother?s feelings. > That was last night. They were terrible - they made me suffer - they > made me suffer too much. For twenty years, as you say, I have lived > childless, - I want to live childless still. [Hiding her feelings > with a trivial laugh.] Besides, my dear Windermere, how on earth > could I pose as a mother with a grown-up daughter? Margaret is > twenty-one, and I have never admitted that I am more than twenty-nine, > or thirty at the most. Twenty-nine when there are pink shades, thirty > when there are not. So you see what difficulties it would involve. > No, as far as I am concerned, let your wife cherish the memory of this > dead, stainless mother. Why should I interfere with her illusions? I > find it hard enough to keep my own. I lost one illusion last night. > I thought I had no heart. I find I have, and a heart doesn?t suit me, > Windermere. Somehow it doesn?t go with modern dress. It makes one > look old. [Takes up hand-mirror from table and looks into it.] And > it spoils one?s career at critical moments. http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/790 -- Benjamin Hawkes-Lewis
Received on Thursday, 21 December 2006 14:04:37 UTC