find your soulmate
...ork, Ralph told the women thing clearly from the Bible and biology. “… He could pity her, but he couldn’t help her any further. Enough was enough.” From this part, we could feel the relationship between Ralph and Meggie of great delicacy. We may call it “the pure love” for Meggie’s innocent and Ralph’s aptitude. Time past, the fourth section was on Mary Carson’s birthday party, when Meggie in her ashes of roses dress, Ralph found a mature woman’s beauty absolutely. He knew she was not the nine years little girl any more, he was delighted for her day after day’s changing but he unable to ease his heart with others, knowing no pure love any more but the dangerous canard and unbearable desire, he left, and when he back to Gillanbone at the big fire, he almost held her. So the pure love was “damaged” and gone with the wind with Meggie’s mature, we could call this “mixed love” for Meggie’s mature and Ralph’s recreance. Now, We could focus on the “true love” for both Meggie and Ralph liberalization of “the climax”. This part was not only the climax in the novel but also the climax of Ralph and Meggie. “There is a legend about a bird which sings just once in its life, more sweetly than any other creature on the fact of the earth. From the moment it leaves the nest it searches for a thorn tree, and does not rest until it has found one, it impales itself upon the longest, sharpest spine. And, dying, it rises above its own agony to out-carol the lark and the nightingale. One superlative song, existence the price. But the whole world stills to listen, and God in His heaven smiles. For the best is only bought at the cost of the great pain…Or so says the legend ” In the climax, the two thorn birds-Ralph and Meggie became one. I know what Ralph and Meggie did really violate God, this part was to a turn in the thirteenth chapter, “thirteen” must have some particular meanings. Although Meggie got a boy-Dane from Ralph, she thought she had stolen some part of Ralph from God successfully. Actually, she was wrong. She only had her son for twenty-six years and he was drowned in saving some women. When Meggie went to Rome to tell Ralph that Dane was dead, “…there was much in his eyes: tenderness, compassion, shock, grief. But they had become the priest’s eyes too, sane, logical, reasonable. ” But when Meggie said “Dane was your son too” “…We stole what you had vowed to God, and we’ve both had to pay…” “…there was a wail , the sound of a soul passing between the portals of Hell. Ralph de Bricassart fell forward out of the chair and wept, huddled on the crimson carpet in a scarlet pool like new blood, his face hidden in his folded arms, his hands clutching at his hair.” So he left Rome backed to Gillanbone for the last time, blessed his so...