The four famous images of misers in the world were from France's "Miser," Britain's Bronte's "Jane Eyre," America's Twain's "The Adventures of Tom sawyer," and Russia's "Old Man Gao." The names of these misers were: 1. The protagonist of The Miser, Amatthew de Boire. 2 Charles Jane, the protagonist in Bronte's Jane Eyre. 3. The protagonist of Twain's The Adventures of Tom sawyer, Tom sawyer. 4. Old Man Gao, the protagonist in Old Man Gao.
The four world-famous misers came from France. Their names were: 1 Sherlock Grandet (Sherlock Holmes played by Charlette Hepburn)--an important character in the French film "Goriot." 2 Plushkin (played by William Spear)-a noble character in the British Hamlet. 3. Ernest Burnham (played by Robert Fair play)--a businessman character in Austin's Pride and Predict. 4. Luke Hancock (Edward Norton as Luke Hancock)--A banker character in Luke, London, USA.
The four misers in the world famous novels were: Sherlock Grandet (Sherlock Quinn) was from the British novelist, William shakespeare's hamlet. 2 Sodom (Sodomani) came from the British novelist Byron's Donald Solon and The Ballad of the Vikings. 3 Abagong was from the French novelist Hugo's "Notre-Dame de Paris." 4. Colonel José Alcadeo Buendía in Calvino's One Hundred Years of Solitude and Colonel Victor Hugo in Notre-Dame de Paris.
The following are the images of the four misers in the world famous books and their origins: 1 Mr. Rochester in Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre. He was known as the "Iron Scrooge" and was an extremely greedy and selfish person who was only willing to pay a small price for his own interests. 2 Quasimodo from Hugo's "Notre-Dame de Paris." He was a very greedy and selfish person who did not hesitate to hurt others for his own benefit and often felt guilty because of his own greed and narrow-mindedness. 3 Hamlet from Hamlet. He was an extremely intelligent and greedy person who would resort to all kinds of means to deceive and murder others in order to get what he wanted. 4. Jia Zheng in Cao Xueqin's Dream of the Red Chamber. He was a very greedy and selfish person who did not hesitate to harm others for his own benefit and often did anything for money.
The four world-famous misers came from different countries. Here is their origin: 1 Charlotte's Web's Jane Eyre and Charlotte Bronte in Wuthering Heights 2 Quasimodo from Hugo's "Notre-Dame de Paris" 3. Balzac's "Eugenie Grandet" and "Old Man Goriot" in Eugenie Grandet 4. Colonel Aureliano Buendía in Dickens 'Oliver Twist and A Tale of Two Cities
The world famous Four Misers came from the French "God of Wealth". The names of the misers were: 1 Charlotte Coset: The steward of the God of Wealth was greedy and unscrupulous in order to get money. 2 Jacques Anthony Dulles: The friend of the God of Wealth is extremely selfish and does not hesitate to hurt others for his own benefit. 3 Bernardo de Forgenet: The son of the God of Wealth was greedy and did anything to get money, even killing his father. 4. Nicolas Bernardo del Forgenet: The other son of the God of Wealth was as greedy as Bernardo de Forgenet. He would do anything to get money.
The four misers in the world's four great masterpieces came from different countries and different authors, and their specific works were also different. China: Jia Baoyu, Xue Baochai, Lin Daiyu, and Grandmother Jia in 'Dream of the Red Chamber', as well as Lu Zhishen, Yang Zhi, and Wu Yong in' Water Margins 'were all seen as stingy people. France: The character of 'Stingy' in the film,'The Miser' is a greedy, selfish, and cold businessman. England: Tom Huck, played by Jesse Owens in The King of Finance, is an extremely selfish and greedy businessman. In the United States, the members of the Aureliano Buendía family in One Hundred Years of Solitude were seen as greedy, selfish, and cold misers. The names of the misers were also different. For example, Jia Baoyu in Dream of the Red Chamber was called Jia Bao, Lu Zhishen in Water Margins was called Lu Da, and the character of Maurpassant in Miser was called Grandet.
The four famous misers of the world came from the French "The God of Wealth and the Miser". The name of the miser was Sherlock Grandet (Sherlock Quinn).
The "Four Misers" in literary works referred to the four female characters in "Dream of the Red Chamber": Grandmother Jia, Xue Baochai, Wang Xifeng, and Shi Xiangyun. They were described as greedy, selfish, vicious, and scheming. They were one of the main villains in the classical Chinese novel, Dream of the Red Chamber. The Lady Dowager was an important character in the novel 'Dream of the Red Chamber'. She was Jia Baoyu's grandmother. She was greedy and selfish. In order to protect her status and interests, she did not hesitate to use all kinds of means to deprive others of their interests. Xue Baochai was one of the female protagonists in the novel Dream of the Red Chamber. She was born in a noble family. She was smart, witty, kind, and upright, but her heart was also filled with greed and selfishness. Wang Xifeng was one of the female protagonists in the novel Dream of the Red Chamber. She was beautiful, smart, and witty, but her heart was full of greed and viciousness. Shi Xiangyun was one of the female protagonists in the novel Dream of the Red Chamber. She was cheerful, kind, sincere, but also full of greed and selfishness. They were all representative characters in the Chinese classical novel, Dream of the Red Chamber. They were described as greedy, selfish, and scheming. They were one of the main villains in the novel.
The four misers in foreign literature referred to the four protagonists in Mopassant's "Old Man Goriot," Balzac's "Eugenie Grandet," Hugo's "Notre-Dame de Paris," and Dickens '"David Copperfield." Their characteristics were greed, selfishness, cruelty, and sacrificing others for money, power, and beauty. The image of these four misers became one of the classic images in Western literature.
The "four misers" in the world literature referred to the four characters in "Dream of the Red Chamber", Jia Baoyu, Xue Baochai, Lin Daiyu, and Jia Lian. These four characters were portrayed as greedy, selfish, cruel, and cold in the novel, becoming one of the classic images in the history of Chinese literature.