Contributor
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2019
- Messages
- 289
Thank you for the release!
It isn't that Harold is stupid, it's that he trusts his first wife too much. That, and, intentionally or not, she's kind of guilt-tripping him (all that "I want to redeem your dirty blood" stuff). Looking at these circumstances, his lack of knowledge about childrearing (quite common among men, historically), and his own situation (it was mentioned in the novel and will probably be mentioned once the Queen Dowager comes up), he has no reason to suspect — Margarita hasn't exactly shown this side of her to him, after all. He's also probably thinking that it'll be better for his son to have the support of his first wife's family (looking at history and such). To his credit, Berta's words convince him very quickly.
It isn't that Harold is stupid, it's that he trusts his first wife too much. That, and, intentionally or not, she's kind of guilt-tripping him (all that "I want to redeem your dirty blood" stuff). Looking at these circumstances, his lack of knowledge about childrearing (quite common among men, historically), and his own situation (it was mentioned in the novel and will probably be mentioned once the Queen Dowager comes up), he has no reason to suspect — Margarita hasn't exactly shown this side of her to him, after all. He's also probably thinking that it'll be better for his son to have the support of his first wife's family (looking at history and such). To his credit, Berta's words convince him very quickly.