The four misers in European literature usually referred to the four misers in the "God of Wealth" by Mauricio de Maurassant: the coppersmith, the blacksmith, the bread master, and the miller. These four characters represented four different types of greed and selfishness in the story: 1 Coppersmith: He is very greedy and is only willing to pay the highest price for bronze. He was also very cold to his wife and only cared about his financial situation. 2. Blacksmith: He is also very greedy and is only willing to pay the highest price for ironware. He was also very selfish towards his family and friends, only caring about his own financial interests. 3. Bread Master: He is also very greedy and is only willing to pay the highest price for bread. He was also very cold to his family and friends and only cared about his own financial interests. 4. Miller: He is also very greedy and is only willing to pay the highest price for grain. He was also very selfish towards his family and friends, only caring about his own financial interests. These four characters in the story through the pursuit of money to show the greed and selfishness of the character, but also reflected some of the drawbacks and problems of society at that time.
The four classic misers in European literature were as follows: Sherlock Holmes was the protagonist of the detective novel The Complete Sherlock Holmes. Holmes was a very shrewd, selfish and greedy person. He valued his wealth and status very much and often obtained wealth through deception and theft. Alcatraz, the miser in the fairy tale of Arbat Grimm, was a greedy, selfish, and cold character. In order to obtain more wealth and status, he did not hesitate to deceive and steal, even putting his relatives and friends in danger. 3 Ivan Pavlov (Ivan Pavlov's story) is a miser in Russian folktales. He was a very greedy and selfish person. In order to obtain more wealth and status, he did not hesitate to use all kinds of means to cheat and steal. 4 Quasimodo (The Hunchback of Clock Tower) in Victor Hugo's Notre-Dame de Paris was a greedy, selfish and stingy character. He valued his wealth and status very much. In order to obtain more wealth, he was willing to resort to all kinds of deception and theft.
The four misers in European literature were usually referred to as Carl Blanchot, Jerome Bruner, Alfred Holmes, and Hans Christian Andersen in Agatha Christie's Murder on the Oriental Express. These characters were often seen as greedy, selfish, cunning, and insidious people. They played the role of misers in the story.
The four misers in the history of European literature were Jane Eyre, A Tale of Two Cities, Pride and Predict, and Emma Jane by Charlotte Bronte.
The four classic examples of the eternal misers in European literature were: 1 Mr. Rochester in Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre. He was extremely stingy with money and material wealth, but he was very generous with his daughter's love. 2 Quasimodo, the bell ringer in Hugo's "Notre-Dame de Paris." He was very stingy with himself and the people around him, but he was very generous to charity. 3. Mathilde Noras in The Necklace by Moupassant. She was extremely stingy with her wealth, but she was willing to give up everything for the person she liked. 4 Charles Dickens in Dickens 'A Tale of Two Cities. He was a wealthy gentleman, but he was very stingy with his money and was very cold to his wife and daughter.
The four misers in literature were usually referred to as Jia Zheng, Grandmother Jia, Xue Baochai, Jia Baoyu, and others in Dream of the Red Chamber. The degree of their stinginess varied, but they were all greedy, selfish, and vicious characters. Jia Zheng was an extremely shrewd businessman. He paid great attention to his own interests. Not only did he live frugally, but he also asked his family to do the same. He was very stingy with money and was only willing to pay a high price for items. Grandmother Jia, on the other hand, was a very astute parent. She paid great attention to the interests of the family. She was very frugal with her clothes, jewelry, and food. However, she was also very greedy and always wanted to obtain more benefits. Xue Baochai was a very rational and shrewd person. She paid great attention to her image and status. She was very good at managing money and was good at saving money, but she also paid great attention to her own interests. Jia Baoyu was a dull, selfish, and greedy man. He was very concerned about his wealth and status, but at the same time, he was very confused and helpless. In 'Dream of the Red Chamber', these characters were all very full. Their personalities and fates were very complicated and complicated. These characters also reflected the various drawbacks of feudal society and the distortion of human nature.
The four misers in Chinese literature referred to the four greedy and stingy characters in ancient Chinese novels. 1. Wang Hai of the Xia and Shang Dynasties (c. 1400 - 1046 B.C.): He was the "Jia Baoyu" in "Dream of the Red Chamber". The prototype was an extremely greedy businessman who did not hesitate to lie, cheat, steal and other means to obtain more wealth. 2. Yan Jiansheng of the Western Han Dynasty (c. 139 - 87 B.C.): He was a character in The Scholars. He was a greedy businessman and landlord who did not hesitate to kidnap and extort in order to obtain more wealth. 3. Xue Tao of the Tang Dynasty (about 713-about 770 AD): She was the heroine of the Song of Everlasting Sorrow. She was a greedy aristocratic woman who did not hesitate to cheat, steal, blackmail and other means to obtain wealth in order to obtain more property. 4. Wang Anshi of the Song Dynasty (1021 - 1086): He was the villain in the Water Margins. He was an extremely greedy politician and businessman who did not hesitate to deceive the people and plunder the country's wealth through reforms in order to obtain more wealth. These four misers were widely praised in ancient Chinese novels as symbols of greed, selfishness, and stinginess, reflecting the dark side of society at that time.
The four misers in world literature originated from the ancient Chinese novel, Dream of the Red Chamber. The following was a detailed description of the four misers: 1 A Xiaocun: The character from Dream of the Red Chamber is stingy, greedy, and loves money as much as his life. In order to obtain more wealth, he does not hesitate to use all kinds of despicable means. 2. Grandet: The novel of the same name by Grandet from France is another famous miser. She was greedy, selfish, and squandered money to the extreme. In the end, she led to a tragic fate because of greed and selfishness. 3. Crusoe: From the United Kingdom's Defoe's "Crusoe" is a rational and brave character. Because of his own stinginess and greed, he was trapped on a deserted island and finally obtained freedom through his own efforts and wisdom. Sherlock Holmes: The Sherlock Holmes novel by the British mathematician, physicist, and logician Conan Doyle was another famous miser. He was smart and capable, and in order to pursue more wealth and power, he did not hesitate to resort to all kinds of despicable means.