Wednesday, November 27, 2019
Jane Eyre By Charlotte Bronte (1816 - 1855) Essays -
  Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte (1816 - 1855)    Jane Eyre  by Charlotte Bronte (1816  - 1855)    Type of Work:    Psychological romance    Setting    Northern England; 1800s    Principal Characters    Jane Eyre, an orphan girl    Mrs. Reed, Jane's aunt, and mistress of    Gateshead Hall    Edward Rochester, the once-handsome owner  of Thornfield Manor    St. John Rivers, a young clergyman    Story Overveiw    Orphaned at birth, Jane Eyre was left  to live at Gateshead Hall Manor with her aunt-in-law, Mrs. Reed. Jane remained  at the estate for ten years, subjected to hard work, mistreatment, and  fixed hatred.    After a difficult childhood, the shy, petite    Jane was sent to Lowood School, a semi-charitable institution for girls.    She excelled at Lowood and over the years advanced from pupil to teacher.    Then she left Lowood to become the governess of a little girl, Adele, the  ward of one Mr. Edward Rochester, stern, middle-aged master of Thornfield    Manor.    At Thornfield, Jane was comfortable with  life - what with the grand old house, its well-stocked and silent library,  her private room, the garden with its many chestnut, oak and thorn trees,  it was a veritable palace. Mr. Rochester was a princely and heroic master,  and, despite his ireful frown and brusque, moody manner, Jane felt at ease  in his presence. Rochester confided that Adele was not his own child but  the daughter of a Parisian dancer who had deserted her in his care. Still,  even with this forthright confession, Jane sensed that there was something    Rochester was hiding.    Off and on, Jane heard bizarre, mysterious  sounds at Thornfield. She finally discovered that Rochester kept a strange  tenant on the third floor of the mansion. This hermit-like woman, once  employed by Rochester - or so he said - often laughed maniacally in the  night. And other disturbances soon followed.    One evening, after the household had gone  to sleep, Jane was aroused by the smell of smoke - to find Mr. Rochester's  bed on fire. Only with a great deal of exertion did she manage to extinguish  the flames and revive her employer.    Some time later, a Mr. Mason from Jamaica  arrived for a house party. Shortly after retiring that evening, Jane and  the house guests were awakened by the sound of a man screaming for help.    Rochester reassured his guests that it was merely a servant's nightmare  and persuaded them to return to their rooms. But Jane was obligated to  spend the rest of the night caring for Mr. Mason, who had somehow received  serious slashes to his arm and shoulder. After hinting that he had obtained  these wounds from an attack by a madwoman, he quietly left the house on  the next morning.    One day Jane was urgently summoned to Gateshead:    Mrs. Reed was dying. Upon jane's arrival, Mrs. Reed presented her with  a letter from her childless uncle, John Eyre, requesting that Jane come  to him in Madeira, as he wished to adopt her. The letter had been delivered  three years before, but, because of her dislike for the girl, Mrs. Reed  had written John Eyre to inform him that Jane had unfortunately died in  an epidemic earlier that year. Adoption by her unclc would have given Jane  not only a family but an inheritance - one she still might claim. However,  she decided to return to Thornfield.    One night, in the garden at Thornfield,    Mr. Rochester proposed marriage - and Jane accepted. She excitedly wrote  to her Uncle John to tell him the news. But one month later, on the morning  of her wedding day, Jane was startled from sleep by a repulsive, snarling  old wot-nan in a long, white dress and fondling Jane's veil. Before bounding  out the door, the wretch shredded the veil. Jane's groom comforted his  shaken bride; and Jane calmed herself and prepared for the i-narriage.    The ceremony was near its end; the clergyman  had just uttered the words, "Wilt thou have this woman for thy wedded wife?"  when a voice suddenly broke in: "The marriage cannot go on. I declare the  existence of an impediment." When asked for the facts, this man - a lawyer  - produced a document proving that Rochester had married one Bertha Mason  in Jamaica some fifteen years earlier. Mr. Mason, the mysteriously wounded  house guest, stood as witness to the fact that Bertha was still alive and  living at Thoriifield. At last Rochester stepped forward and acknowledged  that the accusation was true, but that his wife had gone mad; in fact,  she came from a family of idiots and maniacs for three generations back.    Rochester further maintained that this early wedding had been arranged  by his father and brother in hopes that he would marry into a fortune.    The groom-to-be next    
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