Little women
邱逸诗
The March family is relatively poor, though they can still afford one
servant and they often share whatever they have with others less
fortunate. Mr. March is a philosopher and teacher. He serves as a
Chaplain in the Union Army until he gets ill. After being nursed to
health by his wife, he returns to Concord and becomes a minister. A kind
but unworldly man, he lost the family property trying to help a friend,
which brought poverty upon the family for some time. He leads the family
quietly, urging Christian morality and kindness. Mrs. March, or “Marmee”
is a strong, kind, and moral character. She advocates a healthy balance
of work and play and urges her daughters to marry good, kind men. She is
patient with the family’s poverty, reminding the girls to remember their
many blessings. She is the rock of the family. When she leaves to help
nurse her husband, she must later return to nurse her daughter Beth, and
she comforts the girls through many challenges. In Part I, the girls
decide to improve their characters while their Father is gone, so they
can make him proud when he returns. They use the story Pilgrim’s
Progress to add fun and meaning to their goals. Meg, sixteen, wants to
overcome vanity and complain less about poverty and hard work. She
struggles with envying luxurious things, and occasionally tries them for
herself, but always feels disingenuous and wrong. She chooses to marry
the poor but good John Brooke, who tutored her neighbor Laurie. Meg and
John are very happy together and have twins, Daisy and Demi. Jo, fifteen
at the start, is based on the author and is often considered the main
character. She is a tomboy and a writer with a fierce temper and a
dislike for doing what society thinks is proper. Jo struggles throughout
the book to become womanlier. She is completely devoted to her family
and tries to earn money writing so she can help them. Jo is best friends
with the March family’s neighbor Laurie, who eventually proposes to her,
but she loves him only as a brother. After nursing her sister Beth
through illness and death, Jo becomes tenderer, and marries a German
professor named Mr. Bhaer. They open a school for boys. Beth, thirteen
at the start, is a quiet and selfless girl. She loves music and is given
a piano by their neighbor Mr. Laurence. Beth struggles to overcome her
bashfulness throughout Part I. She also contracts scarlet fever while
helping a poor family. She comes very close to dying in Part I, and,
forever weakened by the fever, dies in Part II. Amy, twelve, is the
young spoiled pet of the family. She loves to draw and tries to use long
words she does not understand in order to sound older and fancy. Similar
to Meg, Amy has aristocratic tastes. She tries to be less selfish and
become a true lady, generous and graceful. Amy is very much Jo’s
opposite, and Jo is heartbroken when an Aunt asks Amy to go abroad
instead of tomboy Jo. Amy studies art abroad and considers marrying
friend Fred Vaughn since he is rich, though she does not love him. Her
conscience and their friend Laurie help her realize that would be a
mistake. In Europe, Amy and Laurie fall in love and are married. Laurie,
the neighbor, is Jo’s age. He is raised by his grandfather, who always
fears Laurie will run away to play music rather than stay to work in the
family business. Laurie benefits greatly from the March family’s
influence, and they benefit from his generosity. In addition to being
wealthy, Laurie is kind, lively, and good. He is devastated when Jo does
not accept his marriage proposal. His grandfather takes him overseas,
where he realizes he loves Jo like a brother, and he falls in love with
Amy. From the interactions among these main characters, Alcott weaves a
lively but domestic, and incredibly popular tale of American youth in
the nineteenth century. Her characters focus on their moral development
but they have weaknesses and humor to make them human and relatable.
Alcott’s deep depiction of the female characters was unique for its time
and implicitly argued for women’s equality in the home and outside of
it. Through their experiences, the characters learn to appreciate the
enduring importance of family, the happiness derived from being selfless
and dutiful, the disconnection between wealth and happiness, and the
benefits of working hard to improve oneself and one’s home.
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