You are like this, my heart hurts

Micheal 2022-12-24 01:16:31

——Jane, you wrote the ending so well, it will only make my heart hurt even more

. I have no resistance to Jane Austen, and her things are slowly chewing. Today's "Persuasion"

male lead is too handsome, female lead is too ordinary, but the acting is very good. . Basically, there is no bad acting in European and American movies. .

"what i desire above all in a wife is firmness of character. a woman who knows her own mind. i cannot abide timidity or feebleness of purpose."

This is just the wishful thinking of a wise and beautiful woman, what man would want one A firm character, who has his own thoughts, and who is not timid and weak should be his wife? From my own experience, my father married a little woman like my mother, and now he has to rely on me, and I make the decision. What he really loves is intelligent and capable, but he can't be a wife. . Regardless of whether it is due to external forces or internal forces, people who maintain the same high level of thinking and who appreciate each other cannot be together?

still he cannot be unfeelin, he cannto see me suffer without wishing to give relief, to spare the proof of his own good, warm and amiable heart, which i cannot contemplate without infinite pain and regret

. 's accompaniment, there is a kind of tear-jerking moving, even if the warm words she is saying are helpless and sad, just like Austin's fate. . All I can say is that the music is great. In fact, when there is music in the whole drama, people's lacrimal glands will be touched. .

About Austin, about my love for her. .
In fact, her novels are all about portraying herself, an independent, intelligent, older leftover woman who loves to write, think, and is loyal to love. . A woman doesn't change her feelings easily? Faced with such an argument, she just wants to prove everything with her own actions. She's someone who can love someone for a lifetime, but only because Austin can't get it herself? She gave up her little love with great love, and never extravagantly asked for the love of her lover. .
The story is a perfect ending. They got to know each other's hearts. After waiting for eight years, neither of them fell in love with anyone else. When Ann kissed him, Austin, were you crying? I was crying anyway. She once told her sister that the stories of her novels all have happy endings and that the protagonists of the stories will be together forever. Oh, she's just trying her best to fulfill her dreams with her novel. . So in fact, the more perfect the ending, the more sentimental, the more they are together, the more it illustrates Austin's grief.
It turns out that a good ending is not necessarily a happy ending, not necessarily a comedy, but a tragedy. Tragedy, on the other hand, seems more like a plausible ending that feels downright sad. And Austin's happy ending makes me feel endless sadness. . Presumably, that's why she appealed to me. .
When you try to understand a person and fall in love with a person, whether he is happy or sad, it will make you sad. Because love is inherently heavy, and this lightness of life can overwhelm you without any medium. But as long as it is someone worthy of your love, this weight is light, because love is the greatest faith, but it will inevitably hurt you. .

I watched it with English subtitles, and I didn't understand a lot of the plot, especially why it was called persuasion. .
In addition, the music inside is as good as the music in "Becoming Jane Austen" and "Pride and Prejudice", with classical piano style. . Just want to indulge in music, sadness, metaphor for some special attributes. .

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Extended Reading

Persuasion quotes

  • Lady Russell: Anne! Who is Admiral Croft? And why does he cause you to be out of countenance so?... Anne.

    Anne Elliot: Admiral Croft's wife is... is...

    Lady Russell: Mrs. Croft.

    Anne Elliot: Indeed. And Mrs. Croft is the sister of Captain... Frederick Wentworth.

    Lady Russell: Wentworth? I see. I see.

    Anne Elliot: To think that soon he may be walking through this house.

    Lady Russell: Anne, you know that your father thought it a most unsuitable match. He would never have countenanced an alliance he deemed so degrading.

    Anne Elliot: He was not alone, as I recall.

    Lady Russell: My dear, to become engaged at 19, in the middle of a war, to a young naval officer who had no fortune and no expectations. You would indeed have been throwing yourself away. And I should have been failing in my duty as your godmother if I did not counsel against it. You were young, and it was entirely prudent to break off the understanding.

  • Sir Walter Elliot: Come, come, Anne! We must not be late. You cannot have forgotten we have an invitation from Lady Dalrymple.

    Anne Elliot: I regret I am already engaged to spend the evening with an old school-friend.

    Elizabeth Elliot: Not that sickly old widow in Westgate-buildings?

    Anne Elliot: Mrs Smith. Yes.

    Sir Walter Elliot: Smith? Westgate building?

    Mrs. Clay: Excuse me.

    Sir Walter Elliot: And who, pray, is Mrs Smith? One of the five thousand Smiths that are everywhere to be met with? Upon my word, Miss Anne Elliot, you have the most extraordinary taste. To place such a person ahead of your own family connections among the nobility of England and Ireland. Mrs Smith!

    Anne Elliot: Perhaps she is not the only poor widow in Bath with little to live on and no surname of dignity. Good evening.