其实自己写的太丑,这是女儿改过的。
Essay #3 Prompt
Write about your favourite fictional character.
This time, please fill up at least 2 pages.
Scarlett O’Hara (当年俺读的当然是中文)
For me, Scarlett O’hara is not just a character in a novel, but also a vivid model of
how a vivacious young lady can endure against the prejudices of a conservative
southern American society and fight for the life she wants.
The first time I read Gone with the Wind, I was 16 and living in the newly post-
Cultural Revolution China. I was not a particularly worldly child, and had little
knowledge of western culture and its history. I also rarely thought about who I
wanted to be and how I might pursue the life I wished to live. I felt inspired when
I read about how passionately Scarlett fought for her independence – her
courage and persistence were truly admirable.
A few years later, I graduated from university and became a college lecturer. One
day, Feng (my roommate) asked me to tell her about the novel. I realised I had
read it so many times that I could recall numerous details - thus I began
recounting the tale with gusto. So animated was my retelling that Feng remarked
how she could picture Scarlett’s willful mannerisms and Rhett’s roguish
Decades later now, I can still remember many themes and snippets of interesting
dialogue from the book. Scarlett manipulating many young men at a party with
her coquettish behaviour while intending to win the affection of Ashley,
smashing a vase after Ashley rejected her proposal to elope with her, and her
skillful acting while visiting Rhett in prison – she was very unlike her fellow
southern belles. There were also more touching moments, such as when she
fretted endlessly over Melanie as she was in labour, or awkwardly attempted to
feed her baby girl from her second marriage. Greatly memorable were also the
scenes where she tried hopelessly to deceive Rhett, and her reaction towards
Rhett’s marriage proposal just moments after crying to him in guilt for how she
Gone with the Wind does not have a happy ending. In fact, it was rather tragic in
some ways – her daughter with Rhett died in an accident, and Rhett left her after
suffering much heartbreak. But I never worried about how Scarlett’s future
might pan out. Instead, I always remember how Rhett congratulated her at
having gained the whole world at yet lost her own soul at the young age of 28. In
the last line of the book, Scarlett says to herself in optimism - “After all, tomorrow is another day.”.