It took two days to read it, very satisfied. The play not only restores the original novel well, but also enriches the details in many places. I first read the original novel in elementary school or junior high school. After reading it, I was very excited to recommend it to my classmates, calling this book "the originator of Xiaoyan". After so many years, when I watch the show, I am still touched by the process of attracting Elizabeth and Darcy to each other. It may be because I have given up the possibility of encountering love in reality, so when I see such a well-matched encounter in a fictional story, I can't help but sigh: Love is so beautiful. It is also because of the change in mentality and the sufficient details of this drama. During the process of watching the drama this time, I will always pay attention to the marriage choices of the characters. A few points that touched me: 1. Elizabeth's father had no son, and after his death, his property would be inherited by his nephew Collins. Therefore, almost everyone at the time tacitly agreed that Collins marrying one of Elizabeth's sisters was a happy ending, and it was Collins' good intentions, even if Collins was a man with poor looks and poor taste in intellectual goods, almost annoying. When Collins proposed marriage, Elizabeth, as smart as Elizabeth, panicked. 2. Elizabeth's best friend, Charlotte, married Collins right after Elizabeth rejected his marriage proposal. The reason is that she feels that he has a good career and that he can bring her the stable life she wants. Indeed, she later lived the life she wanted. But when Elizabeth visited her house later, she said calmly but with a little dark humor: "Collins spends a lot of time every day tending the small garden, and I hope he spends as much time on it as possible." 3. Elizabeth's youngest sister, Lydia, ran away with someone and was almost exhausted to the point of ruining the family's reputation. With the help of the male protagonist, she reluctantly married the unbearable man. This is the kind of person who, when returning home, proudly said to the other sisters with his head held high: I will walk ahead of you in the future, because I am married.
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