deird_lj: (Default)
deird_lj ([personal profile] deird_lj) wrote2009-11-19 09:25 pm
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Still reading...

Do you ever find, when reading something, that there are phrases which make perfect sense, really, but still sound completely strange in context?


For instance:
"The man's hand was arrested before it had grasped the telephone receiver. He drew it back..."

That sounds relatively normal.
But when it's:
"The policeman's hand was arrested..."

Suddenly it sounds very odd.



This is from a Georgette Heyer murder mystery I've been re-reading.

A murder mystery in which, as it happens, two people are killed by having their heads beaten in with a blunt object.
Which also makes a later metaphor sound strangely un-metaphorical. Look:

"He went into a small private office, and once more spread his notes on the case before him, and cudgelled his brain over them."

Of course, it's really just a metaphorical way of describing how frustrating he was finding the case - but, given the brain-cudgelling murders that keep happening, it's very noticeable...

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