Everyone in their lifetime has a period of carefree happiness.
For Jane Sampson, it was no different.
Before she turned 16, she was the Sampton Family's princess, whose only worry in life was being told what to eat by her family due to her frail health—she thought it was the biggest worry in the world.
It was a bigger bother to her than her marriage contract with James Black.
Before she turned 16, when she got angry, she did so with reckless abandon; when she was happy, her laughter was incredibly joyful.
Those were the most innocent and blissful times for Jane, and while acting, she often found herself irresistibly recalling the purity of those times.
Perhaps it's true that pianists generally have good memories—from a young age, memorizing music scores had made her better at remembering things than ordinary people.
Acting opposite Matthew Chip, apart from some initial nervousness, Jane gradually got into her role.