I've always loved this story, and read the book and the movie over and over again. For the first time today, I felt that no one loved Scarlett, including Rhett Butler.
In fact, she has never changed. The wildness he pursues in her is to conquer and change her. So when he finally got her, his last conversation with her, he said, he was looking for "elegant" life.
She really doesn't deserve to be loved.
There is almost nothing good, the only advantage is the strong vitality, and it is externally placed on the Tara Manor. She used this vitality to kill a useless but highly respected gesture, and lead the others to live in vain—she could not have used it.
Giving but not interpreting is probably an instinct but also a contempt for the weak and the weak. Ashamed to seek reconciliation in a low voice, to do what you are determined to do, to take the lead in cold heartedness, and to prop up your self-esteem, you can abandon others who intend to abandon and destroy her.
It's so easy to do, it's ruthless, shameless, cruel and evil... Any word can come and step on it, and anyone who comes will refuse.
I believe that men love her, and I don't believe that any man can rely on her.
Essentially, Scarlett's game was originally a survival game, not a development. Heathley is the morphine to get through difficult times, and in the end she finds that the pain is nothing more than that; and Rhett, she may be true love, and will rely on the symbolized Tara again.
The books are the best, and Mitchell uses almost like a "narrative trick" that will make you want to be on Scarlett's side forever. Scarlett in the movie is much less cute. But if she is wrong, you can give her a good excuse for each mistake, and believe that when she suffers from those who are not even well-known and malicious, her intentions are not evil.
Tara is still an image, no matter war or peace, she still lives by vitality. So today is not terrible, as long as there is tomorrow.
Really inspirational.
ps, if anyone really loved her, it would be Melanie.
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