I thought that the ending would be that lovers finally got married, but it turned out to be sad. Although the protagonist loves Charlotte very much, he and his brothers need money more for their careers, and the reconstruction of Shalitun needs money. Therefore, in the face of love and money, the protagonist decisively chooses money and exchanges himself for Shalitun’s Reconstruction funds. Sure enough, Money talks, money can buy everything, of course, including love, including marriage, including career, love for brothers, love for Shalitun. In the eyes of the male protagonist, the female protagonist is certainly important, but Shalitun is really more important.
Charlotte's three views are too right. When the male protagonist rides a horse and chases a carriage to bid farewell and tell her that the person she really loves is her, she hopes that since the other party has chosen someone else, she will fulfill her promise to be good to the other party, instead of eating a bowl and thinking about it. This girl is so sensible and so likable.
However, since the second season has been renewed, the first season certainly cannot and should not be HE. What's so interesting about the married chai, rice, oil and salt? Of course, it depends on all kinds of love but no love, a lot of hard work, and all the tribulations, so that the story is worth seeing. So, structurally speaking, the ending of the first season has paved the way for the follow-up of the story.
Looking forward to the second season.
By the way, the translation of "Shalitun" is so good and so grounded that I almost thought it was a love story in a northeastern country. Of course, this is also a rural love story, but it took place in the distant United Kingdom. Hundreds of years ago, the well-known "Jane Austen" told an unfinished story and rewritten it by a 21st century editor.
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