And when it did, I nurtured it fiercely." It did not bloom until after he was gone. I did not even know I could have a garden. "My garden did not die with my husband because it had never been planted. "We all have gardens, Violet," Lady Danbury says. "Queen Charlotte" primarily romances the pre-"Bridgerton" London of the past, when Lady Danbury and Charlotte are young women and Violet is a girl, all of ages popularly associated with love stories and glamour.īut with "Gardens in Bloom," Shonda Rhimes defends a mature woman's right to satisfaction, too. Ruth Gemmell as Violet Bridgerton in "Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story" (Nick Wall/Netflix) But a broader interpretation of Agatha's wisdom applies to women in an era: Desire doesn't fade with age, and nourishing it is our birthright until we die. These ladies are talking about sex, in case the innuendo breezed by you. I almost asked a footman to lie on top of me today!" "It is blooming out of control," she continues. garden is in bloom," she confesses to Agatha, who is confused at first, before picking up Violet's code: the mannerly widow is feeling unexpectedly merry again. One moves a flustered Violet to launch into a passionate conversation about, ahem, "gardening." In the fifth episode of "Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story," Violet Bridgerton (Ruth Gemmell) and Lady Agatha Danbury (Adjoa Andoh) take in an art exhibit of the latest oil paintings, including a few lushly rendered nudes.
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