故事情节:ZZ:http://i.mtime.com/aiqing100/blog/1167078/ 斯嘉丽经历了三次失败的婚姻。她为了赌气嫁给了查尔斯,为了赚钱嫁给了弗兰克,她其实并不爱他们,为此还得罪了原本应该成为新娘的她的两个妹妹。她心里始终都爱着梅兰妮的丈夫阿什利。对于18岁的初恋,斯嘉丽显然是十分青涩的,她勇于对阿什利表白,并为此不惜在阿什利面前贬低梅兰妮。正如威特勒所说,阿什利其实是在心力不能忠于他的妻子,可是在行动上却又表现出很忠实于妻子。对这样一个两头不沾边的人来说,斯嘉丽的执著是徒劳的,她只有用“他爱的人是我”来安慰自己。直到梅兰妮去世她才明白自己最终在阿什利身上什么也没有得到。
威特勒船长英俊潇洒又玩世不恭,他的风流是最吸引女人的地方。当这样一个男人站在斯嘉丽面前的时候,显然不会马上吸引住她。事实上他们是慢慢的产生爱意的。战争爆发时威特勒帮助斯嘉丽回到泰拉(虽然半路他就去参军了:其实他知道她们已经安全了。他可以放心的离开了。),而在斯嘉丽穷困潦倒的时候他却不能给她资助:因为他被关在牢房里,没有自由,即使为斯嘉丽开出支票,她也拿不到钱,而会被北佬得到,他就得死去。仔细分析威特勒的举动,会让人觉得他对斯嘉丽的爱情似乎总是飘忽不定,有点欲擒故纵的意味,可是爱情里往往需要这样的计谋才能得到想要的心,尤其向斯嘉丽这种不知道自己究竟想要什么的人。
他们婚后的生活很不幸福。斯嘉丽还是忘不了阿什利,依旧期待自己可以取代梅兰妮在他心中的位置。威特勒对此不是视而不见的,他也想到离婚,但是为了他们的孩子,威特勒只好迁就着她。他是那么的爱他们的女儿,用妈咪的话说就是“从来没有见过这么爱孩子的男人,”所以当女儿骑马跌倒致死时,威特勒的世界瞬间哄塌,奠定他们夫妻情感的最后一块基石就此瓦解。祸不单行,梅兰妮由于过度劳累,在不久之后也去世了。威特勒说“世界上最善良的人走了。”可是在孩子的葬礼上,斯嘉丽竟然抱住阿什利表白,以为没有了梅兰妮,自己就真的可以投入阿什利的怀抱了。结果却是,她既没有得到阿什利的拥抱,也失去了她的爱人威特勒。离婚成为威特勒给斯嘉丽最后的礼物。甚至对斯嘉丽的哀求,他只留了一句:“说实话,那不管我的事。”威特勒的绝情给斯嘉丽致命的打击,她这才翻然醒悟,自己是爱威特勒的,只是以前她都没有察觉。美好的事物总是在失去之后才愈发显出它的珍贵。奢求得不到的,从而忽略原本更应该珍惜的,这是何等糊涂啊!
至少斯嘉丽还有拥有泰拉——那片生她养她的土地。回家成了她心中唯一的信念。多年前父亲语重心长的话语又浮现在儿畔,她终于明白什么才是最重要的。土地,跟爱情相比,只有它是永恒的。“明天毕竟是新的一天!”这句话激励着斯嘉丽重新振作起来,迎接新生。多少人也为这句话而热血沸腾。
Character development (
http://zhidao.baidu.com/question/136743096.html?fr=qrl&cid=96&index=5&fr2=query)
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 willingness to 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
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 willingness to 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
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