Why did laurie marry amy
Not cool at all. I once held the manuscript incident, her spoiled demeanor, and her marriage to Laurie staunchly against Amy March.
Of course, if many of the girls and women who are drawn to Little Women are drawn in particular to Jo —the writer of the bunch who struggles against the bounds of the traditional path for women in the mids—then it tracks that Amy would be disliked, inverse as she is to Jo and pitted as opposite her so often.
Silver lining: From this incident, the Josephine Marches of today learned to always command-S while working. But is Amy March destined to have that fit of sibling rage held against her forever?
Well, that all depends … do you think people can change and grow? Especially people who are fictional characters whose change and growth is charted on the page? A time to reevaluate some things when it comes to Amy March. Pugh is pretty charming, self-possessed, and often hilarious as Amy March. Amy kicks off the Little Women story as a year-old and ends as a young adult who has seen more of the world and fallen in love and gotten married and had a child.
Meg and Jo both age and mature, but they start already on the brink of womanhood. Amy March at the end of Little Women is far from the little girl she started out as. No consideration of Amy March would be complete without addressing the fact that Amy and Laurie get married. At best, it always rankled as a weird pivot; at worst, it rankled as disloyal to Jo.
Maybe it was originally a further twist of the knife to fans who wanted Alcott to marry off Jo , probably to Laurie? Still, others remember older versions where Katharine Hepburn played Jo or when Elizabeth Taylor played Amy While the versions of Little Women have somewhat changed the plot or the character arcs, one element of the plot that has stayed constant is the love triangle between Jo-Laurie-Amy.
Jo and Laurie have been best friends, and Jo balks when he proposes to her, professing his love and wanting to make their friendship into a romance. Rejected, Laurie leaves, and later finds romance and a wife in Amy, Jo's little sister.
Some fans believe that Jo should have ended up with Laurie, while others believed that Amy was a better match. For both camps, there are reasons why Jo and Laurie should've ended up together, and there are reasons why Amy is the perfect match.
Updated on April 29th, by Amanda Bruce: No matter how times change, there's something enduring in the story of Little Women. Readers and audiences alike enjoy watching as the March sisters learn and love as they grow up.
Tragedy might strike them, but the group never gives up on finding their version of a happy ending - something that's different for each of the sisters. For Jo, that happy ending involves her work more than romance. For Amy, that happy ending involves sharing her life with a husband who understands her. They might be very different sisters, but their love for Laurie is one of the areas they find common ground. No matter which version of Little Women is examined , one thing remains true about the bond between Jo and Laurie: it happened immediately.
Jo and Laurie met at a party that Jo only attended to accompany Meg. She might have had little use for making society appearances, but Meg adored it. Laurie, for his part, was uninterested in the events of the evening until he met Jo. They bonded by talking about everyone else there and hiding the scorch marks on Jo's dress. Their connection was instantaneous and didn't waver until Laurie told Jo how he feels much later in life.
It was Jo who introduced him to the rest of the family, and he didn't have the same bonding experience with everyone else, not even Amy. If there's one place where Amy and Jo differed in their approach to Laurie, it's in facing their feelings - and getting him to face his own. Jo wanted to pretend that there were no romantic feelings between them. In every version, she has begged him not to say anything when he starts to tell her how he feels. Jo also then, in every version, has avoided him, allowing Laurie to wallow in his misery instead of face the rejection.
Amy, on the other hand, was not going to put up with that. When she met up with him again in Europe, she chastised his attitude, his treatment of others, and naturally, his treatment of her.
There has never been avoidance in Amy's character, and her tendency to dive headfirst into situations meant that Laurie had to meet her in the deep end. Jo thought the best of Laurie, even encouraging her sisters to let him into their theatre group and to be an active member of it.
She always thought the best of him and welcomed him to be part of her family, her inner sphere. However, unlike Amy, she never idolized him.
Laurie was as human as she was, and they'd bicker. It made them real. He wouldn't have to live up to extremely high expectations with Jo. As time passes, Beth gets weaker, but she is not afraid of death. Jo writes a poem about all Beth has meant to her, which pleases Beth, who worries that her life has been useless.
Before Beth dies, she asks Jo to take care of their parents. Beth passes away peacefully. Laurie is more active when he returns to Switzerland. He spends some time in Austria working on a requiem and an opera. He tries to make Jo his heroine, but she seems ill fit to be his artistic muse, or inspiration, so he begins to imagine a blonde damsel, although he does not name her.
Laurie also begins to correspond with Amy frequently. When Fred Vaughn finally proposes, Amy turns him down because she does not want to marry for money. They begin to spend much time together and fall in love. One day, Laurie and Amy are boating on a river. Laurie is doing the rowing, and Amy asks to help, telling him that he looks tired. They begin to row smoothly together, and Laurie asks Amy if she will always row in the same boat as him—that is, if she will marry him.
Amy responds that she will. Jo grows lonely at home, although she tries to make life easier for Marmee, Mr. March, and Hannah. One day, she confides to her father how much she misses Beth. Word arrives that Amy and Laurie are engaged, and Marmee is worried about how Jo will take the news. Jo is calm, though, and pleased that they are in love.
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