[Albert replaced her with some simple afterthoughts]
At first, it was aimed at women disguising as men, and I thought it was the kind of romantic Albert.
From the very beginning, she was moved by the expressionless face, who didn't talk to others, went back to the room to count tips, and glanced at her mother's photo before going to bed.
Later, the timid and even pleading she who lived with Paige when she was found made me a little bit contradictory and a little annoying.
Later, she "liked" the maid Helen and pursued Helen. I was very uncomfortable watching this episode. I was deceived by Helen and her boyfriend Joe to buy something, and Joe wanted to go to the United States by deceiving her money. After calculating how much money it will cost to continue dating, do you still tell yourself that maybe you can marry Helen in three months? Helen and her boyfriend think about cheating money and she thinks about when to tell Helen that she is a woman.
Except for the part that touched me at the beginning, it was more uncomfortable to watch here later. Maybe it was because the foreshadowing for her was in place, so I felt very distressed.
After that, it's more cloudy to see the sun. She continued to date Helen, took Helen to the store inspection of the "Knows' Tobacco Store" that she wanted to open in her dream, and told Helen about her future plans: "The window on the second floor has beautiful curtains" "This house will definitely be in the future. Appreciation, what the intermediary said" "Sell the house and move to somewhere by the sea" "I always wanted to live by the sea" "Just wanted to tell you"
What I feel here is that she is really planning for their future, but it always doesn't feel right. Maybe whether it's the person you're telling or the thing you're talking about, it sounds like you're telling a story, too beautiful and too pure.
Later, when the hotel closed due to a fever, she became ill and stayed in her room for several days. Fortunately, she carried it all by herself. At this time, many people in the town have died from the fever. When she found out, she hurried to Mr. Page's house again. Page's wife Catherine died of illness. However, she proposed to Paige, who was saddened by her lover's death, that she and Paige should raise money to open a shop together. Paige could continue to work as a painter, and she was in charge of the shop. She even offered to move here and live with Paige, just like Paige's wife, Catherine.
That way neither of us will be alone, she said.
At that moment, I suddenly understood that she was pursuing Helen to marry Helen. She planned to open a store with a lady boss. She even proposed to replace Catherine and live with Paige, just because she didn't want to be alone, because she was tired, yes Because she has her own way of living her life. It may also be that she has never had love and does not understand the feeling of truly falling in love with someone. Suddenly very sad.
Paige said, "Catherine is everything to him, and they love each other deeply." Then he took out two women's clothes that Catherine made by herself, put them on with her, and went out. After opening the door, she was embarrassed and ran happily by the sea. This is Albert's happiest laugh in the entire play.
The uncomfortable scene in the date scene with Helen up front contrasts with the natural (how to describe it? A bloom of a flower? Stretch.).
Thinking about it again, she confessed her life experience when she went to Page's house for the first time. The illegitimate daughter, who only has a photo of her mother, grew up in a monastery, and only left the monastery when her supporter died at the age of 14, so she has a good upbringing. Living in a slum, living a life without dignity, being violated. Had to pretend to be a man to make a living.
Afterwards, Paige told her that with the money she had earned over the years, she could go outside to find someone she wanted and live the life she wanted.
She still went back and pursued Helen.
In the end, when the pregnant Helen was quarreling with her boyfriend Joe, she appeared to seek to protect Helen, was pushed down by Joe and injured her head, returned to the room, and died peacefully.
Another touching point is that when the bearded doctor examined her, he found that she was a woman. The doctor sat beside the bed and looked at her, which suddenly made me feel like a father. Just like when Albert poured tea (wine) to a hangover doctor, he communicated with the doctor what he wanted to do, opened a store, a tobacco store. (Of course, I still don't understand why the doctor can't hide it, so that everyone in the town knows it)
Albert is a little boring and fantasy, but she is also a woman, she respects Helen, she finds the shop step by step and pays the deposit. (After being explicitly rejected, he secretly wiped his tears, drank, and was quite cute when he walked out of the kitchen with two bottles of wine in a serious manner.)
This is the point I am more unclear about, you don't think she will be provocative, but she is a woman, so it's okay.
You said she just wanted company, but after wearing the dress and going to the beach, she still went to Helen. There is just one thing, looking directly at it, it feels uncomfortable, but when you think about her being a woman, it seems like this is how it should be. Maybe this is the charm of her living like this.
There is still something that has not been expressed. This is my first article. I can't wait to write it. I feel that I can experience a lot of things, more about society and about survival. Great video.
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