The opportunity to explore the Queen of Spades with Pushkin said in the Bible that God gave people free will. Unfortunately, for human beings the Bible does not fully conform to the meaning of "free will". Some people think that there is the power of opportunity. Those people believe that they can control their future through serious coincidence, luck, and their choice. Some people believe in the power called destiny. Through this idea, there are goals for everything, and ultimately these goals will be achieved. This gives believers an unavoidable feeling, and because of the philosophy of least resistance, they tend to be more relaxed.
Alexander Pushkin first said about the queen of spades is its elegance and simplicity. With less than 30 pages, Pushkin could somehow draw a complex character and tell an attractive psychological story. The romance in the story is not Tomsky, but Herman, also a Russian, imaginative and obsessed Russian. Herman is an outsider on the first page. In addition, he discovered that the secret decision of the card implies some kind of arrogance: he said he could succeed where success was the failure of others and must succeed I believed. As one of the founders of realism, the handling of Pushkin against Hellkin was not a gentle person. Those who own the statue of Napoleon (p. 277) did not win and prosper, but in a spiritual system. . The fact that gambling is the subject of the story suggests that fate - in the form of opportunities - plays a few roles in the story. Pushkin is skeptical of this incredible attitude.
The Queen of Pushkin's spade expressed irony in many ways. Ironically, it is to enchant the audience and keep reading. I must understand the story of Puskin, point out the result, and suddenly have to look at another, unexpected and satiric result. The Queen of Spades highlighted the expression "I expect surprise." Pushkin also used the thrill of gambling to excite the audience. He imitates the classic gambler (a conversation about past bonuses and the formation of a strong interest in each game) and gives a sense of reality so that the audience feels as if they are gambling. Pushkin plays the superstition of the audience. He created rumors that women know how to play the perfect game. In doing so, Pushkin skillfully wagered by testing their beliefs for drunken vision. Pushkin completely sets his story as a sarcastic ending