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t different from othersBeth had her troubles as well as the others, and not being an angel but a very human little girl, she often `wept a little weep39。, and the name suited her excellently, for she seemed to live in a happy world of her own, only venturing out to meet the few whom she trusted and loved.“One forlorn fragment of dollanity had belonged to Jo and, having led a tempestuous life, was left a wreck in the rag bag, from which dreary poorhouse it was rescued by Beth and taken to her refuge. Having no top to its head, she tied on a neat little cap, and as both arms and legs were gone, she hid these deficiencies by folding it in a blanket and devoting her best bed to this chronic invalid. If anyone had known the care lavished on that dolly, I think it would have touched their hearts, even while they laughed. She brought it bits of bouquets, she read to it, took it out to breathe fresh air, hidden under her coat, she sang it lullabies and never went to be without kissing its dirty face and whispering tenderly, I hope you39。s wish for the girls in his letters, Jo tried to live up what their father had expected her to do. She detected that she was not the only one struggling with outbursts of anger. Much to her amazement, she found her mother also possessed a hidden temper. This knowledge helped Jo believed she could, with effort, control hers. After all, her great wish was to bee a famous romance writer. She knew reaching that goal would require discipline. Jo39。ll up again...Though not the oldest daughter of the family, Jo put herself in the position of the man of the house in father39。t kill me...when I39。 ) This speech perfectly delivered the nature of Jo acts like a boy. Jo is the only one of the four girls who braves and challenges the oppressive and restrictive true womanhood, she alone exhibits the spirit of independence and unconventionality. Dreaming of being a boy, she ridicules and discards wherever possible the etiquette and decorum required of true girls. She even brushes away the respectability of a middleclass girl by working as a governess in New York. advantage Jo also loves literature, both reading and writing it. She poses plays for her sisters to perform and writes stories that she eventually gets published. She imitates Dickens and Shakespeare and Scott, and whenever she39。s so boyish that Mr. March has referred to her as his son JO in the past, and her best friend Laurie sometimes calls her my dear fellow. There were many significant moments in the book in which Jo acted with a strong will like a man. One of the moments happened in chapter three:“But Jo, who didn39。t go and fight in the Civil War alongside her father, who has volunteered as a chaplain. Instead, Jo has to stay at home and try to reconcile herself to a nineteenthcentury woman39。t bear to be left on the sidelines。 )When we first meet Jo March, she39。s worse than ever now, for I39。s games and work and manners. I can39。ve got to grow up and be Miss March, and wear long gowns, and look as prim as a China Aster. It39。s the only sister who can really remember when her family used to be wealthy, and she feels nostalgic about those good old days. Boyish Jo March’s Character general descriptionJo March is the second daughter of Mrs. March. She had a decided mouth, a ical nose, and sharp, gray eyes, which appeared to see everything, and were by turns fierce, funny, or thoughtful. Round shoulders had Jo, big hands and feet, a flyaway look to her clothes, and the unfortable appearance of a girl who was rapidly shooting up into a woman and didn39。s turned herself into, and she never does it again. Even at her wedding, Meg wears a simple dress that she makes herself by hand. unusual virtue In spite of her small vanities, Meg had a sweet and pious nature, which unconsciously influenced her sisters, especially Jo, who loved her very tenderly, and obeyed her because her advice was so gently given.As she is the eldest of the four, she knew her responds. When her sisters met troubles, she is always willing to help them. As the oldest daughter, she has always shouldered a fair amount of responsibility, particularly with not having her father at home. She39。s dressed up like a doll, she realizes that39。s trying to impress are unbelievably shallow. She doesn39。s got it in spades. Meg tries to set aside her materialism, and gradually learns to value simple things more because of the hard work that it takes to earn them. Before she gets to that point, however, she spends many, many hours envying the fortune and leisured life of her friends Sallie Gardiner and the Moffat girls. In fact, at one point Meg allows the Moffats to dress her up in fancy clothes, covering her in makeup and jewelry and making her show far more cleavage than a demure, protestant, nineteenthcentury girl really should. She even – we know you39。s rambunctious, tomboyish behavior. Each of the March sisters has at least one major character flaw that she struggles to overe, and Meg is no different. Meg39。s why she39。s about love and marriage, and Jo starts to suspect pretty early on that Meg might have a reallife Prince Charming in her thoughts. Meg is sweetnatured, dutiful, and not at all flirtatious – in fact, she39。s also a bit of a romantic。 )Those words can be best illustrated by her this characteristic. As she said, she was `fond of luxury39。t dance without them, and if you don39。 )When Meg received a regular note of invitation, she was so excited. She waved the precious paper and then proceeded to read it with girlish delight. You must have gloves, or I won39。s also the most typical of the sisters – we think of her as everything that you might expect a nineteenthcentury American girl from a good family to be. Meg runs the household when her mother is absent. character: fond of luxuryFrom the works we can be found that she has a small weakness for luxury and leisure. That is vanity. At the beginning of the book,