It is not an exaggeration to say that this is one of my favorite TV series so far. Except for a few of the actors who performed a little too much (after all, most actors are mainly acting in dramas), the whole TV series is still very interesting. The simple rural life at the bottom of the Victorian England, the countryside wind and the blue sky, there is no intrigue between people, and the coming era of industrialization is changing bit by bit. Lark Rise and The people of Candleford, there are no earth-shattering events that follow one after another, but some are just the simplest life, the simplest and most authentic communication between people. Watching this play touched me a bit. This is not the kind of touch that makes people burst into tears, but the kind of warmth and touch from the heart. This kind of life, although poor and backward, it preserves the most precious things in the world. Family affection, love and friendship; career, ideals and memories, these mankind's most eternal themes are fully displayed in this drama.
Intermittently watching one episode a day can be regarded as the end of the whole show, but I still feel that I have not enough. I went to Amazon to buy the original book in paperback and looked back. After reading a small part for a while, I found that the book is no less inferior to the TV series. Flora Thompspon’s biographical trilogy describes the English rural life of her time in a plain but elegant way. There is the post office where the story happened. The true meaning of life may not be as difficult to discover as people think, but it is in your hands, sitting quietly and waiting for the time to pass, and you will discover it.
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