Gone with the wind_ extracts

Hà Chi
(Libra)

Điều hành viên
For a time of love... gone with the wind...

"Oh, Ashley! Ashley!" she thought, and her heart beat faster.

Some of the cold sense of bewilderment and disaster that had weighted er down since the Tarleton boys told her their gossip was pushed into the background of her mind, and in its place crept the fever that had obssessed her for two years.

It seemed strange now that when she was growing up Ashley had never seemed so very attractive to her. In childhood days, she had seen him come and go and never given him a thought. But since that day two years ago when Ashley, newly home from his three years' Grand Tour in Europe, had called to pay his respects, she had loved him. It was as simple as that.

She had been on the front porch and he had ridden up the long avenue, dressed in gray broadcloth with a wide black cravat setting off his frilled shirt to perfection. Even now, she could recall each detail of his dress, how brightly his boots shone, the head of a Medusa in cameo on his cravat pin, the wide Panama hat that was instantly in his hand when he saw her. He had alighted and tossed his bridle reins to a pickaninny and stood looking up at her, his drowsy gray eyes wide with a smile and the sun so bright on his blond hair that it seemed like a cap of shining silver. And he said, "So you've grown up, Scarlett." And, coming lightly up the steps, he had kissed her hand. And his voice! She would never forget the leap of her heart as she heard it, as if for the first time, drawling, resonant, musical.

She had wanted him, in that first instant, wanted him as simply and unreasoningly as she wanted food to eat, horses to ride and a soft bed on which to lay herself.

For two years he had squired her about the County, to balls, fish fries, picnics and court days, never so often as the Tarleton twins or Cade Calvert, never so importunate as the younger Fontaine boys, but, still, never the week went by that Ashley did not come calling at Tara.

True, he never made love to her, nor did the clear gray eyes ever glow with that hot light Scarlett knew so well in other men. And yet--and yet--she knew he loved her. She could not be mistaken about it. Instinct stronger than reason and knowledge born of experience told her that he loved her. Too often she had surprised him when his eyes were neither drowsy nor remote, when he looked at her with a yearning and a sadness which puzzled her. She KNEW he loved her. Why did he not tell her so? That she could not understand. But there were so many things about him that she did not understand.

He was courteous always, but aloof, remote. No one could ever tell what he was thinking about, Scarlett least of all. In a neighborhood where everyone said exactly what he thought as soon as he thought it, Ashley's quality of reserve was exasperating. He was as proficient as any of the other young men in the usual County diversions, hunting, gambling, dancing and politics, and was the best rider of them all; but he differed from all the rest in that these pleasant activities were not the end and aim of life to him. And he stood alone in his interest in books and music and his fondness for writing poetry.

Oh, why was he so handsomely blond, so courteously aloof, so maddeningly boring with his talk about Europe and books and music and poetry and things that interested her not at all--and yet so desirable? Night after night, when Scarlett went to bed after sitting on the front porch in the semi-darkness with him, she tossed restlessly for hours and comforted herself only with the thought that the very next time he saw her he certainly would propose. But the next time came and went, and the result was nothing--nothing except that the fever possessing her rose higher and hotter.

She loved him and she wanted him and she did not understand him. She was as forthright and simple as the winds that blew over Tara and the yellow river that wound about it, and to the end of her days she would never be able to understand a complexity. And now, for the first time in her life, she was facing a complex nature.

For Ashley was born of a line of men who used their leisure for thinking, not doing, for spinning brightly colored dreams that had in them no touch of reality. He moved in an inner world that was more beautiful than Georgia and came back to reality with reluctance. He looked on people, and he neither liked nor disliked them. He looked on life and was neither heartened nor saddened. He accepted the universe and his place in it for what they were and, shrugging, turned to his music and books and his better world.

Why he should have captivated Scarlett when his mind was a stranger to hers she did not know. The very mystery of him excited her curiosity like a door that had neither lock nor key. The things about him which she could not understand only made her love him more, and his odd, restrained courtship only served to increase her determination to have him for her own. That he would propose some day she had never doubted, for she was too young and too spoiled ever to have known defeat. And now, like a thunderclap, had come this horrible news. Ashley to marry Melanie! It couldn't be true!
 
Chỉnh sửa lần cuối:
The library was in semidarkness, for the blinds had been drawn against the sun. The dim room with towering walls completely filled with dark books depressed her. It was not the place which she would have chosen for a tryst such as she hoped this one would be. Large numbers of books always depressed her, as did people who liked to read large numbers of books. That is--all people except Ashley. The heavy furniture rose up at her in the half- light, high-backed chairs with deep seats and wide arms, made for the tall Wilkes men, squatty soft chairs of velvet with velvet hassocks before them for the girls. Far across the long room before the hearth, the seven-foot sofa, Ashley's favorite seat, reared its high back, like some huge sleeping animal.

She closed the door except for a crack and tried to make her heart beat more slowly. She tried to remember just exactly what she had planned last night to say to Ashley, but she couldn't recall anything. Had she thought up something and forgotten it--or had she only planned that Ashley should say something to her? She couldn't remember, and a sudden cold fright fell upon her. If her heart would only stop pounding in her ears, perhaps she could think of what to say. But the quick thudding only increased as she heard him call a final farewell and walk into the front hall.

All she could think of was that she loved him--everything about him, from the proud lift of his gold head to his slender dark boots, loved his laughter even when it mystified her, loved his bewildering silences. Oh, if only he would walk in on her now and take her in his arms, so she would be spared the need of saying anything. He must love her--"Perhaps if I prayed--" She squeezed her eyes tightly and began gabbling to herself "Hail Mary, full of grace--"

"Why, Scarlett!" said Ashley's voice, breaking in through the roaring in her ears and throwing her into utter confusion. He stood in the hall peering at her through the partly opened door, a quizzical smile on his face.

"Who are you hiding from--Charles or the Tarletons?"

She gulped. So he had noticed how the men had swarmed about her! How unutterably dear he was standing there with his eyes twinkling, all unaware of her excitement. She could not speak, but she put out a hand and drew him into the room. He entered, puzzled but interested. There was a tenseness about her, a glow in her eyes that he had never seen before, and even in the dim light he could see the rosy flush on her cheeks. Automatically he closed the door behind him and took her hand.

"What is it?" he said, almost in a whisper.

At the touch of his hand, she began to tremble. It was going to happen now, just as she had dreamed it. A thousand incoherent thoughts shot through her mind, and she could not catch a single one to mold into a word. She could only shake and look up into his face. Why didn't he speak?

"What is it?" he repeated. "A secret to tell me?"

Suddenly she found her tongue and just as suddenly all the years of Ellen's teachings fell away, and the forthright Irish blood of Gerald spoke from his daughter's lips.

"Yes--a secret. I love you."

For an instance there was a silence so acute it seemed that neither of them even breathed. Then the trembling fell away from her, as happiness and pride surged through her. Why hadn't she done this before? How much simpler than all the ladylike maneuverings she had been taught. And then her eyes sought his.

There was a look of consternation in them, of incredulity and something more--what was it? Yes, Gerald had looked that way the day his pet hunter had broken his leg and he had had to shoot him. Why did she have to think of that now? Such a silly thought. And why did Ashley look so oddly and say nothing? Then something like a well-trained mask came down over his face and he smiled gallantly.

"Isn't it enough that you've collected every other man's heart here today?" he said, with the old, teasing, caressing note in his voice. "Do you want to make it unanimous? Well, you've always had my heart, you know. You cut your teeth on it."

Something was wrong--all wrong! This was not the way she had planned it. Through the mad tearing of ideas round and round in her brain, one was beginning to take form. Somehow--for some reason--Ashley was acting as if he thought she was just flirting with him. But he knew differently. She knew he did.

"Ashley--Ashley--tell me--you must--oh, don't tease me now! Have
I your heart? Oh, my dear, I lo--"

His hand went across her lips, swiftly. The mask was gone.

"You must not say these things, Scarlett! You mustn't. You don't mean them. You'll hate yourself for saying them, and you'll hate me for hearing them!"

She jerked her head away. A hot swift current was running through her.

"I couldn't ever hate you. I tell you I love you and I know you must care about me because--" She stopped. Never before had she seen so much misery in anyone's face. "Ashley, do you care--you do, don't you?"

"Yes," he said dully. "I care."

If he had said he loathed her, she could not have been more frightened. She plucked at his sleeve, speechless.

"Scarlett," he said, "can't we go away and forget that we have ever said these things?"

"No," she whispered. "I can't. What do you mean? Don't you want to--to marry me?"

He replied, "I'm going to marry Melanie."

Somehow she found that she was sitting on the low velvet chair and Ashley, on the hassock at her feet, was holding both her hands in his, in a hard grip. He was saying things--things that made no sense. Her mind was quite blank, quite empty of all the thoughts that had surged through it only a moment before, and his words made no more impression than rain on glass. They fell on unhearing ears, words that were swift and tender and full of pity, like a father speaking to a hurt child.

The sound of Melanie's name caught in her consciousness and she looked into his crystal-gray eyes. She saw in them the old remoteness that had always baffled her--and a look of self-hatred.

"Father is to announce the engagement tonight. We are to be married soon. I should have told you, but I thought you knew. I thought everyone knew--had known for years. I never dreamed that you-- You've so many beaux. I thought Stuart--"

Life and feeling and comprehension were beginning to flow back into her.

"But you just said you cared for me."

His warm hands hurt hers.

"My dear, must you make me say things that will hurt you?"

Her silence pressed him on.

"How can I make you see these things, my dear. You who are so young and unthinking that you do not know what marriage means."

"I know I love you."

"Love isn't enough to make a successful marriage when two people are as different as we are. You would want all of a man, Scarlett, his body, his heart, his soul, his thoughts. And if you did not have them, you would be miserable. And I couldn't give you all of me. I couldn't give all of me to anyone. And I would not want all of your mind and your soul. And you would be hurt, and then you would come to hate me--how bitterly! You would hate the books I read and the music I loved, because they took me away from you even for a moment. And I--perhaps I--"

"Do you love her?"

"She is like me, part of my blood, and we understand each other. Scarlett! Scarlett! Can't I make you see that a marriage can't go on in any sort of peace unless the two people are alike?"

Some one else had said that: "Like must marry like or there'll be no happiness." Who was it? It seemed a million years since she had heard that, but it still did not make sense.

"But you said you cared."

"I shouldn't have said it."

Somewhere in her brain, a slow fire rose and rage began to blot out everything else.

"Well, having been cad enough to say it--"

His face went white.

"I was a cad to say it, as I'm going to marry Melanie. I did you
a wrong and Melanie a greater one. I should not have said it, for I knew you wouldn't understand. How could I help caring for you-- you who have all the passion for life that I have not? You who can love and hate with a violence impossible to me? Why you are as elemental as fire and wind and wild things and I--"

She thought of Melanie and saw suddenly her quiet brown eyes with their far-off look, her placid little hands in their black lace mitts, her gentle silences. And then her rage broke, the same rage that drove Gerald to murder and other Irish ancestors to misdeeds that cost them their necks. There was nothing in her now of the well-bred Robillards who could bear with white silence anything the world might cast.

"Why don't you say it, you coward! You're afraid to marry me! You'd rather live with that stupid little fool who can't open her mouth except to say 'Yes' or 'No' and raise a passel of mealy- mouthed brats just like her! Why--"

"You must not say these things about Melanie!"

"'I mustn't' be damned to you! Who are you to tell me I mustn't? You coward, you cad, you-- You made me believe you were going to marry me--"

"Be fair," his voice pleaded. "Did I ever--"

She did not want to be fair, although she knew what he said was true. He had never once crossed the borders of friendliness with her and, when she thought of this fresh anger rose, the anger of hurt pride and feminine vanity. She had run after him and he would have none of her. He preferred a whey-faced little fool like Melanie to her. Oh, far better that she had followed Ellen and Mammy's precepts and never, never revealed that she even liked him--better anything than to be faced with this scorching shame!

She sprang to her feet, her hands clenched and he rose towering over her, his face full of the mute misery of one forced to face realities when realities are agonies.

"I shall hate you till I die, you cad--you lowdown--lowdown--"
What was the word she wanted? She could not think of any word bad enough.

"Scarlett--please--"

He put out his hand toward her and, as he did, she slapped him across the face with all the strength she had. The noise cracked like a whip in the still room and suddenly her rage was gone, and there was desolation in her heart.

The red mark of her hand showed plainly on his white tired face. He said nothing but lifted her limp hand to his lips and kissed it. Then he was gone before she could speak again, closing the door softly behind him.
 
She sat down again very suddenly, the reaction from her rage making her knees feel weak. He was gone and the memory of his stricken face would haunt her till she died.

She heard the soft muffled sound of his footsteps dying away down the long hall, and the complete enormity of her actions came over her. She had lost him forever. Now he would hate her and every time he looked at her he would remember how she threw herself at him when he had given her no encouragement at all.

"I'm as bad as Honey Wilkes," she thought suddenly, and remembered how everyone, and she more than anyone else, had laughed contemptuously at Honey's forward conduct. She saw Honey's awkward wigglings and heard her silly titters as she hung onto boys' arms, and the thought stung her to new rage, rage at herself, at Ashley, at the world. Because she hated herself, she hated them all with the fury of the thwarted and humiliated love of sixteen. Only a little true tenderness had been mixed into her love. Mostly it had been compounded out of vanity and complacent confidence in her own charms. Now she had lost and, greater than her sense of loss, was the fear that she had made a public spectacle of herself. Had she been as obvious as Honey? Was everyone laughing at her? She began to shake at the thought.

Her hand dropped to a little table beside her, fingering a tiny china rose-bowl on which two china cherubs smirked. The room was so still she almost screamed to break the silence. She must do something or go mad. She picked up the bowl and hurled it viciously across the room toward the fireplace. It barely cleared the tall back of the sofa and splintered with a little crash against the marble mantelpiece.

"This," said a voice from the depths of the sofa, "is too much."

Nothing had ever startled or frightened her so much, and her mouth went too dry for her to utter a sound. She caught hold of the back of the chair, her knees going weak under her, as Rhett Butler rose from the sofa where he had been lying and made her a bow of exaggerated politeness.

"It is bad enough to have an afternoon nap disturbed by such passage as I've been forced to hear, but why should my life be endangered?"

He was real. He wasn't a ghost. But, saints preserve us, he hadheard everything! She rallied her forces into a semblance of dignity.

"Sir, you should have made known your presence."

"Indeed?" His white teeth gleamed and his bold dark eyes laughed at her. "But you were the intruder. I was forced to wait for Mr. Kennedy, and feeling that I was perhaps persona non grata in the back yard, I was thoughtful enough to remove my unwelcome presence here where I thought I would be undisturbed. But, alas!" he shrugged and laughed softly.

Her temper was beginning to rise again at the thought that this rude and impertinent man had heard everything--heard things she now wished she had died before she ever uttered.

"Eavesdroppers--" she began furiously.

"Eavesdroppers often hear highly entertaining and instructive things," he grinned. "From a long experience in eavesdropping, I--"

"Sir," she said, "you are no gentleman!"

"An apt observation," he answered airily. "And, you, Miss, are no lady." He seemed to find her very amusing, for he laughed softly again. "No one can remain a lady after saying and doing what I have just overheard. However, ladies have seldom held any charms for me. I know what they are thinking, but they never have the courage or lack of breeding to say what they think. And that, in time, becomes a bore. But you, my dear Miss O'Hara, are a girl of rare spirit, very admirable spirit, and I take off my hat to you. I fail to understand what charms the elegant Mr. Wilkes can hold for a girl of your tempestuous nature. He should thank God on bended knee for a girl with your--how did he put it?--'passion for living,' but being a poor-spirited wretch--"

"You aren't fit to wipe his boots!" she shouted in rage.

"And you were going to hate him all your life!" He sank down on the sofa and she heard him laughing.

If she could have killed him, she would have done it. Instead, she walked out of the room with such dignity as she could summon and banged the heavy door behind her.
 
I've once had a chance to read this story, but in Vietnamese.
Anyone has read both in English and Vietnamese, please tell me is the difference. Okie? Thanks a lot.
 
Nguyen Van Trang đã viết:
I've once had a chance to read this story, but in Vietnamese.
Anyone has read both in English and Vietnamese, please tell me is the difference. Okie? Thanks a lot.

One is in Vietnamese, and the other one is in English, ofcourse ;)

You read this story in both Vietnamese, and now you can read the same one in English. ?It'd be great if you tell us what you think? ;)
 
i've read the story in VNm about 10 times. It's the most interesting one i've ever read.
After reading the E version (HA, u gave it to me;)), i think the VNm one is better but i don't know why. just feel so.
 
Ôi, thay vì paste ra đây thì ấy cứ cho cai link co phải hay không?
Tớ tìm mãi bản tiếng Anh trên mạng mà không ra, đành đi mua, may mà không đắt lắm. Điên đến độ mua cả quyến GWTW tiếng Hà Lan mà tiếng HL của tớ chưa đầy cái lá mít..
Bản dịch VN thì hay quá rồi, Dương Tường dịch mà lị. Mấy quyển CTC gió ở nhà cũ lắm rồi, giấy đen, mấy trang sách chắc cũng sắp Gone w' the wind rồi mà đọc vẫn thấy hay..(Trong khi cái phần 2, gượng ép không chịu nổi, đọc bực cả mình )
Buồn cười, có một lúc nào đấy hình như mình cũng đặt cho một người là Ashley rồi cứ thế mà mơ mộng :) (ngượng nhỉ??) Ai thích Rhett cứ việc. Tớ vẫn thích Ashley. Có ai nhớ bức thư Ashley viết từ mặt trận gửi Mel không?
 
i've read the story in VNm about 10 times. It's the most interesting one i've ever read.
After reading the E version (HA, u gave it to me), i think the VNm one is better but i don't know why. just feel so.

I don't think that I've read Gone with the wind in its Vietnamese version as much as 10 times :D but it is definitely unforgettable and very attractive novel. I feel like I could understand why Ngan prefers the Vietnamese one :) because that was what I felt when I read the English version the first time too. Perhaps naturally, because we feel closer to our mother-language and also the first impression... the purest feeling we had... was brought to us by the VNm one. Thus, when I read this novel in English, I found myself always recalling how it was translated in Vietnamese :D However, the more you read the English version, backwards and forwards, the more you feel familiar with the language, and you'll fall in love with it ;) English has its own attraction too :D

Ôi, thay vì paste ra đây thì ấy cứ cho cai link co phải hay không?
Tớ tìm mãi bản tiếng Anh trên mạng mà không ra, đành đi mua, may mà không đắt lắm. Điên đến độ mua cả quyến GWTW tiếng Hà Lan mà tiếng HL của tớ chưa đầy cái lá mít..
Bản dịch VN thì hay quá rồi, Dương Tường dịch mà lị. Mấy quyển CTC gió ở nhà cũ lắm rồi, giấy đen, mấy trang sách chắc cũng sắp Gone w' the wind rồi mà đọc vẫn thấy hay..(Trong khi cái phần 2, gượng ép không chịu nổi, đọc bực cả mình )
Buồn cười, có một lúc nào đấy hình như mình cũng đặt cho một người là Ashley rồi cứ thế mà mơ mộng (ngượng nhỉ??) Ai thích Rhett cứ việc. Tớ vẫn thích Ashley. Có ai nhớ bức thư Ashley viết từ mặt trận gửi Mel không

Giang, ấy có thể tìm thấy link đến truyện này ở bên topic "chuyên tiếng Anh" cũng trong CLB Tiếng Anh này. Tớ chỉ paste lên đây những đoạn nào thấy thích thích... for sharing í mà ;)
Tớ thích cả Rhett và Ashley, mỗi người là một kiểu khác nhau và đều rất... hấp dẫn :D Nhiều người bảo là Ashley là con trai mà yếu đuối, bất tài, chả làm gì được ngoại trừ "núp váy" Meloni và Scarlett (hehe hình như trong truyện Ashley cũng tự mình nghĩ vậy thì phải và phần 2 viết thì còn thấy hình ảnh Ashley dở hơi hơn nữa :D) Nhưng chả hiểu sao tớ chẳng cảm thấy thế :oops: Đôi khi nhìn vào Ashley lại thấy hình ảnh của "ông đồ" của Vũ Đình Liên vậy... những con người lạc thời... Thích nhất đoạn Scarlett nói chuyện với Ashley sau chiến tranh ở bên ngoài ấp Tara.... mặc dù nó có vẻ buồn ghê gớm... :love1:
 
From the day when Ellen first came to Tara, the place had been transformed. If she was only fifteen years old, she was nevertheless ready for the responsibilities of the mistress of a plantation. Before marriage, young girls must be, above all other things, sweet, gentle, beautiful and ornamental, but, after marriage, they were expected to manage households that numbered a hundred people or more, white and black, and they were trained with that in view.

Ellen had been given this preparation for marriage which any well-brought-up young lady received, and she also had Mammy, who could galvanize the most shiftless negro into energy. She quickly brought order, dignity and grace into Gerald's household, and she gave Tara a beauty it had never had before.

The house had been built according to no architectural plan whatever, with extra rooms added where and when it seemed convenient, but, with Ellen's care and attention, it gained a charm that made up for its lack of design. The avenue of cedars leading from the main road to the house--that avenue of cedars without which no Georgia planter's home could be complete--had a cool dark shadiness that gave a brighter tinge, by contrast, to the green of the other trees. The wistaria tumbling over the verandas showed bright against the whitewashed brick, and it joined with the pink crepe myrtle bushes by the door and the white-blossomed magnolias in the yard to disguise some of the awkward lines of the house.

In spring time and summer, the Bermuda grass and clover on the lawn became emerald, so enticing an emerald that it presented an irresistible temptation to the flocks of turkeys and white geese that were supposed to roam only the regions in the rear of the house. The elders of the flocks continually led stealthy advances into the front yard, lured on by the green of the grass and the luscious promise of the cape jessamine buds and the zinnia beds. Against their depredations, a small black sentinel was stationed on the front porch. Armed with a ragged towel, the little negro boy sitting on the steps was part of the picture of Tara--and an unhappy one, for he was forbidden to chunk the fowls and could only flap the towel at them and shoo them.

Ellen set dozens of little black boys to this task, the first position of responsibility a male slave had at Tara. After they had passed their tenth year, they were sent to old Daddy the plantation cobbler to learn his trade, or to Amos the wheelwright and carpenter, or Philip the cow man, or Cuffee the mule boy. If they showed no aptitude for any of these trades, they became field hands and, in the opinion of the negroes, they had lost their claim to any social standing at all.

Ellen's life was not easy, nor was it happy, but she did not expect life to be easy, and, if it was not happy, that was woman's lot. It was a man's world, and she accepted it as such. The man owned the property, and the woman managed it. The man took the credit for the management, and the woman praised his cleverness. The man roared like a bull when a splinter was in his finger, and the woman muffled the moans of childbirth, lest she disturb him. Men were rough of speech and often drunk. Women ignored the lapses of speech and put the drunkards to bed without bitter words. Men were rude and outspoken, women were always kind, gracious and forgiving. :)D)

She had been reared in the tradition of great ladies, which had taught her how to carry her burden and still retain her charm, and she intended that her three daughters should be great ladies also. With her younger daughters, she had success, for Suellen was so anxious to be attractive she lent an attentive and obedient ear to her mother's teachings, and Carreen was shy and easily led. But Scarlett, child of Gerald, found the road to ladyhood hard.

To Mammy's indignation, her preferred playmates were not her demure sisters or the well-brought-up Wilkes girls but the negro children on the plantation and the boys of the neighborhood, and she could climb a tree or throw a rock as well as any of them. Mammy was greatly perturbed that Ellen's daughter should display such traits and frequently adjured her to "ack lak a lil lady." But Ellen took a more tolerant and long-sighted view of the matter. She knew that from childhood playmates grew beaux in later years, and the first duty of a girl was to get married. She told herself that the child was merely full of life and there was still time in which to teach her the arts and graces of being attractive to men.

To this end, Ellen and Mammy bent their efforts, and as Scarlett grew older she became an apt pupil in this subject, even though she learned little else. Despite a succession of governesses and two years at the near-by Fayetteville Female Academy, her education was sketchy, but no girl in the County danced more gracefully than she. She knew how to smile so that her dimples leaped, how to walk pigeon-toed so that her wide hoop skirts swayed entrancingly, how to look up into a man's face and then drop her eyes and bat the lids rapidly so that she seemed a-tremble with gentle emotion. Most of all she learned how to conceal from men a sharp intelligence beneath a face as sweet and bland as a baby's.

Ellen, by soft-voiced admonition, and Mammy, by constant carping, labored to inculcate in her the qualities that would make her truly desirable as a wife.

"You must be more gentle, dear, more sedate," Ellen told her daughter. "You must not interrupt gentlemen when they are speaking, even if you do think you know more about matters than they do. Gentlemen do not like forward girls."

"Young misses whut frowns an pushes out dey chins an' says 'Ah will' and 'Ah woan' mos' gener'ly doan ketch husbands," prophesied Mammy gloomily. "Young misses should cas' down dey eyes an' say, 'Well, suh, Ah mout' an' 'Jes' as you say, suh.'"

Between them, they taught her all that a gentlewoman should know, but she learned only the outward signs of gentility. The inner grace from which these signs should spring, she never learned nor did she see any reason for learning it. Appearances were enough, for the appearances of ladyhood won her popularity and that was all she wanted. Gerald bragged that she was the belle of five counties, and with some truth, for she had received proposals from nearly all the young men in the neighborhood and many from places as far away as Atlanta and Savannah.

At sixteen, thanks to Mammy and Ellen, she looked sweet, charming and giddy, but she was, in reality, self-willed, vain and obstinate. She had the easily stirred passions of her Irish father and nothing except the thinnest veneer of her mother's unselfish and forbearing nature. Ellen never fully realized that it was only a veneer, for Scarlett always showed her best face to her mother, concealing her escapades, curbing her temper and appearing as sweet-natured as she could in Ellen's presence, for her mother could shame her to tears with a reproachful glance.

But Mammy was under no illusions about her and was constantly alert for breaks in the veneer. Mammy's eyes were sharper than Ellen's, and Scarlett could never recall in all her life having fooled Mammy for long.

It was not that these two loving mentors deplored Scarlett's high spirits, vivacity and charm. These were traits of which Southern women were proud. It was Gerald's headstrong and impetuous nature in her that gave them concern, and they sometimes feared they would not be able to conceal her damaging qualities until she had made a good match. But Scarlett intended to marry--and marry Ashley--and she was willing to appear demure, pliable and scatterbrained, if those were the qualities that attracted men. Just why men should be this way, she did not know. She only knew that such methods worked. It never interested her enough to try to think out the reason for it, for she knew nothing of the inner workings of any human being's mind, not even her own. She knew only that if she did or said thus-and-so, men would unerringly respond with the complementary thus-and-so. It was like a mathematical formula and no more difficult, for mathematics was the one subject that had come easy to Scarlett in her schooldays.

If she knew little about men's minds, she knew even less about the minds of women, for they interested her less. She had never had a girl friend, and she never felt any lack on that account. To her, all women, including her two sisters, were natural enemies in pursuit of the same prey--man. :)D)

All women with the one exception of her mother.

Ellen O'Hara was different, and Scarlett regarded her as something holy and apart from all the rest of humankind. When Scarlett was a child, she had confused her mother with the Virgin Mary, and now that she was older she saw no reason for changing her opinion. To her, Ellen represented the utter security that only Heaven or a mother can give. She knew that her mother was the embodiment of justice, truth, loving tenderness and profound wisdom--a great lady.

Scarlett wanted very much to be like her mother. The only difficulty was that by being just and truthful and tender and unselfish, one missed most of the joys of life, and certainly many beaux. And life was too short to miss such pleasant things. Some day when she was married to Ashley and old, some day when she had time for it, she intended to be like Ellen. But, until then . . .
 
..hihi ở đây vui ghê ah, hôm nay chả hỏi cũng gặp được một hội yêu thích 1 trong tp yêu thích của mình ...:D

công nhận truyện này hồi mới đọc mình cũng đọc mãi ko chán thật-
em xem phim trước ,rùi mới đọc qua các tóm lược các tác phẩm - hehe..các truyện khác- họ tóm tắt ít quá- chả hiểu đầu cua tai nheo gì..
riêng CTCG thì được rất được ưu ái ,thấy có chen vào phân tích có một dòng - muh họ khen quá ấn tượng-hihi.. nên sau đấy mới tìm đọc- uh cũng ko thấy thất vọng tẹo nào..:D..

mình thấy bản Tv hay thật- đọc hay hơn xem phim- ..ai đồng ý ko? ??
cũng chẳng biết đọc bao nhiêu lần rồi nữa- ko ít hơn 10 lần ..hihi ( nhưng ko phải cả truyện :D )

chị Chi, em qua thử cái link paste rùi :) ,hihi nghe Chi nói, em thấy chắc mê truyện thật thi`phải mê luôn nguyên bản của nó rồi hah ... tội thấy in ra nhiều chữ quá, ,, ngại đọc ...:D

a`h so sánh 2 bản anh với viet, theo tớ , khác nhau nhiều nhất là : cái tên đó.Cùng một nhân muh đọc sang bản Ta chả biết đấy là ai..hehe..

đọc truyện này học Sử Mỹ (nếu phải;)) cũng nhớ nhanh hơn ấy nhỉ.,-đồng ý ko?.. :D..
 
oh quên,...sao chưa thấy ai bình bầu cho nhân vật chính thế..,
hì gì chứ tớ vẫn thấy Scarlet nv số 1 !!!! :D

(..ai thích truyện nào nữa có link mang lên đây cho mọi người xem với đi- còn chị Chi, Good job! Keep this going on nha! ..:D

take care everyone! ;D..
 
thực ra tớ đã đọc và thấy phần truyện tiếng VIệt có mấy đoạn bị lược đi. như phần miêu tả hai anh em sinh đôi, trong truyện TV chỉ có một đoạn ngắn tẹo. Còn trong truyện TA là cả một phần dài dài.

Tớ ko thích Ashley tẹo nào nếu ko muốn nói là ghét. Tớ ko chịu được loại con trai yếu đuối. Nói chung thì Ashley cũng có cái đáng thông cảm nhưng tớ thấy....thương hại.

Phần tớ khoái nhất trong bản dịch của Dương Tường là ông đã dịch ngọng những phần của người da đen. Như truyện cuộc phiêu lưu của Huck Finn, truyện TV của tớ nó dịch nguyên xi, ko ngọng nghịu nên thấy ko đúng lắm.

Trong GWTW thì tớ thích nhất là phần tiệc ở 12 cây sồi và đoạn Scarlett về lại ấp Tara sau CT.
Còn một nhân vật nữa mà tớ rất thích đó là Mr. O'Hara. Có khi còn thích hơn Scarlett. Nhất là đoạn ông ý ko chịu ký vào bản cam kết cho dù chết. Và cuối cùng ông trở thành chính mình, cưỡi ngựa "phốc" qua hàng rào và để rồi ngã gãy cổ.
 
Chị Hà Chi cho em cái link cái, hic, công nhận truyện này hay, nhưng em mới đọc version tiêng Việt theo bản dịch của Dương Tường thôi, bao nhiêu lần em cũng không nhớ nữa
Mà chị có thich Pride and Prejudice ko? ;)
 
Hehehe, vào bình bầu với mọi người cái. Em không thích Scarlet. ( she's kind of brainless). Thích nhất là Rhett Butler :) ( My hero!). Em hơi thích Melanie, nhưng có lẽ người như vậy khó có trên đời này lắm.

Mình cũng thích đoạn Scarlet trở về Tara sau cuộc bao vây. Cái hình ảnh Scarlet nằm soài trên đất, nôn thốc nôn tháo vì ăn phải củ cà rôt xơ già, rồi đứng dậy và tự nhủ: Cho dù có phải trộm cắp, giết người, hay bất cứ cái gì đi nữa, cũng sẽ không bao giờ rơi vào cảnh nghèo đói nữa, không bao giờ để người thân phải đói nữa, hic, mình đọc đi đọc lại.
Có ai ở đây thích các đoạn đối thoại giữa Rhett và Scartlet ko? That's awesome! >>> Câu nói yêu thích " Ô Scartlet, cứ nghe đến tiền là hai mắt cô lại lấp la lấp lánh :D "
 
Chỉnh sửa lần cuối:
mình thấy bản Tv hay thật- đọc hay hơn xem phim- ..ai đồng ý ko? ??
cũng chẳng biết đọc bao nhiêu lần rồi nữa- ko ít hơn 10 lần ..hihi ( nhưng ko phải cả truyện )

Ừm, công nhận là đọc truyện vẫn hay hơn xem phim, mặc dù phim "gone with the wind" có dàn diễn viên hơi bị tuyển và có thể nói là không thể tốt hơn :D nhưng chẳng hiểu sao, chắc hơi subjective một tẹo, vẫn thích đọc truyện và tưởng tượng hơn ;)

Tớ ko thích Ashley tẹo nào nếu ko muốn nói là ghét. Tớ ko chịu được loại con trai yếu đuối. Nói chung thì Ashley cũng có cái đáng thông cảm nhưng tớ thấy....thương hại.

Phần tớ khoái nhất trong bản dịch của Dương Tường là ông đã dịch ngọng những phần của người da đen. Như truyện cuộc phiêu lưu của Huck Finn, truyện TV của tớ nó dịch nguyên xi, ko ngọng nghịu nên thấy ko đúng lắm.

Linh Ngân tính tình mạnh mẽ nên chắc không thể thích được mấy chàng trai yếu đuối như kiểu Ashley ;) Hehehe, chị nhớ cái hồi còn phải dấm dúi đi mượn "cuốn theo chiều gió" về đọc, bộ bốn tập giấy đen xì, đầu tiên còn không có tập 3 và tập 4 nên chỉ biết đọc đi đọc lại tập 1-2 nên cảm giác khá mạnh và tốt đẹp về Ashley. Kiểu như một mẫu hoàng tử trong truyện vậy :D (Mà chắc tại dạo này chị đọc nhiều Japanese comics quá nên càng chẳng cảm thấy Ashley yếu đuối lém, các nhân vật nam chính trong truyện tranh còn củ chuối hơn...dù rất...đẹp trai :oops: :D )...Sau này đọc lại vẫn thấy cái tình yêu của Scarlett với Ashley ngày xưa có lý, dù nó childish và mù quáng... giống như mọi mối tình đầu tiên vậy... Và trong trí nhớ vẫn luôn nghĩ về một Ashley with "his drowsy gray eyes wide with a smile and the sun so bright on his blond hair that it seemed like a cap of shining silver"... so lovely :smlove:
 
Chỉnh sửa lần cuối:
hì gì chứ tớ vẫn thấy Scarlet nv số 1 !!!!

Còn một nhân vật nữa mà tớ rất thích đó là Mr. O'Hara.

Hehehe, vào bình bầu với mọi người cái. Em không thích Scarlet. ( she's kind of brainless). Thích nhất là Rhett Butler ( My hero!). Em hơi thích Melanie, nhưng có lẽ người như vậy khó có trên đời này lắm.

Hehehehe, đúng là mỗi người một ý thích... :D Ngày xưa đọc chị cũng chỉ thấy thích Rhett nhất :love3: còn Scarlett thì thấy cứ insensitive ghê gớm. Hơ hơ, nhưng sau này nhìn lại, tự nhiên thấy chả hiểu nếu mình là Scarlett thì liệu có khá khẩm hơn được không trong việc phát hiện ra tình yêu của Rhett...cái con người suốt ngày mỉa mai và châm chọc mình bằng đủ mọi vũ khí :rolleyes: Mặc dù cách sống và cái cách quan tâm đến mọi người của Scarlett vô tình, quá thực tế, sometimes, it's rude, nhưng cái inner strength của cô ấy thì chị rất thích...tình yêu cho Tara...cả cái kiểu I don't think of it today, I'll think about it tomorrow. Anyway, tomorrow is another day... mạnh mẽ và dứt khoát.

Melanie công nhận là một "great lady" nhưng hình như cái hình ảnh không tì vết nào của cô đúng là chỉ khiến cho mọi người kính trọng và "hơi thích" chứ cảm giác một con người như thánh như vậy không làm cho người ta đồng cảm nhiều lém được. Mà đau khổ ghê, bây giờ đọc lại bỗng tự nhiên cảm thấy tình yêu cho Rhett cũng chẳng còn nhiều như xưa...chắc tại già hơn và thực tế hơn... critical thinking thì bây giờ có một anh chàng biết rõ mọi ngóc ngách trong đầu mình đang nghĩ gì còn mình thì chẳng thể nào hiểu được anh chàng đó trong cái lớp vỏ sắc nhọn như cái lông nhím...hình ảnh cũng chẳng hấp dẫn lắm thì phải. Với cả người nam tính như Rhett mà lại còn tinh tế và understanding nữa thì chắc cũng giống như dạng Melanie, không tồn tại trên cõi đời này :rolleyes: nên thôi, ngừng mơ mộng :D To some extent, Mr O'Hara is real, a kind person and his love for Ellen is just also great --> better!!!

Mà chị có thich Pride and Prejudice ko?

Shocked :shock: Không phải chị với em giống nhau thế chứ hả :D Pride and prejudice, của đáng tội, chị mới "khai phá" được gần đây sau khi sang Mel thôi, mà mới chủ yếu xem phim mấy lần :oops: chứ ở nhà có truyện nhưng dạo này đang hơi lười đọc truyện chứ nên chị chưa tiêu hóa hết được. Nhưng truyện của Jane Austin ở VN hình như không phổ biến lắm thì phải... hoặc ngày xưa chị không để ý... không biết có truyện đấy bằng tiếng Việt không! Trong các versions thì chỉ thích mỗi bản của BBC thì phải, có anh Colins trông lạnh lùng dễ thương ghê gớm :oops: What's about other Jane Austin's work? Sense and sensibility? Emma? :D
 
:) . Pride and Prejudice, truyen thi em moi doc mot lan, nhung phim thi xem di xem lai 5 lan roi :D . Em rat khoai cac giong van scarcastic. Nhung em xem di xem lai phim do la vi...thich cai cach phat am tieng Anh cua ho qua, vua ro, vua co cai gi rat sang trong. Bay gio van nho cai cau to tinh ma Lizy nhan duoc tu anh chang lanh lung day, hihi:
In vain I have struggled, it will not work. You must let me tell how aderntly I admire and love uuuuuuuuu :)
Sense and Sensibility thi em ko thich lam, vi tinh cach nhan vat hoi mo nhat.
Hi`hi`, chi em ta lai come up with a great idea nua: Em cung cho la Rhett hoi khong co thuc. UI choi, nhung neu co mot nguoi hieu minh ngoc ngach nhu the thi cung thich nhung ma hoi so nhi :D :rolleyes: ( ta ko the giau duoc dieu gi` :cry: )
 
Mr Gerald O'Hara

Still there was no sign of Gerald on the quiet winding road. If she had to wait much longer, Mammy would certainly come in search of her and bully her into the house. But even as she strained her eyes down the darkening road, she heard a pounding of hooves at the bottom of the pasture hill and saw the horses and cows scatter in fright. Gerald O'Hara was coming home across country and at top speed.

He came up the hill at a gallop on his thick-barreled, long-legged hunter, appearing in the distance like a boy on a too large horse. His long white hair standing out behind him, he urged the horse forward with crop and loud cries.

Filled with her own anxieties, she nevertheless watched him with affectionate pride, for Gerald was an excellent horseman.

"I wonder why he always wants to jump fences when he's had a few drinks," she thought. "And after that fall he had right here last year when he broke his knee. You'd think he'd learn. Especially when he promised Mother on oath he'd never jump again."

Scarlett had no awe of her father and felt him more her contemporary than her sisters, for jumping fences and keeping it a secret from his wife gave him a boyish pride and guilty glee that matched her own pleasure in outwitting Mammy. She rose from her seat to watch him.

The big horse reached the fence, gathered himself and soared over as effortlessly as a bird, his rider yelling enthusiastically, his crop beating the air, his white curls jerking out behind him. Gerald did not see his daughter in the shadow of the trees, and he drew rein in the road, patting his horse's neck with approbation.

"There's none in the County can touch you, nor in the state," he informed his mount, with pride, the brogue of County Meath still heavy on his tongue in spite of thirty-nine years in America. Then he hastily set about smoothing his hair and settling his ruffled shirt and his cravat which had slipped awry behind one ear. Scarlett knew these hurried preenings were being made with an eye toward meeting his wife with the appearance of a gentleman who had ridden sedately home from a call on a neighbor. She knew also that he was presenting her with just the opportunity she wanted for opening the conversation without revealing her true purpose.

She laughed aloud. As she had intended, Gerald was startled by the sound; then he recognized her, and a look both sheepish and defiant came over his florid face. He dismounted with difficulty, because his knee was stiff, and, slipping the reins over his arm, stumped toward her.

"Well, Missy," he said, pinching her cheek, "so, you've been spying on me and, like your sister Suellen last week, you'll be telling your mother on me?"

There was indignation in his hoarse bass voice but also a wheedling note, and Scarlett teasingly clicked her tongue against her teeth as she reached out to pull his cravat into place. His breath in her face was strong with Bourbon whisky mingled with afaint fragrance of mint. Accompanying him also were the smells of chewing tobacco, well-oiled leather and horses--a combination of odors that she always associated with her father and instinctively liked in other men.

"No, Pa, I'm no tattletale like Suellen," she assured him, standing off to view his rearranged attire with a judicious air.

Gerald was a small man, little more than five feet tall, but so heavy of barrel and thick of neck that his appearance, when seated, led strangers to think him a larger man. His thickset torso was supported by short sturdy legs, always incased in the finest leather boots procurable and always planted wide apart like a swaggering small boy's. Most small people who take themselves seriously are a little ridiculous; but the bantam cock is respected in the barnyard, and so it was with Gerald. No one would ever have the temerity to think of Gerald O'Hara as a
ridiculous little figure.

He was sixty years old and his crisp curly hair was silver-white, but his shrewd face was unlined and his hard little blue eyes were young with the unworried youthfulness of one who has never taxed his brain with problems more abstract than how many cards to draw in a poker game. His was as Irish a face as could be found in the length and breadth of the homeland he had left so long ago--round high colored, short nosed, wide mouthed and belligerent.

Beneath his choleric exterior Gerald O'Hara had the tenderest of hearts. He could not bear to see a slave pouting under a reprimand, no matter how well deserved, or hear a kitten mewing or a child crying; but he had a horror of having this weakness discovered. That everyone who met him did discover his kindly heart within five minutes was unknown to him; and his vanity would have suffered tremendously if he had found it out, for he liked to think that when he bawled orders at the top of his voice everyone trembled and obeyed. It had never occurred to him that only one voice was obeyed on the plantation--the soft voice of his wife Ellen. It was a secret he would never learn, for everyone from Ellen down to the stupidest field hand was in a tacit and kindly conspiracy to keep him believing that his word was law.

Scarlett was impressed less than anyone else by his tempers and his roarings. She was his oldest child and, now that Gerald knew there would be no more sons to follow the three who lay in the family burying ground, he had drifted into a habit of treating her in a man-to-man manner which she found most pleasant. She was more like her father than her younger sisters, for Carreen, who had been born Caroline Irene, was delicate and dreamy, and Suellen, christened Susan Elinor, prided herself on her elegance and ladylike deportment.

Moreover, Scarlett and her father were bound together by a mutual suppression agreement. If Gerald caught her climbing a fence instead of walking half a mile to a gate, or sitting too late on the front steps with a beau, he castigated her personally and with vehemence, but he did not mention the fact to Ellen or to Mammy. And when Scarlett discovered him jumping fences after his solemn promise to his wife, or learned the exact amount of his losses at poker, as she always did from County gossip, she refrained from mentioning the fact at the supper table in the artfully artless manner Suellen had. Scarlett and her father each assured the other solemnly that to bring such matters to the ears of Ellen would only hurt her, and nothing would induce them to wound her gentleness. :)D)

Scarlett looked at her father in the fading light, and, without knowing why, she found it comforting to be in his presence. There was something vital and earthy and coarse about him that appealed to her. Being the least analytic of people, she did not realize that this was because she possessed in some degree these same qualities, despite sixteen years of effort on the part of Ellen and Mammy to obliterate them.

"You look very presentable now," she said, "and I don't think anyone will suspect you've been up to your tricks unless you brag about them. But it does seem to me that after you broke your knee last year, jumping that same fence--"

"Well, may I be damned if I'll have me own daughter telling me what I shall jump and not jump," he shouted, giving her cheek another pinch. "It's me own neck, so it is. And besides, Missy, what are you doing out here without your shawl?"

Seeing that he was employing familiar maneuvers to extricate himself from unpleasant conversation, she slipped her arm through his and said: "I was waiting for you. I didn't know you would be so late. I just wondered if you had bought Dilcey."

"Bought her I did, and the price has ruined me. Bought her and her little wench, Prissy. John Wilkes was for almost giving them away, but never will I have it said that Gerald O'Hara used friendship in a trade. I made him take three thousand for the two of them."

"In the name of Heaven, Pa, three thousand! And you didn't need to buy Prissy!"

"Has the time come when me own daughters sit in judgment on me?" shouted Gerald rhetorically. "Prissy is a likely little wench and so--"

"I know her. She's a sly, stupid creature," Scarlett rejoined calmly, unimpressed by his uproar. "And the only reason you bought her was because Dilcey asked you to buy her."

Gerald looked crestfallen and embarrassed, as always when caught in a kind deed, and Scarlett laughed outright at his transparency.

"Well, what if I did? Was there any use buying Dilcey if she was going to mope about the child? Well, never again will I let a darky on this place marry off it. It's too expensive. Well, come on, Puss, let's go in to supper."
 
Ellen O'Hara

Ellen O'Hara was thirty-two years old, and, according to the standards of her day, she was a middle-aged woman, one who had borne six children and buried three. She was a tall woman, standing a head higher than her fiery little husband, but she moved with such quiet grace in her swaying hoops that the height attracted no attention to itself. Her neck, rising from the black taffeta sheath of her basque, was creamy-skinned, rounded and slender, and it seemed always tilted slightly backward by the weight of her luxuriant hair in its net at the back of her head. From her French mother, whose parents had fled Haiti in the Revolution of 1791, had come her slanting dark eyes, shadowed by inky lashes, and her black hair; and from her father, a soldier of Napoleon, she had her long straight nose and her square-cut jaw that was softened by the gentle curving of her cheeks. But only from life could Ellen's face have acquired its look of pride that had no haughtiness, its graciousness, its melancholy and its utter lack of humor.

She would have been a strikingly beautiful woman had there been any glow in her eyes, any responsive warmth in her smile or any spontaneity in her voice that fell with gentle melody on the ears of her family and her servants. She spoke in the soft slurring voice of the coastal Georgian, liquid of vowels, kind to consonants and with the barest trace of French accent. It was a voice never raised in command to a servant or reproof to a child but a voice that was obeyed instantly at Tara, where her husband's blustering and roaring were quietly disregarded.
As far back as Scarlett could remember, her mother had always been the same, her voice soft and sweet whether in praising or in reproving, her manner efficient and unruffled despite the daily emergencies of Gerald's turbulent household, her spirit always calm and her back unbowed, even in the deaths of her three baby sons. Scarlett had never seen her mother's back touch the back of any chair on which she sat. Nor had she ever seen her sit down without a bit of needlework in her hands, except at mealtime, while attending the sick or while working at the bookkeeping of the plantation. It was delicate embroidery if company were present, but at other times her hands were occupied with Gerald's ruffled shirts, the girls' dresses or garments for the slaves. Scarlett could not imagine her mother's hands without her gold thimble or her rustling figure unaccompanied by the small negro girl whose sole function in life was to remove basting threads and carry the rosewood sewing box from room to room, as Ellen moved about the house superintending the cooking, the cleaning and the wholesale clothes-making for the plantation.

She had never seen her mother stirred from her austere placidity, nor her personal appointments anything but perfect, no matter what the hour of day or night. When Ellen was dressing for a ball or for guests or even to go to Jonesboro for Court Day, it frequently required two hours, two maids and Mammy to turn her out to her own satisfaction; but her swift toilets in times of emergency were amazing.

Scarlett, whose room lay across the hall from her mother's, knew from babyhood the soft sound of scurrying bare black feet on the hardwood floor in the hours of dawn, the urgent tappings on her mother's door, and the muffled, frightened negro voices that whispered of sickness and birth and death in the long row of whitewashed cabins in the quarters. As a child, she often had crept to the door and, peeping through the tiniest crack, had seen Ellen emerge from the dark room, where Gerald's snores were rhythmic and untroubled, into the flickering light of an upheld candle, her medicine case under her arm, her hair smoothed neatly place, and no button on her basque unlooped.

It had always been so soothing to Scarlett to hear her mother whisper, firmly but compassionately, as she tiptoed down the hall: "Hush, not so loudly. You will wake Mr. O'Hara. They are not sick enough to die."

Yes, it was good to creep back into bed and know that Ellen was abroad in the night and everything was right.

In the mornings, after all-night sessions at births and deaths, when old Dr. Fontaine and young Dr. Fontaine were both out on calls and could not be found to help her, Ellen presided at the breakfast table as usual, her dark eyes circled with weariness but her voice and manner revealing none of the strain. There was a steely quality under her stately gentleness that awed the whole household, Gerald as well as the girls, though he would have died rather than admit it.

Sometimes when Scarlett tiptoed at night to kiss her tall mother's cheek, she looked up at the mouth with its too short, too tender upper lip, a mouth too easily hurt by the world, and wondered if it had ever curved in silly girlish giggling or whispered secrets through long nights to intimate girl friends. But no, that wasn't possible. Mother had always been just as she was, a pillar of strength, a fount of wisdom, the one person who knew the answers to everything.

But Scarlett was wrong, for, years before, Ellen Robillard of Savannah had giggled as inexplicably as any fifteen-year-old in that charming coastal city and whispered the long nights through with friends, exchanging confidences, telling all secrets but one. That was the year when Gerald O'Hara, twenty-eight years older than she, came into her life--the year, too, when youth and her black-eyed cousin, Philippe Robillard, went out of it. For when Philippe, with his snapping eyes and his wild ways, left Savannah forever, he took with him the glow that was in Ellen's heart and left for the bandy-legged little Irishman who married her only a gentle shell.
But that was enough for Gerald, overwhelmed at his unbelievable luck in actually marrying her. And if anything was gone from her, he never missed it. Shrewd man that he was, he knew that it was no less than a miracle that he, an Irishman with nothing of family and wealth to recommend him, should win the daughter of one of the wealthiest and proudest families on the Coast. For Gerald was a self-made man.
 
Pride and Prejudice, truyen thi em moi doc mot lan, nhung phim thi xem di xem lai 5 lan roi . Em rat khoai cac giong van scarcastic. Nhung em xem di xem lai phim do la vi...thich cai cach phat am tieng Anh cua ho qua, vua ro, vua co cai gi rat sang trong. Bay gio van nho cai cau to tinh ma Lizy nhan duoc tu anh chang lanh lung day, hihi:
In vain I have struggled, it will not work. You must let me tell how aderntly I admire and love uuuuuuuuu
Sense and Sensibility thi em ko thich lam, vi tinh cach nhan vat hoi mo nhat.
Hi`hi`, chi em ta lai come up with a great idea nua: Em cung cho la Rhett hoi khong co thuc. UI choi, nhung neu co mot nguoi hieu minh ngoc ngach nhu the thi cung thich nhung ma hoi so nhi ( ta ko the giau duoc dieu gi` )

Chính xác :D Ấn tượng mạnh nhất của chị khi xem phim đấy cũng là pronunciation của diễn viên và lời thoại thì hay và mượt mà ghê gớm. Bây giờ mà nói chuyện kiểu thế thì chắc là buồn cười lắm vì nó dài dòng và kiểu cách, nhưng xem trong phim thì thấy đúng chỉ có cái ngôn ngữ như vậy mới hòa nhập được vào cái không khí cổ xưa và trang trọng đấy. Nghe các đoạn hai người này đối đáp với nhau sướng thật :D Mà trong các tác phẩm của Jane, chị thấy cái truyện này đối thoại và nhân vật tính cách hay và ấn tượng nhất. Sense àn sensibility, hay Emma cũng chỉ tàm tạm thôi, không có nhân vật nào tính cách mạnh mẽ lắm cả thì phải!

Anh Colins đóng vai đấy quá hợp, nhất là những đoạn anh chàng phải bỏ cái vẻ ngoài lạnh lùng đi để mà thể hiện tình cảm của mình... trông ngô ngố dễ thương ghê :D

Ừm, chị cũng đang considering xem có một anh chàng hiểu mọi ngóc ngách của mình thì dễ thương hơn hay một người bình thường thui cho nó an toàn :D nhưng rốt cuộc thấy cái kiểu người thứ nhất vừa không tồn tại, vừa có vẻ dangerous, nên thui... không phải lựa chọn gì nữa :D Thực ra nếu có người hiểu mình hết cũng hay, nhưng nếu mình không hiểu được họ như vậy thì chả hay ho tí nào ;) Vả lại bây giờ cũng thấy tất cả những gì người ta biết và hiểu chỉ có thể limited thôi, chính mình cũng chẳng hiểu hết được mình---> càng thấy Rhett không bao giờ tồn tại :D
 
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