romantic realism

Ferne 2022-03-23 09:03:19

I only went to bed at two o'clock yesterday, woke up early in the morning by my mother dragging the cabinet, got up and stared at the blank screen for a while, and then opened YOUKU to see the south and north.

The female protagonist is the plump type I like the most, the classic girl that the BBC has always loved. The tall guy can persuade the poker guy in it, but as long as he's a poker guy, he's quite objective.

Fans of P&P will rely on the routine of P&P, but this film about rural ideals and personal struggle, the contradiction between exploitation and anti-exploitation is obviously deeper than JA. However, the law of romance novels is that the more you want a deep love story, the less good it will be, and the more you want to please the show, the less you will be able to please. So, how poker and the heroine fell in love with me has never been understood. So the show didn't start getting better until the third episode.

anyway, romantic realism is more favored by material women than romantics. If you want zhuangbility, you must choose romantic realism. For example, holding a copy of Yishu, wearing khakis from an unknown French store, and falling in love with an engineering man. To be more romantic and realistic, please refer to "Wang Gui and Anna".

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Extended Reading
  • Deven 2022-03-28 09:01:12

    This is a country where the heroine has the strong and independent personality of Jane Eyre. Margaret is that kind of second eye beauty. But the most seductive and most moving was definitely Mr. Thornton, who felt like he was going to surpass Mr. Darcy's place in my mind! Indifferent on the outside, infatuation on the inside, infatuation, perseverance, and perseverance, marriage proposal and look back at me... It broke my heart.

  • Bell 2022-03-24 09:03:39

    The Victorian theme is the big braid drama in the UK, dirty, ugly and complacent

North & South quotes

  • John Thornton: [When Margaret is leaving Milton in a carriage] Look back at me.

  • John Thornton: Was... was it Miss Hale who told you to come to me? You might have said.

    Nicholas Higgins: And you've have been a little more civil?

    John Thornton: [Thornton glares at him and leaves]