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Classic English classics include:
1, "Pride and Prejudice" Pride and Prejudice "Pride and Prejudice" can be said to be a Rosetta stone in the literary world, and it is also the inspiration, foundation and template for many modern **, so you may be more familiar with the plot and characters than you imagined.
2, "Ulysses" Ulysses
Ulysses began using the concept of "stream of consciousness" before it came along. At the same time, it's also quite intricate, full of metaphors, wordplay, cryptic banter, and the characters' personal musings.
3. "To Kill a Mockingbird" to kill a mockingbird is rarely a book that can remain a classic for more than 50 years like "To Kill a Mockingbird". If you want to know how Harper Lee did it, you have to read this book. And it only takes 7 hours of reading time to finish the book.
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The English classics are as follows:
1, gone with the wind "Gone with the Wind".
**"Gone with the Wind" is a romanticism written by the famous American female writer Margaret Michel and reflects the theme of the Civil War**. The rebellious spirit and the spirit of hard work and self-improvement shown by the protagonist Scarlett have always made readers fall in love with it. This enduring ** has touched countless readers.
It has been remade into a movie many times. The unprecedented movie is also known as "Gone with the Wind".
2, a journey to the center of the earth
This "Journey Underground" was published in 1864 by the French artist Jules Verne, and is considered one of the classics of science fiction. "Adventure in the Center of the Earth" has also been adapted into movies and TV series several times, including the 3D film Adventure in the center of the earth, which was released in 2009. The story begins with Dr. Lytton Whitelock, a famous German geologist, trying to decipher a code written on parchment.
From this code, the Doctor learns that there is an underground passage in the cavern of a volcanic crater in Iceland that leads to the underground where the mysteries of the ages are hidden, and he summons up the courage to take his nephew Axy and his guide Hans to explore the underground. After encountering all kinds of dangers, it took them nine deaths to escape from the crater of a volcanic island in the Mediterranean Sea and return to the surface. It's a whimsical adventure.
3, Oliver Twist "Orphan of the Fog".
The Orphan of the Fog is a realistic work published by the British writer Charles Dickens in 1838. Set in the foggy capital of London, it tells the tragic life and experience of an orphan, the protagonist Oliver grew up in an orphanage, experienced an apprenticeship, fled hard, strayed into a den of thieves, and was forced to be with the vicious murderers, experienced countless hardships, and finally with the help of good people, found out his life experience and obtained the blessings of the year. Like Dickens's other books, this book exposes many of the social problems of the time, such as almshouses, child labor, and gangs that recruit young people into crime.
The book has been adapted for film, television and stage on several occasions.
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