There is still hope.
Yes it is her famous line in the movie Gone With the Wind! TRUST ME ON THAT!
"I'll think about that tomorrow" Considering the fact that she is the main character... there are to many to list here. Some well known lines are "Fiddle-dee Ashely says he likes a girls with a healthy appetite." "I'll think about it tomorrow, after all tomorrow is another day."
Gone with the wind?
Source of the title "Gone with the Wind"The phrase "Gone with the Wind" refers to the swift and complete destruction of the "Old South" -the culture, economic system, infrastructure, wealth, and the people themselves - as a result of the Civil War. The film's opening credits refer to the "Old South" as "a civilization gone with the wind..."
Scarlett can't bear to think of it (losing Rhett) today so she would think of it tommorrow as she is fond of saying and plans to return to Tara (her home and safehaven before the war even began).
Yes it is her famous line in the movie Gone With the Wind! TRUST ME ON THAT!
Scarlett say tomorrow is another day
"After all, tomorrow is another day" is the last line of the novel "Gone with the Wind" by Margaret Mitchell.
The first one, and the one which made it a famous line is, of course, Gone with the Wind (1939). "After all, tomorrow is another day" is the movie's final line, spoken by Scarlet O'Hara.
Gone with the Wind.
"I'll think about that tomorrow" Considering the fact that she is the main character... there are to many to list here. Some well known lines are "Fiddle-dee Ashely says he likes a girls with a healthy appetite." "I'll think about it tomorrow, after all tomorrow is another day."
Gone with the wind?
Source of the title "Gone with the Wind"The phrase "Gone with the Wind" refers to the swift and complete destruction of the "Old South" -the culture, economic system, infrastructure, wealth, and the people themselves - as a result of the Civil War. The film's opening credits refer to the "Old South" as "a civilization gone with the wind..."
Scarlett can't bear to think of it (losing Rhett) today so she would think of it tommorrow as she is fond of saying and plans to return to Tara (her home and safehaven before the war even began).
AUTHOR OF GONE WITH THE WIND Gone with the Wind was written my Margaret Mitchell.
"Pansy" was the tentative working title of "Gone With the Wind", although other titles considered included "Tomorrow is Another Day," "Not in Our Stars", "Bugles Sang True" and "Tote the Weary Load". The most famous working title was, "Ba! Ba! Black Sheep".
If you mean the one in the book Gone With the Wind, I think it is not real.