Susan was born on lant street. She stole and sold tickets to people watching the hanging, but the gentleman said she is a thief with a golden heart in a particularly ironic way. Sometimes people who know you don't like you, or even don't. Susan's bravery lies in being able to maintain a character similar to generosity and kindness to others even when she was born in that place.
Of course, to lie to Maud, she must be inauthentic, but apart from money and love for aunt sucksby, of course she has her selfish side, she may also want to use 3,000 pounds to find a better birth for herself, Just like maud longs to be free for himself.
Maud calmly copied and wrote it on brair, but his heart was turbulent. How do you know that although Susan is happy on lant street all day long, she has no other thoughts in her heart?
Maybe it's human nature to want to become a better self, but the standards and processes are different.
Maud, on the surface is calm and calm, and the city is very deep, but when he becomes crazy, it is not lighter than the sucksby aunt. For example, Maud insists on escaping from the brair, and even destroys the little H book that her uncle regards as a treasure ( causing her uncle to have a stroke), that is, to go back to the mad house to rescue Susan. This man is bold, stubborn and paranoid, cool-headed, but has clear grievances. There are hardly any blurred boundaries. And this kind of temperament showed on her adult face from the very beginning. So much so that at the beginning, when Susan was around, I always wondered if the identities of the two people had been interchanged.
Because although Susan has never been well educated, she has a soft and even weak temperament. This temperament usually appears in some people with good family background, and it will be inherited.
Therefore, Susan and Maud are emotionally restrained, while Maud is extroverted. And if Maud was locked up in a lunatic asylum, it's very likely that Susan didn't have the courage to desperately try to save Maud. Because in fact Susan has richer interpersonal relationships than Maud, and Maud, at least when they met, the outsider of interpersonal relationships, the only person who can place their feelings on Susan. Maud is lonelier than Susan, a smart and lonely woman who has been in a boudoir for decades. When she meets another gentle, lively, understanding young woman, it is difficult not to have feelings for her. What's more, Susan should be as beautiful as her mother.
In the relationship between the two, Maud is the active party, while Susan is the passive party.
Both Susan and Maud have inherited some personalities and brains from their own mothers. But there is still no escape, some entanglements of fate. Although the two mothers wished their daughters well in their own way, fate still made fun of them. Susan returned to the manor because of poverty, and Maud returned to Lant Street because of this bureau, and accidentally killed the gentleman. At least in most of the films, the two did not get the happiness or good life that their mothers hoped for.
Sure enough, sometimes fate is also hereditary. Unless you can do timely and profound introspection, this kind of introspection is not something that makes you happy after thinking deeply, but seeps into your heart, repeatedly tortures yourself, admits your own stupidity, your own tragedy, and even hurts in your heart. A drop of blood is an unavoidable introspection. All in all, only self-examination with blood is enough to beg fate to negotiate.
Maybe this also comes down to the reason why Susan fought back and forth in the lunatic asylum, but did not seek revenge for Maud when he was discharged from the hospital, and why Maud did not feel confident that Susan was purely self-inflicted after seeing Susan. Aunt sucksby, however, used her life to complete her self-examination. This seemingly inadvertent, but actually difficult choice and practice is really noble. Of course, with their unique personality characteristics, they are not saints and cannot be perfect, but at least they did their best.
In this play, several protagonists perform their own performances for their own abacus, and the result is from the truth of the play to the fake of the play. Put yourself in.
For example, gentleman, in fact, I personally think that gentleman is likely to love Maud. From the way he looks at Maud, he tries his best to help Maud escape from the brair, and does not hesitate to cut himself on the first night of Maud's makeup. In particular, the psychological motive of deliberately making out with maud in front of Susan every time, and angering Susan, is very similar to showing off to a rival in love.
Gentleman is of course a playboy, a liar and gambler who relies on the love of women, but the more affectionate he is on the surface, the more ruthless and rational he is sometimes, he and Maud sympathize with each other. So it's no surprise that gentleman is drawn to Maud. He has seen too many romantic women, or women who think they are romantic, are crazy about love, and they are all tired of it. But this one is so different. He acted in front of too many people, but he was real in front of this woman, or the real thing that could be relaxed, not to mention that Maud was not young, beautiful, and well-bred.
There is too little room for gentleman to fall in love. Although he rescued Maud out of money, he has the motive of cheating, and he is manipulated by mother sucksby, but it is hard to say that there is no voluntary plot. When maud watched Susan come into the mad house and threw the wedding ring in a bad mood, gentleman picked it up like a seed of infatuation and put it on his little finger. Although the end ring has the meaning of singleness and loneliness, pick up the discarded wedding ring and put it on the little finger. This move has to be said to be extremely ambiguous. What's more, the gentleman was stabbed, and the first sentence said she hits me. A pun, one could say she stabbed me, or one could say she hurt me. The subtext is, how can she do this, I am. . . Before gentleman died, his eyes stared straight at Maud and he wanted to stop talking. However, the direct motive that stimulates gentleman to tell the truth, I doubt it is Charlie's words, I would never dream of thinking that you are a bad person, touching on his last bit of goodwill, yes he lingers in the flowers, thinking that a leaf will not touch his body, The result is loneliness. The people here are just a kind of people who are lonely, lack of love or think that they lack love and go more and more outrageous.
That is to deceive people, get too deep into the play and end up compiling yourself into it.
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