Current location - Recipe Complete Network - Catering industry - Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights, Gone with the Wind, Pride and Prejudice, roughly
Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights, Gone with the Wind, Pride and Prejudice, roughly
Jane Eyre: Jane Eyre was an orphan girl born into a poor clergyman's family. Her parents died within a month of each other due to typhoid fever. The young Jane was fostered in the house of her aunt and uncle. After her uncle, Mr. Reed, died in the Red House, Jane lived a life of discrimination and abuse for 10 years. At one point, Jane is imprisoned in the Red House for resisting a cousin's beating. The physical pain and mental humiliation and fear made her very ill.

The confrontation with her aunt, who saw her as a thorn in her side and isolated her from her own children, became more open and determined from then on. Later, Jane is sent to the Lowood Orphanage.

The orphanage is harsh and grueling, and the director is a cold-hearted hypocrite. Jane continues to be mentally and physically destroyed at the orphanage. As a result of the harsh living conditions, children at the orphanage often died of disease, and her best friend, Helen, died in a major typhus attack. This typhus also led to major improvements in the orphanage. Jane received six years of education under new circumstances and taught at this school for two years. Tired of life in the orphanage due to the departure of Miss Tambourine, Jane advertises for a career as a governess.

The housekeeper of Thornfield Hall hires her. The man of the manor, Rochester, is often traveling, and the only other person in the large mansion is a girl under the age of ten, Adela Vallon, whose protector Rochester is, and who is Jane's pupil.

One day at dusk, Jane goes for a walk and meets her master, who has just returned from abroad, and this is the first time they meet. Later, she discovers that her master is a melancholic, temperamental man who treats her with good and bad manners. The whole house is gloomy and empty, and sometimes a strange, creepy laugh can be heard.

One day, Jane is awakened in her sleep by this laughter and realizes that Rochester's room is on fire; Jane wakes him up and helps him put out the fire.

Rochester often held house parties after his return. At one of the feasts, he makes a pass at a beautiful young lady named Ingram. Jane is summoned into the parlor, but is treated so coldly by Blanche's mother and daughter that she endures the humiliation and leaves the parlor. By this time, she has fallen in love with Rochester. In fact, Rochester has also fallen in love with Jane, he just wanted to test Jane's love for himself. When he asks Jane to marry him, she says yes.

The night before the wedding, Jane sees in a haze a repulsive woman wearing her wedding dress in front of a mirror.

The next day, as the wedding is quietly taking place in the church, someone suddenly testifies that Mr. Rochester was married 15 years ago. His wife turned out to be the madwoman who had been locked in a third-floor chamber. The law gets in the way of their love, plunging both into deep misery. One miserable night, Jane leaves Rochester. On her way to find a new way out of life, Jane sleeps and begs along the way, enduring hardships before finally being taken in by the priest St. John at the Zedi Room and teaching at a small local school.

Soon, Jane learns that her uncle has died and left her an inheritance, and also discovers that St. John is her cousin, and Jane decides to divide the property equally. St. John is an ardent believer and intends to go to India as a missionary. He asks Jane to marry him and go with him to India, but only on the grounds that Jane Eyre is fit to be a missionary's wife. Jane refuses him and decides to take another look at Rochester.

She returns to Thornfield Hall, which is in ruins, where the madwoman has set fire to the house and fallen to her death, and Rochester has been crippled (losing an arm and an eye). Jane finds him and is so shaken up that she eventually marries him and gets her desired happily ever after.

Wuthering Heights: The article is told in the voice of Ellen Dean, a housekeeper: the owner of Wuthering Heights, the squire Mr. O'Shaughnessy, brings back an unidentified child named Heathcliff, and Mr. Shaughnessy's doting on Heathcliff arouses intense jealousy in his son, Hendre. After the death of his master, Hendre reduced Heathcliff to slavery in revenge and persecuted him in every way, but Catherine was close to him, a childhood friend, and they fell in love. Later, Catherine had no choice but to marry Edgar, a quiet young man from the Painted Fields. Heathcliff chose to run away in grief, and returned home three years later, rich, Catherine had married Edgar, but not happy. Heathcliff takes revenge by gambling away Hendry's fortune. Hendre himself died of drunkenness, and his son Harrington became a slave. He also persecutes Edgar's sister Isabella by deliberately marrying her. Catherine, who was in great internal agony, died in childbirth, but clung to Heathcliff on her deathbed. Ten years later, Heathcliff again contrived to make Edgar's daughter, Little Catherine, marry his dying son, Little Linton. Both Edgar and Linton Jr. died, and Heathcliff eventually took the Edgar family fortune for himself as well. Revenge is won, but he is unable to free himself from his love for the dead Catherine and eventually dies without eating or drinking bitter love. Young Catherine and Harrington inherited the Hill and Field estates, and the two finally fell in love and went to make their home at Painted Fields.

"Gone with the Wind" a charismatic, dumped the legendary woman Houska during the American Civil War, in the face of misfortune strong life. From an admired manor petite lady to a self-supporting businesswoman. Sexually, from mean to strong. From hatred of a love rival to a true friendship of mutual dependence. Emotionally, though obsessively in love, she is not loved by her lover and has to marry someone else, but her husband dies soon after. Until Baird married her. White Reed loves her y but is not valued by her, and by the time she realizes that White Reed is the one she loves, he leaves her again.

Pride and PrejudiceThe young squire Bennet has five young ladies in his family, and Mrs. Bennet spends her days trying to find husbands for her daughters. The new neighbor, Bingley, is a wealthy bachelor who immediately becomes Mrs. Bennet's target. At a ball, Bingley falls in love at first sight with Jane, the Bennetts' eldest daughter, and Mrs. Bennet is overjoyed. The ball is also attended by Bentley's best friend Darcy. He is a good-looking, very rich man who earns several times as much as Bentley, and many girls cast envious glances at him; but he is very proud of himself and considers them all unworthy of being his partner, including Jane's sister Elizabeth. (Darcy tells Bingley that she (Elizabeth) is "tolerably" good-looking, but not so good as to arouse his interest.) Elizabeth, with her high self-esteem, decides to ignore this arrogant fellow. However, Darcy soon takes a liking to her lively demeanor and asks her to dance with him at another ball. Elizabeth agrees to dance with Darcy and Darcy gradually changes his mind about Elizabeth. Bingley's sister Caroline (Caroline) is determined to marry Darcy, who is very indifferent to her. When she realizes that Darcy has a crush on Elizabeth, she is furious and is determined to prevent him from marrying her. Although Darcy admires Elizabeth, he cannot tolerate her mother's and her sisters' vulgar and impolite behavior, and fears that Jane is only interested in Bingley's income and fortune, not in Bingley's love, so he persuades Bingley to give up marrying Jane. At the urging of his sisters and his best friend Darcy, Bingley leaves for London without saying goodbye, but Jane is still y in love with him. Mr. Bennet had no son, according to the law at that time, only men could inherit property, and the Bennet daughters could only get five thousand pounds as dowry, so his family property will be inherited by a distant relative Collins (Collins). Collins, who was old-fashioned, mediocre, and a flatterer, became a vicar by virtue of his power. When he refuses Elizabeth's proposal of marriage, he marries Charlotte, a close friend of hers, which causes Elizabeth a great deal of trouble. The nearby town's militia regiment in the joint forces of a handsome young officer Wickham (Wickham), everyone praised him, Elizabeth also had a good feeling about him. One day, he tells Elizabeth that his father was the chief steward of Darcy's household, and that Darcy's father had suggested in his will that Darcy give him a fortune so that he could honorably become a clergyman (in fact, it was Wickham himself who had squandered that inheritance, and had attempted to seduce Darcy's sister, Georgiana, into eloping). Instead, the fortune was swallowed up by Darcy. Elizabeth hears this and becomes even more disgusted with Darcy. The Collinses invite Elizabeth to their home, where Elizabeth meets Darcy's aunt, Mrs. Catherine (Catherine) Bird, and is invited to be a guest at her Rosings Lodge. Soon after, she meets Darcy again, who has come there for Easter. Unable to contain his love for Elizabeth, Darcy asks her to marry him, but his attitude is still arrogant, and Elizabeth, who has been seriously prejudiced against him before, firmly rejects his proposal. This blow made Darcy realize for the first time the evil consequences of pride and self-conceit, and he left her bitterly, leaving a long letter with several explanations: he admitted that Bingley's unceremonious departure had been prompted by him because he resented the frivolity and meanness of Mrs. Bennet and the Misses Bennet (excluding Jane and Elizabeth), and was only interested in Bingley's five thousand pounds a year of income and real estate, and thought that Jane was not really Wickham is telling lies, but the truth is that Wickham himself has squandered the inheritance and attempted to seduce Darcy's sister, Georgiana, to elope. Elizabeth reads the letter and regrets it, feeling both guilty for wronging Darcy and ashamed of her mother and sister's behavior. The following summer, Elizabeth accompanied her aunt and parents to Darcy's estate, Pemberley, in the mouth of the steward learned that Darcy in the local people are very respected, and his sister Georgiana very loving. Elizabeth met Darcy in the woods, just arrived home, and found that his attitude has greatly changed, polite to her aunt and parents, and gradually her prejudice against him eliminated. In the meantime, Elizabeth receives a letter from home saying that her youngest sister, Lydia, has run away with Wickham, who is burdened with gambling debts. Elizabeth was so embarrassed by this family scandal that she thought Darcy would despise her even more. However, she was surprised to learn that Darcy, upon learning of the news, found a way to solve the problem for her - not only did he pay off Wickham's gambling debts, but he also gave him a large sum of money so that he could marry Lydia. Since then, Elizabeth's old prejudices against Darcy have been turned into sincere love. Bingley and Jane, after a lot of trouble, are back together, and the two lovers are immersed in joy. And Catherine Bird, who wants her daughter Annie to marry Darcy, arrives in a hurry. Mrs. Bird arrives in a hurry and asks Elizabeth to promise not to marry Darcy. Elizabeth flatly refused this unreasonable request. Word of this reached Darcy's ears. Knowing that Elizabeth had changed her mind about him (he later confessed to Elizabeth: You are too generous to trifle with me, you are too sincere and generous to make a fool out of me), he earnestly asked her to marry him again. And so it is that a couple whose marriage had been delayed by pride and prejudice are finally united in love.