The princess really wanted to marry the prince and completely forgot her family and friends. He was willing to leave his hometown alone and marry into the complicated palace. Don't think about it, I'm silly and sweet, is the palace also a gathering place for silly and sweet? And the prince too. Could it be that the emperor and the queen were afraid that the prince would seize power and did not teach him a little common sense of the emperor? The prince is really a perfect match for the princess, it's not that the whole family does not enter the house.
And the witch is indeed a good mother who loves her daughter, but the society is complicated. She only taught the princess to love, but did not teach the princess to think. Everything is too easy, but it will make the princess involuntarily become a selfish person. She has never learned how to take care of others, how to manage the people, she only knows how to get what she wants, but she will fall into the misunderstanding, thinking that what others do for her is for granted, and the sacrifices of others are not worth mentioning.
Although the ending of the story is abruptly written as a great consummation, the sacrificed person will not be resurrected again, and the contradiction is covered up by the false love of Dakong. Fortunately, this is a fairy tale, just for children. After all, adults think that it’s enough for children to know love, but when do you teach them responsibility and gratitude?
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