A British plane flew over the Sahara Desert, and the pilot took his beloved woman to a country full of flowers.
Taking a woman out of the desert is the pilot's promise to her beloved, Catherine.
Catherine's final message to the pilot: "My beloved, I am sure you will come and take me to the Temple of the Winds." That's what I want, we walk hand in hand under the sky of freedom, sharing the joy of each other with family and friends. ”
However, on the way to Britain, the plane was shot down by the Germans, and the billowing fireworks instantly engulfed the two men.
The pilot was rescued by the locals, but his body burned by the fire was so inconspicuous that he lost his appearance and memory.
He couldn't remember who he was, so he was called the "English Patient".

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Hannah was a nurse at the Allied Field Hospital, and because of the war, she lost everything she loved and the people she loved.
The successive heavy blows made her unable to bear the slightest pain.
When Hannah meets the "English Patient", she feels that he is so similar to herself that he is a poor survivor alone.
Two lonely souls draw each other in, comfort each other, and become indispensable pillars of their respective hearts.
The scorched "English patient" is running out of time, and the bumpy journey will exacerbate the consumption of his life.
So Hannah decided to find a secluded place near the retreat route and stay alone to take care of the "English patient" and let him enjoy the last moments of his life.
Eventually they rested in an abandoned monastery in Italy, where the two wounded hid in the monastery, far from the hustle and bustle of the war, and life seemed peaceful and comfortable.
There were fat plums in the courtyard of the monastery, and Hannah would deliver the peeled plum meat to the mouth of the "English patient", and she also planted greens in the open space near the monastery, looking like she had been quiet for years.
The "English patient" lay quietly on the wooden bed of the room, and Hannah deliberately moved the wooden bed to find the best angle so that her patient could see the beautiful scenery outside even when lying on the bed.
On a wooden table near the window lay a worn-out book, the book carried by the "English Patient", Herodotus's History.
The "English Patient" looked at it, he remembered the moment when he first had a crush on his "wife" Catherine, and the books seemed to awaken his memory...
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Lying on his hospital bed, the "English Patient" said to Hannah: "I can see the beautiful desert, before the war I surveyed, drew maps, I saw my wife." ”
That night, a group of them sat around the fire in the desert, turning bottles of wine and playing Truth or Dare.
When the bottle is aimed at Catherine, she tells a very allegorical historical story.
King Ganteri was bent on proving that the queen was the most beautiful woman in the world.
So Gantri told Queen Geji about her nightly habits: "She would take off her clothes one by one and put them on a chair in the doorway, after which you could admire her body as much as you wanted." ”
That night Geji hid in a corner, and as the king said, Geji saw the naked queen, who was as beautiful as a fairy, beyond his imagination.
The queen looked up and saw Geji hiding in the shadows, her whole body trembling and not saying a word.
The next day, the queen summoned Geji to ask him why he was peeking at her, and Gaiji told her the truth.
The queen said, "If you do not want to be put to death, kill the king who insulted me and take his throne." ”
Eventually Geji killed the king, married the queen, and ruled Rydia for twenty-eight years.
Catherine's story is from Herodotus' History, a favorite book of the "English Patient", which he carries with him and reads it at any time.
But he did not expect that the history of Herodotus could be unfolded in such a vivid way, such a beautiful story, a beautiful Catherine, he listened to it, indulged in it, but did not know it.
The "English Patient" would then sneak up on Catherine and follow her into the bazaar.
After seeing that Catherine had spent a lot of money on a cheap blanket, he would jump out and tell her that she had lost money and claim that he could help her get justice.
But Catherine loved the blanket, and she thought it was great value for money.
The "English patient" who is not good at hooking up with women is eager to present herself in front of Catherine, but instead makes Catherine very angry, she feels offended, leaving the nasty man in front of her and leaving alone.
The "English Patient" followed Catherine all the way, secretly escorting her back to the hotel.
He himself explained that it was not safe for a woman to return to the hotel alone, and that he had an obligation to protect Catherine, not to mention that the woman was also the wife of his colleague Jeff Clifton.
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Yes, Catherine was actually his colleague's wife.
The "English patient" was afraid to admit that he was in love with Catherine, that he could not fall in love with a married woman, but his eyes and thoughts were all on Catherine.
So contradictory, so entangled, there is nowhere to vent emotions, there is nothing to do.
He could only write his feelings for Catherine on paper, and sandwich the words full of thoughts in the books of History, so that they would be sealed in his heart forever.
On a dusty night, the "English Patient" and Catherine are in the same car. He said to her, let me tell you some stories of the wind.
Outside, the wind was rolling sand in the desert, the wind was roaring by the window, and Catherine inside the car was resting on the arm of the "English patient" to listen to him talk about Simon's hot wind.
Slowly, he bent his arms and stroked Catherine's hair with his hands, whispering stories about the wind in her ear.
The feelings of the two men quickly warmed up, Catherine did not dare to turn back to face him in the eyes, she was helpless, and the awkward atmosphere in the car spread.
Later, Catherine saw the words he had written in the "History" book of the "English Patient", so hot and so sincere, she seemed to know why the clumsy man in front of her was always "targeting" her everywhere.
Catherine was with the "English Patient" and they dated and kissed like normal couples.
But both men were condemned by their consciences, and after the two men had warmed up, the "English Patient" would say to Catherine, "Forget me after you leave me."
Catherine couldn't forget him, just as he couldn't forget Catherine.
Catherine would wear his favorite pincers around his neck until the last moment of his life.
He would heal alone at night after Catherine proposed to break up under inner pressure, would lose his attitude at the dinner table, and would be jealous of Catherine's dance partner.
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Eventually Jeffer discovers the fact that his wife Catherine and his colleague "The English Patient" had a private meeting.
Heartbroken, he chose to crash into the "English patient" in the desert in a plane on a clean afternoon, and Jeffer had planned to end the painful life of the three of them.
However, the "English patient" safely avoided, and Jeffer himself was killed on the spot, and his wife Catherine was seriously injured.
Lying on his hospital bed, the "English patient" finally remembered everything, his name was Emmass, a descendant of the Hungarian nobility, who loved history and followed a group of like-minded people on an expedition in the Sahara Desert.
He remembered that he had placed the injured Catherine in a cave in the desert, leaving her enough food and water, as well as the "History" he had always carried, and promised that his lover would come back to pick her up as soon as he found the rescue army.
He walked in the desert for three days and three nights, and finally found the British troops stationed near the desert, too late to explain, too late to rest for a moment, he needed a car to drive to the desert to rescue his beloved.
The British, suspecting him of being a German spy, knocked him unconscious, forcibly took him on a train, and forced him out of the Sahara Desert.
But Catherine was still in the dark cave waiting for help, and she was enduring cold and hunger, experiencing fear and despair.
Emmaus couldn't imagine how scared Catherine was at this point, he was going back, and Catherine was waiting for him.
So he stunned the soldiers guarding him and jumped off the train.
He found the Germans and gave the desert exploration map as a bargaining chip in exchange for a plane in exchange for the British plane of his former British friend Medo.
After learning that he had given the map of the desert to the Germans, Meedor mistakenly thought that his trusted friend was a German spy, and in anger and shame, he raised his gun and committed suicide.
By the time Emmaus flew back to the cave, Catherine had left him forever.
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Eventually, at the request of the "British patient", Hannah injected him with a large dose of morphine.
Long after Catherine's death, Emmaus no longer missed the world.
At the last moment of her life, Hannah, at the request of her patient, softly read Catherine's last words written in the history books.
"My love, I am waiting for you, how tormented the long days in the darkness, I have long lost a few hours of time, the weak firewood will eventually burn out, only the cruel cold remains..."