What I'm gonna write is not about that movie telling the story of the Nobel Prize winner,professor John Nash
By contrast,what I'm focusing on dates back to ancient renaissance period,referring to the greatest poet at the time,Shakespeare.
In his prestigious poem "A Midsummer-Night's Dream" the respectable man wrote as below
I frown upon him,yet he loves me still
O!that your frowns would teach my smiles such skill
I gave him curses,yet he gives me love
O!that my prayers could such affection move
The more I hate,the more he follows me
The more I love,the more he hateth me
His folly,Helena,is no fault of mine
None,but your beauty:would that fault were mine!
Take comfort:he no more shall see my face
Lysander and myself will fly this place
How profound!How remarkable!How broad the love is!Is this poem attempting to tell us what at bottom is a true love?Or it's just demonstrating the author's feeling or emotion?Why cannot the two love each other at the same time?Why is it impossible?What's that fault mentioned?
You guys think,I go to bed... :)
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