Jane Eyre
Jane Eyre The feminine struggle to not only be accepted, but also respected, by their male counterparts has existed for many years. No matter how educated they are or experience in certain learned crafts, women are still not treated equal. Charlotte Bronte had a good understanding of this, she expressed her own life story and her feminist views in her greatest piece of literature, Jane Eyre. Bronte was able to create such a dynamic character out of Jane Eyre because she parallels her own experiences as a youth. Anguish, misfortune, disappointment, and long-suffering were no strangers to the Bronte' household. With the deaths of their mother and two sisters, Jane and her siblings were never the same. Likewise, their father, Reverend Bronte, was left heartbroken, and faced with the burden of rearing his children on his own. Although Reverend Bronte loved his children, he was not a warm or affectionate man. Since love and cheeriness were no longer a part of the Bronte household, education and religion became the resilient tower of the family. The scholared Reverend Bronte "did more than teach his children; he endowed them with a spirit of inquiry and integrity and an entheus
Through religion , "she shows Jane that she can release her negative emotions, and make them less destructive through forgiveness, and that, by loving her enemies her hatred and anger may fade" (Johnson, 2-3). If you were mad, do you think I should hate you?" (228). They did not enjoy the free will of growing up and finding their own way. The poetry, complete with multi-layered meaning, also allows her booklovers a glimpse into her past. Brocklehurst, the first adviser that she encounters, uses his "Calvinistic philosophy to teach the mortification of the flesh as the way to obtain balance" (Johnson, 2). Her reply was "I am not at all afraid of being out late when it is moonlight", which leads one to believe that the moon was great source solace to her. Nature, Bertha Mason, and reason are among the many reoccurring themes that formulate this narrative and allow the reader to fully comprehend the story Bronte is trying to tell. Knapp said, "So powerful was her imagination, so repressed her instincts and sexual desires, that her poetry - a bridge between her inner and outer worlds- took on the luster of the life she longed for but did not live" (134). Bronte strategically places people in Jane's life to help her find her way. Much of what Knapp refers to as 'powerful' and 'imaginative' are seen in "Unloved I Love, Unwept I Weep" where she shares in the first stanza of the poem:Unloved I love, unwept, I weep,Grief, I restrain, hope I repress;Vain is this anguish, fixed and deep,Vainer desires or means of bliss. Helen Burns is another person who adds balance to Jane's life. Maybe if Jane were a man, she would not have experienced such difficult times, but she would not have been so strong, either.
Common topics in this essay:
Bertha Mason,
Jane Eyre,
Unwept Weep,
Reverend Bronte,
Charlotte Bronte,
Furthermore Jane's,
Maybe Jane,
Penisonnat Hegar,
Finally Bronte,
Jane Rochester,
jane eyre,
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mad hate,
charlotte bronte,
own reverend,
course jane's,
bertha mason,
unwept weep,
love unwept weep,
own reverend bronte,
jane experienced,
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