The story is a good one, and the Granada production is excellent.
Interestingly enough, both tale and episode do not try to explain what will happen to Henry Wood next. Will he stay away from Nancy? Will she try to seek him out? Their positions in Edwardian society would make a marriage unlikely. But the question here is more universal.
They may still harbor romantic feelings for each other. But with the passage of time, is the past enough?
Stargate SG-1 has a great episode, "The Torment of Tantalus," where Catherine goes through the gate to a planet to track down her fiancee Dr. Ernest Littlefield who went through the gate 52 years earlier.
A later passing reference suggests that Catherine and Ernest got back together.And I kind of don't buy it.
In the nurture/nature debate, I tend to come down (partly) on the side of nature, as in genetics. But in the nature/agency debate, I come down on the side of choice.
A person's character can stay much the same. But the same person isn't un-impacted by experience. They make decisions that lead to other decisions that lead to other decisions. C.S. Lewis comments in one of his books that the choices look haphazard at the time but entirely organic and "meant" in retrospect.
As Joe in Joe versus the Volcano remarks, "It's a long crooked road that brought me here to you."
Is Catherine the same person she was in 1945? In essence, sure. But in lifestyle? Living arrangements? Wants? Needs?
For instance, the woman is a powerhouse and was when she was younger (excellently played in the episode by Nancy McClure). In 1945, marriage was more of a given. She's managed without marriage for years. And now she's going to change her mind?Maybe she just hauls Ernest around with her like an extra retainer.
As for Nancy and Henry Wood, she might leave her life and go with him. But the time period and their backgrounds could likely preclude them being able to leap the social stigmas.
And maybe the memory of romance in this case is enough.















