Scarlett
O'Hara and Rhett Butler
The epic tale of a woman's life during one of the most
tumultuous periods in America's history. From her young, innocent days on a
feudalistic plantation to the war-torn streets of Atlanta; from her first love
whom she has always desired to three husbands; from the utmost luxury to
absolute starvation and poverty; from her innocence to her understanding and
comprehension of life.
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Scarlett is a
narcissistic plantation belle, the daughter of a French aristocratic mother and
an Irish peasant immigrant who managed to acquire a large cotton plantation and
a lovely cultured wife. Scarlett inherited her mother’s beauty and manners and
her father’s raw energy and ambition. Beneath her polished exterior, she is
dynamo of unruly impulses. Although her beauty and flirtatious behavior have
enslaved almost every young man in the region, Scarlett longs to marry Ashley
Wilkes, the educated son of a distinguished Southern family. Heartbroken when
Ashley marries his cousin Melanie instead, Scarlett marries Melanie’s brother
just to spite Ashley. When her husband is killed in the war, she marries a
store owner for his money, but never abandons her hope of finally winning
Ashley for herself.
Scarlett’s only
real relationship is with Rhett Butler, the dashing young blockade runner who
was disowned by his family and expelled from Charleston for dishonorable
behavior. Rhett sees right through Scarlett’s façade of ladylike elegance and
knows the ruthless, unscrupulous, wildcat which lies behind her pretty face.
Attracted by her energy, strength, courage and beauty, he pursues her first to
become his mistress and later his wife. Scarlett’s heart has always been after
Ashley. She admires Rhett’s brute strength, his courage to defy society, his
tall handsome appearance and his considerable wealth, but she never feels for
him anything like true affection.
But the real love
story in Gone with the Wind is not between these two selfish, self-centered
characters whose passion torments and ultimately ruins the happiness of both.
It is rather the quiet, idealized love between Ashley and Melanie Wilkes that
depicts the true qualities and power of love to nurture, save and protect, even
in times of extraordinary upheaval. Though Scarlett has set her heart on
marrying the refined and cultured Ashley, he chooses instead his mild-mannered
and frail cousin Melanie and marries her. Melanie lacks the captivating beauty,
energy, vitality, and feminine wiles of Scarlett. But her gentle heart is made
of pure goodness and possesses extraordinary power of goodwill that protects
Ashley through the long years of fighting and imprisonment. But Scarlett and
Rhett's turbulent and unfulfilling marriage is marred by constant
quarrels.After the death of their young daughter, Rhett finally leaves her.
Only then does she realize how much she needs and wants him. Through her sobs
in the final scene, Scarlett begins to think of her home Tara, from which she
has always gained strength, and determines that she will return there and will
think of a way to get Rhett back.
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Images
The Movie named ,
Gone with The Wind (1939)
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