Victorians! discussion
Archived Group Reads - 2017
>
No Thoroughfare: Acts Two & Three
date
newest »

Discussion Questions have been posted for both Acts 2&3.
However, feel free to comment on any aspect of the story so far.
However, feel free to comment on any aspect of the story so far.

So, Vendale found a receipt for wine that the company did not actually buy, but received anyway. Apparently, the correspondence needs to check the receipt to catch the culprit for embezzlement. Apperently, Obenrizer might have worked previously with the other company that Vendale corresponds with. Apparently, Obenrizer questions his lineage. He basically says he can’t be sure who he really is or where he comes from because the information of his identity is told to him during childhood. He can’t remember the much of his childhood and we all rely on what adults say we are at birth. Vendale’s conscious appears to be waited by Wilding final wish. However, when Vendale speculates the possibility of Obenrizer being the heir, he certainly brushes it off quickly. He was afraid that he won’t get to marry Marguerite because of it.
Vendale should have had a bunch of warning flags go off about Obenrizer, Obenrizer himself even told Vendale that he was dense to pick of things. Perhaps Vendale is more naïve rather than dense. I would have to say that Vendale is quite naïve. So, Marguerite ends up coming to his rescue on the mountain. Here is an example of the love she has for Vendale.
I loved that Madame Dor turned out to be an ally! But I have to wonder if my suspicions of her weren't founded in the way the two different authors decided to handle her character OR if she was intentionally made to seem more sinister in Act 1.


It's definitely a melodrama. I think many of us love the way both authors typically embroider layered characters and plot-line over many chapters. That is decidedly missing from this collaboration. It's a piece to be enjoyed for the collaborative effort it is, for the melorama, for the novelty. But there are clear reasons why it is far less well-known than other more exemplary works.
Act II
Scene 1
1) How has the phrase "No Thoroughfare" been highlighted in the search for the true Walter Wilding?
2) What are your thoughts on the new character who has the capacity for silence and for emptying bottles?
3) Can we make any connections between Obenrizer's praise of Vendale's gift and the praises he sings of his adopted country of England? How would the original audience have responded to this?
4) In what ways does Madame Dor encourage the lovers?
5) What are Obenrizer's arguments against the engagement between Vendale & Marguerite? Do you suspect any others?
Scene 2
6) How has embezzlement been disclosed?
7) What are the proofs required?
8) In what ways is Obenrizer implicated?
Act III
Scene 1
- What puts Obenrizer's maternity into question?
- What thoughts are repeated in his head as they walk through the streets of Strasbourg? How does this increase the tension of the story?
- What happens at the inn? How do these events influence the next scene?
Scene 2
- What happens on the mountain?
- Who saves the day?