A long time ago, a friend gave me a small book, La Traviata, and I couldn't do it.
I took it home and watched it several times, and I was moved by the beautiful love story of the Traviata.

(Archetype of the Traviata by Dumas)
The traviata in the famous French writer Alexandre Dumas, she is a very beautiful and beautiful girl. The daughter of a commoner who lives at the bottom of society.
Margaret, a la traviata, has an older sister who lives the life that ordinary women in the countryside should live, and she works hard every day and is very satisfied with her existing life.
Margaret was the socialite of French high society at that time. She likes camellias, and wherever she appears, there are male brothers or earl-marquises who send her favorite camellias, and she often has beautiful and bright camellias on her hands, so people call her Traviata.
Margaret's beauty is overwhelming, her temperament is unparalleled, but her fate is tragic and bleak.
As she walked through the Champs Elysées in a lavishly decorated carriage with maids and older female companions, the men were fascinated by her beauty, to be able to invite her to a play, to visit her, to be a lover of great pleasure and satisfaction, and to be able to show off capital in high society.
Although Margaret did an unspeakable livelihood, she lived a life of spending money and drunken gold fans. She travels daily between theater, food, flowers and wealthy men, exchanging her beauty and youth for a life of luxury. But her heart is holy and good, and she longs for true love, and she longs to live the life of an ordinary person with the lover in her heart.
In the end, true love, for various reasons, they lost each other and missed each other.
Margaret left her love, in order to vent the bitterness in her heart, she ignored the advice of the doctor, and lived a life of drunken dreams and dreams every day, exhausted herself, and when the wind was flourishing, the soul of the absolute style returned home.
The beautiful Traviata, with her desire for love, left people's eyes for money forever.
After Margaret's death, she was heavily in debt, and the authorities auctioned off her life luxury items, and there were slight savings after paying off the accounts.
Her inheritance was sent to her sister's house. The country woman, as beautiful as Margaret, happily deposited her money into the money after grieving for her sister.
(La Traviata in the play)