Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel accommodation - What kind of story does Foster's A Room with a View mainly tell?

What kind of story does Foster's A Room with a View mainly tell?

Lucy is a girl from a middle-class family in England. Accompanied by her cousin bartlett, she went to Florence and lived in an apartment in Bertau. However, she found that the owner of the apartment did not arrange a room with a view for them as promised. Mr Emerson and his son George proposed to exchange rooms with her. However, the conservative and rigid bartlett thought his proposal was inappropriate, but finally he reluctantly accepted it.

Other guests in Bertau's apartment, including Father Bibby and Novelist Lavezzi, introduced their views on Italian and other guests to Lucy and Miss bartlett. Emerson and his son came from the working class and were regarded as nouveau riche. Old Mr. Emerson was a liberal and refused to baptize his son George. George is influenced by his father, simple and natural. On a shopping trip, Lucy witnessed a murder in the street and then fainted. It happened that George helped her.

Later, in an outdoor activity attended by apartment residents, George couldn't help kissing Lucy, which made Lucy deeply uneasy and wanted to stay away from George. At bartlett's suggestion, they set off for Rome, where they met Cecil, an elegant aristocratic youth, who was very gentlemanly, but indifferent and empty. Later, they got engaged.

Soon, Emerson and his son George also came here, rented a villa and became neighbors with Lucy. Lucy is sensitive and sincere, but still immature. She gradually realized that she loved George instead of Cecil. Lucy's confession to George seemed calm on the surface, but in fact, her heart was deeply shocked, so she broke off her engagement with Cecil. Lucy had a long talk with Mr Emerson, so that she finally decided to accept George's love. They went to the apartment where they had spent their honeymoon before.