belief in love

Dana 2022-03-23 09:01:43

"The Count of Monte Cristo" is really a relief to watch. The heroine finally revealed that it was to protect the child she conceived in love with the hero that she succumbed to the enemy; and it was not a month, it was sixteen years, and she never gave up that love... She
will not lose the beauty in her heart, no. Will not believe in love. Why come?
We have listened to too many beautiful stories and watched too many happy endings, and we have been foolishly looking forward to, guessing, hoping that the other party may, maybe... maybe have difficulties, maybe hide some secrets, endure it, and finally shake the sky A big reversal, say everything, and reconcile with you like a broken mirror... all kinds of possibilities... But life is not a novel, not a movie, no one has set the structure, and there is no need to start a success and a wonderful ending.
It is precisely because people who attach importance to feelings are obsessed with this that they foolishly believe it again and again, get hurt again and again, and still insist on saying it or insisting on it - believe in love

View more about The Count of Monte Cristo reviews

Extended Reading

The Count of Monte Cristo quotes

  • Napoleon: Time you were on your way. Your captain has been dead for half an hour.

    Edmond: Are you sure?

    Napoleon: When you have walked as many battlefields as I, young Dantes, you can feel death.

  • J.F. Villefort, Chief Magistrate: Well, I must say, Dantes, you don't have the look of a traitor.

    Edmond Dantes: Traitor?

    J.F. Villefort, Chief Magistrate: Now, attend me well, Dantes, for your life may depend on it. Did you have any personal contact with Napoleon when you were on Elba?

    Edmond Dantes: Elba. Yes, I did. Well, we did. I was with the Count Mondego's son, Fernand, almost the entire time. Do you know Fernand?

    J.F. Villefort, Chief Magistrate: He's a recent acquaintance, yes.

    Edmond Dantes: Oh, there you are. He'll vouch for me.

    J.F. Villefort, Chief Magistrate: No doubt, but you said "almost the entire time."

    Edmond Dantes: Except for when Napoleon asked me to deliver a personal letter to a friend in Marseilles.

    J.F. Villefort, Chief Magistrate: Well, Dantes, it is for accepting that treasonous correspondence that you have been denounced by your own first mate, a monsieur Danglars.

    Edmond Dantes: What?