Thanks anyway for your review

Hilbert 2022-04-21 09:02:42

I'm not a literary young woman who doesn't like obscure and gloomy films. I admit that I occasionally pretend to be B, and I know that even if I don't pretend,

my first love boy used cold and violent means to leave me alone and go away to the United States to live alone in that freedom In a happy country full of human rights under the care of the goddess, there is

no goodbye, so I calmly told myself that I don’t really want to hear it

. Everyone can live well, yes, everyone can. It’s

been a long time since I went to school. I’m in this rainy day that is about to get moldy. I saw the log marked in font size 3 in the friend update----to Little Sally


When no one called me Little Sally anymore, I couldn't see this irony. The



full text is as follows:
Becoming.Jane.2007.720P .BDRip.X264-TLF)


video format is 720P,

playing at 1280*1024 resolution,

even the wrinkles at the corners of the eyes of the elderly are clearly visible

. Watching such a movie is a kind of enjoyment

,

both

originally wanted to watch 1080P The

first is the hard disk protest (a two-hour film is 30 G)

followed by the CPU and graphics card (the image is displayed frame by frame) It

seems that you can see the lascivious smiles of the hardware manufacturers The

subtitles are in Chinese and English

See a

The . Here



are some great excerpts:



Love is



absolutely indispensable A strong reason for this is that I have a decent income of £2000 a year. Near the end of the film, he is also very interesting to describe himself with this sentence



: But I am vain enough to want to be loved for myself rather than my money.

(But see Come to me, this person is nothing but money)



Is there an alternative for a well-educated young woman of small fortune?

(



Is there an alternative for a well-educated young woman of small fortune? What my aunt humiliated Jane and forced her to marry a rich man said I had rather you were



a whore-mongering blackguard with a chance of reform than a love-sick whelp sunk in a bad marriage.

The pimp you save doesn't want you to be ruined by an unsuitable marriage)



This is what Tom's uncle, the hero of the film (Jane's lover), says to Tom when he refuses to accept their feelings and stops them from trying to get



married destroys spirit like poverty.

(Nothing like poverty can make the spirit succumb.)



Jane's father used this sentence to persuade Jane not to marry a rich man. This sentence we have been familiar with since childhood is criticized by the facts provided by the movie's ending when Tom gave up his future status for love. When Fame gave up her responsibility to support her parents, brothers and sisters who were struggling in poverty, Jane refused to elope with him. She did not bow to the poverty she might suffer but to the poverty that the family of a loved one might suffer.



She said:



It is a truth universally acknowledged that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife. However little known the feelings or views of such a man may be on his first entering a neighborhood this truth is so well fixed in the minds of the surrounding families that he is considered as the

rightful property of someone or other of their daughters. I don't know his temperament and opinions, but since such a truth has long been ingrained in people's minds, people always regard him as a piece of property that one of their daughters deserves)



Truth. Made from contradiction. But it must come with a smile

.




But if our love destroys your family it will destroy itself, in a long slow degradation of guilt and regret and blame

. Slowly dying)


In addition to despair, Jane also said this sentence The emotion





is absurd. When you consider the sex to whom , it is often directed indistinguishable from folly. It

's just stupid) The Jane in this



film, Miss Jane Austen, is the author of "Pride and Prejudice". After



watching this film, I thought for a long time,



thinking that two hundred years later, the people around us are repeating the words in the film over and over again when we are faced with emotional choices. What Jane and Tom's parents, relatives and friends said When we were children, they taught us how to be noble. When we grew up, we were taught how to surrender to power and wealth.



Thinking of the bbs pie version of the leftover boys and girls like the digital plaza buying and selling computers and bargaining for marriage and love Those men and women who are struggling in despair



think of how the contradiction between idealism and pragmatism is vividly reflected in everyone, think



that the sociality of human beings requires that life must be secular What is secular?



Weakness is because people are not gods. No matter how noble people are, they have to bow their heads to the world



, only to find that the eternal nature is human

nature. . . .



I conclude with one of the most philosophical lines in the film.



Irony is the bringing together of contradictory truths to make out of the contradiction a new truth with a laugh or a smile and I confess that a truth must come with one or the other or I account it as false and a

denial of the very nature of humanity itself. Acknowledging the fact must be accompanied by a companion, otherwise I will not admit it as a fact but a denial of the most fundamental human nature)



——I would like to use this article to commemorate the sincere relationship that has passed away and the current embarrassed emotional life






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Extended Reading

Becoming Jane quotes

  • Judge Langlois: Wild companions, gambling, running around St James's like a neck-or-nothing young blood of the fancy. What kind of lawyer will that make?

    Tom Lefroy: Typical.

  • Tom Lefroy: I have been told there is much to see upon a walk, but all I've detected so far is a general tendency to green above and brown below.

    Jane Austen: Yes, well, others have detected more. It is celebrated. There's even a book about Selborne Wood.

    Tom Lefroy: Oh. A novel, perhaps?

    Jane Austen: Novels? Being poor, insipid things, read by mere women, even, God forbid, written by mere women?.

    Tom Lefroy: I see, we're talking of your reading.

    Jane Austen: As if the writing of women did not display the greatest powers of mind, knowledge of human nature, the liveliest effusions of wit and humour and the best-chosen language imaginable?