乱世佳人读后感英语【1】
Scarlett , a very personality figures ,the two mans she love ,neither does she know about.
To her, I was compelled to admire, admire her strong and brave, admire her to lay down in the environment, farm workers previously suffered education, admire her to disregard the community to create their own expression of the cause .
She is in the whole story, all a person full of fighting will full of vitality .
I appreciated most , it is this " Tomorrow is another day of hers." .
Promising forever, full of fighting will , will never give up, never desperate.
I think I’m moved by her.
So, whenever I meet difficulty, the mood is not good, I will tell oneself : " Tomorrow is another day." ’Gone with the Wind’ is absolutely a good book that is worth sampling repeatedly, the characters are graceful , the plot rises and falls, exciting boldly and unconstrainedly, though the subjective factor because of the author among them , the appraisal on U.S.A.’s Civil War is not objective and overall, but as to angle of literature, this one fine piece of writing generation definitely absolutely, worth visiting.
Title: The Little Prince
Author: Antoine de St-Exupery
Main Characters: The little prince, the pilot, the rose, the fox, the snake, etc.
Despite I’ve not in my childhood yet, I still prefer reading fairy-tale stories.
The tales, which accompany with me in my old days, often make me think of some precious experience and sensation which only belong to children.
This summer I’ve review this kind of tale, which was published in 1940.
It’s the world-famous fairy-tale by the French author, Antoine de St-Exupery, The Little Prince.
As many other fairy-tales, the outline of The Little Prince is not very complex.
“I”, the narrator of the story, is a pilot whose plane has something wrong and lands in the Sahara.
In this occasion, the pilot makes the acquaintance of the little prince, a little boy from another planet, the Asteroid B612.
The little prince has escaped from his tiny planet, because he has some quarrel with a rose, which grows on his planet.
In that case he left his own planet and took an exploration at some neighbor asteroids.
乱世佳人读后感英语【2】
Character development
Scarlett O'Hara is not beautiful in a conventional sense, as indicated by Margaret Mitchell's opening line, but a charming Southern belle who grows up on the Clayton County, Georgia, plantation Tara in the years before the American Civil War.
Scarlett is described as being sixteen years old at the outbreak of the Civil War in April 1861, which would put her approximate birth date in early 1845/late 1844 [1].
She is the oldest of three daughters.
Her two younger sisters are the lazy and whiny Susan Elinor ("Suellen") and the gentle and kind Caroline Irene ("Carreen").
Her mother also gave birth to three younger sons, who were all named Gerald Jr.
and died as infants.
Selfish, shrewd and vain, Scarlett inherits the strong will of her Irish father Gerald O'Hara, but also desires to please her well-bred, gentle French American mother Ellen Robillard, from a good and well respected Savannah, Georgia, family.
Scarlett believes she's in love with Ashley Wilkes, her aristocratic neighbor, but when his engagement to his cousin, the meek and mild-mannered Melanie Hamilton, is announced, she marries Melanie's brother, Charles Hamilton, out of spite.
Her new husband goes to train with Wade Hampton's Legion but dies within two months of measles, and never sees battle.
The war progresses and near the end of the war the Yankee army, led by the infamous General Sherman, makes its way to Georgia.
Scarlett's mother dies of typhoid fever, and her sisters are gravely ill.
The Yankee army burns the family's store of cotton, steals the food and livestock, but spares the family home.
Scarlett flees nearby Atlanta where she had been living with Melanie, her sister-in-law, and Melanie's aunt during the war ahead of the invading Yankee army, expecting to arrive at Tara to be cared for by her parents.
Instead she finds the home and lands damaged, and the family barely surviving.
In the face of hardship, the spoiled Scarlett uncharacteristically shoulders the troubles of her family and friends, and eventually the not-so-grieving widow marries her sister's beau, Frank Kennedy, in order to get funds to pay the taxes on and save her family's beloved home.
Her practical nature leads to a willingneto step on anyone who doesn't have her family's best interests at heart, including her own sister.
Over the course of the story Scarlett sheds all her illusions — except her "love" for Ashley.
The war's upheaval of Scarlett's life and the transforming choices she makes can be seen as a metaphor for the challenges life commonly presents to women, to face or deny; Scarlett's story particularly resonated with a 1936 readership which had just gone through a similar upheaval — the Great Depression.
One of the most richly developed female characters of the time on film and in literature, she repeatedly challenges the prescribed women's roles of her time.
As a result, she becomes very disliked by the people of Atlanta, Georgia.
Scarlett's ongoing internal conflict between her feelings for the Southern gentleman Ashley and her attraction to the sardonic, opportunistic Rhett Butler—who becomes her third husband—embodies the general position of The South in the Civil War era.