The philosophy of a spider

Reagan 2022-01-10 08:01:14

Yesterday, while the little demon was sleeping, I watched Charlotte's net which I had bought for a week. The feeling of reading this time is completely different from that of reading before. Reading books pays too much attention to the results, and just wonders if the piglet will become a Christmas feast in the end. So many details are ignored. Turning a book into a movie, not only has the perfect dubbing of the big mouth carrot shreds, but also the beautiful visual effects, which directly touch the softest corner of your heart. In a short film of less than two hours, many fragments are worth narrating.

Synopsis

of the story One night with heavy rain, thunder was rumbled, and Fein, who was lying on the bed, woke up from his dream and saw the faint light on the farm. Following the lights to the barn, Fein found a litter of piglets left by the sow on the farm, a total of 11 humming happy piglets! One of them was especially skinny, but Fein fell in love with this piglet at a glance. At Fein's begging, he originally planned to dispose of the little piglet's father who might not grow up, and agreed to let her take care of the piglet alone.
The piglet became Fein's favorite pet. She nursed him, bathed, told stories, pushed him for a walk, and gave him a lovely name-Wilbur. But Fein had to go to school after all, and her parents were uneasy about her too much petting Wilbur, so Fein was forced to put Wilbur back into the barn. Wilbur, a shy and innocent piglet, soon made friends with a big gray spider named Charlotte and joined the barn animal family.
In the barn, Wilbur heard that the "smoke-bearing hotel" on the nearby mountain was a slaughterhouse, and the piglets could not escape the bad luck of being a delicacy on the Christmas table. Knowing that the end was approaching, Wilbur, who was sad, became irritable. The kind-hearted Charlotte decided to save her new friend. He brewed an almost impossible plan and completely reversed Wilbur's fate, making Wilbur the most famous ace pig in the county, a great one. And the glorious pig!

The words

Charlotte on the web. The words on the spider web became the last words that changed the fate of Wilbur the pig. It is also the process of building the whole world of Piggy.
"so me pig"--"Terrific"--"Radiant"--"Humble"
These words are the process of a person gradually getting to know oneself, and now that he feels good, and then slowly finds the feeling that some parts of himself are very different, and after a while, his shining places will be recognized and accepted by others. After that, the lead was washed out and returned to simplicity. Continue your life peacefully and humbly.

When the piglet was really saved, Charlotte was very calm and told him
My webs were no miracle, Wilbur.
I was only describing what I saw.
The miracle is you.
I was thinking, when we were helping our friends, it was because We saw the places in them that others could not see or ignored, and magnified these beautiful things to the other side. Or through other means, let the other party realize their own power. There is really no need to feel that it is one's own credit. External factors can only work through internal factors. All we can do is to be your friend's left and right hand. or be his eyes or ears..

Charlotte's philosophical

promise
I'm making you a promise right now. I am not going to let them kill you.
You' A Spider Re. by you're Little. They're Huge!
How are you going to STOP Them?
the I have have NO IDEA. but IT's A promise,
and promises are something the I Never BREAK.
promises to be a kind of courage, but also believe that the promise A kind of sustenance. People with trust/pigs can go further. .

When Charlotte promised Wilbur the pig to help him, but there was no good idea for a while, she said something very philosophical:
Not yet, but it's like a web.
You make it, you wait , and something always comes.
This sentence is the most beautiful sentence I think. Many times we have done a lot of foreshadowing, many times we can't see the result and the end when we look up. We will be anxious and disappointed. But when we finally get a desired result, everything we have done will become a reason for tomorrow. .

Charlotte is grateful to Wilbur the pig for a simple reason:
Don't you know what you've already done?
You made me your friend,
and, in doing so, you made a spider beautiful to everyone in that barn.
A little bit of your true feelings may be the whole sky on the other side. Why not begrudge the

final monologue:
welcoming his second spring.
And that spring was followed by many, many more.
All because someone stopped to see the grace
and beauty and nobility of the humblest creature.
That is the miracle of friendship.
It is not often that someone comes along
who is a true friend and a good writer.
Charlotte was both.

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Extended Reading

Charlotte's Web quotes

  • [Templeton is being chased by two crows and finding shelter inside a tin can]

    Templeton: The rat... is not... uh, uh, enjoying this! All this for slop? The rat is desperate. The rat is trapped. The rat needs to stop calling himself "the rat".

  • Wilbur: [about Charlotte] She's dying! She can't go home with us. So I need you to help me take her egg sac with us.

    Templeton: Did you say "eggs"?

    Wilbur: It's an egg *sac*, and it's right up there, and it has her children in it. And I can't just leave it here. What if something happened to them? Now, I can't reach it, so I need you to get it for me. And I need you to do it *now*!

    Templeton: I don't think I like your tone.

    Wilbur: Can't you just once in your life think of someone other than yourself?

    Templeton: Once? Once?

    Wilbur: Come on.

    Templeton: No, *you* come on! Who got his hindquarters pecked to make you "radiant," huh? Templeton, that's who. And who interrupted the gorging of a lifetime so you could be "humble"? Why, I think it was... Templeton! Templeton, Templeton, Tem-ple-ton! And do I get thanked? No! Well, has it ever occurred to you that even a rat might like a little appreciation? A little, dare I say, *love*?

    Wilbur: Do it and you'll get dibs on my slop for the rest of my life.

    Templeton: Done.