In the film, along with Rhett's second honorable proposal of marriage to Scarlett, he also promises to pamper Scarlett with a "vulgar" diamond ring, an expensive New Orleans honeymoon, and many many fancy new clothes.

On their honeymoon after their marriage, after all Scarlett's years of skimping and conniving, she is finally able to spend money in an ostentatious way. She is now nouveau riche. A picture postcard scene reflects their world of pleasure. In the moonlight, a grand Mississippi riverboat is taking Rhett and Scarlett to their honeymoon in New Orleans. Lying back in her riverboat cabin, the newly married bride smiles and asks: "I'm thinking about how rich we are. Rhett - I can keep the lumber business too, can't I?"

Then while they are in a New Orleans restaurant, Cancan dancers skillfully entertain them. They have found time to have some fun. But that night, Scarlett experiences troubling dreams of insecurity, and she sees herself as a being who is lost in some thick mist.

When Rhett returns with her to Tara, he understands that Scarlett finds her strength there: "You get your strength from this red earth of Tara, Scarlett. You're a part of it. It's a part of you." Will they find a way to have their honeymoon live on or will it at some point come to an end?

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