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读后感,希望对您有帮助!
远离尘嚣英文读后感
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远离尘嚣英文读后感(一)
Much of the plot of Far
from the Madding Crowd depends
on
unrequited love
—
love by
one person for another that is
not
mutual
in
that
the
other
person
does
not
feel
love
in
return.
The
novel
is
driven,
from
the
first
few
chapters,
by
Gabriel Oak's love for Bathsheba. Once
he has lost his farm, he
is free to
wander anywhere in search of work, but he heads to
Weatherbury because it is in the
direction that Bathsheba has
gone.
This
move
leads
to
Oak's
employment
at
Bathsheba's
farm,
where
he
patiently
consoles
her
in
her
troubles
and
supports
her
in
tending
the
farm,
with
no
sign
he
will
ever
have his love returned.
This novel focuses on the
way that catastrophe can occur
at
any
time,
threatening
to
change
lives.
The
most
obvious
example occurs when Oak's flock of
sheep is destroyed by an
unlikely
confluence
of
circumstances,
including
an
inexperienced
sheep
dog,
a
rotted
rail,
and
a
chalk
pit
that
happens to have been
dug adjacent to his land. In one night,
Oak's
future
as
an
independent
farmer
is
destroyed,
and
he
读后感,希望对您有帮助!
ends
up begging just to secure the diminished position
of a
shepherd.
This
novel
offers
modern
readers
a
clear
picture
of
how
important
social
position
was
in
England
in
the
nineteenth
century and of the opportunities that
existed to change class,
in either
direction. In
the
beginning,
Oak and
Bathsheba
are
social equals: he is an
independent farmer who rents his land,
and
she
lives
on
her
aunt's
farm
next
door
to
his,
which
is
presumably
similar
in
value.
The
only
thing
that
keeps
her
from
accepting
his
proposal
of
marriage
is
the
fact
that
she
just does not want to be married yet.
After Oak loses his farm
and Bathsheba
inherits her uncle's farm, there is little
question
of
whether
they
can
marry
—
their
social
positions
are
too
different. She is more socially
compatible with Boldwood, who
owns the
farm next to hers and is in a similar social
position.
远离尘嚣英文读后感(二)
This novel is
talking about a woman and her love or called
marriage. Gabriel Oak took the fancy in
Bathsheba Everdene at
the
first
sight. She was
a beautiful
lady,
but also
a
little
van.
Courting
to
her
was
his
dream.
Unfortunately,
she
left.
What’s
more, as a fa
rmer he lost all the
pregnant sheep. Now
his
hopes
of
being
an
independent
farmer
were
destroyed.