Hachiko's story is real, and I think most people can't be as persistent as Hachiko. And it is precisely because we can't do it that we are more moved.
I especially like some of the sentences in it. For example, "It's your dog, but you are it's all." It's just your dog, but you are its life. Professor Parker adopted Hachiko, and once, Akita dog Hachiko followed the owner's scent all the way to the train station where the owner must go to work. Parker had to send it home before going to work, but Hachiko did not. Since then, I have remembered the train station that my master must pass through on commute to and from work. I will send my master to work in the morning, and I will wait at the gate of the railway station at 5 o'clock in the afternoon to watch the master return. This became a promise that did not require an agreement, and the one person and one dog sent to us became the most beautiful scenery on this border station. After Parker died, Hachiko couldn't know the situation like a human being. In Hachiko's mind, the master just went to work as usual, but this time he went to work for a long, long time. Hachiko's waiting day after day moved us.
My favorite line in this film is "They taught me the meaning of loyalty that you should never forget anyone that you loved." The meaning of loyalty is that we should never forget everyone that you have loved.
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