The novel Jane Eyre is about a young lady who was treated unfairly and all she really wanted was happiness and kindness. Many characters get introduced in this novel and many of them change, but Jane Eyre would have to be the one who changes the most. She doesn’t change in a physical way, but her mind set changes. Throughout the novel Eyre becomes frustrated, hopeless, and open minded. In the beginning of the book, Eyre is living with the Reed family, her aunt and cousins. The Reeds were very wealthy, unlike Jane Eyre’s family. Mrs. Reed’s children are very rude to Jane Eyre especially her son John. Since Eyre has lived with them, she has had to bite her tongue to ensure she doesn’t say anything to upset Mrs. Reed. Well one day John pushed …show more content…
In Thornfield Eyre changes her mind set a lot. In the beginning she felt a sense of imprisonment. She describes it as pacing the corridors like a creature caged. She was longing for her freedom. She changed her mind set when she met Edward Rochester. He offered her a chance to liberate her passions. She knew she had feelings for Rochester, but also knew that as his mistress she would be giving up her dignity and integrity. Jane didn’t know if this is the freedom she wanted. She had always had this idea that she would respect her own dignity and never undergo it, but Rochester makes her want to choose her feelings over everything. She then meets a fellow named St. John Rivers who offers her different aspects then Rochester. He allows her to act willingly when she pleases and offers her to live and work with him in India. Jane Eyre soon realizes that either way she will feel imprisoned because with St. John Rivers she would have to keep her feelings in check. Eyre ended up choosing feelings over everything. She wanted to be with Rochester because she was in love with him. Jane Eyre has the happy ending with Rochester that she now knows she
At first glance Jane Eyre may seem to be a young woman with semi-bad taste in men, but she is actually much more complex a character than that. Jane is driven by her craving for freedom, her desire to be useful, and her yearning to fit in somewhere. She is rich in character with a stubborn, strong willed, and passionate personality. She is not afraid to stand up for what she believes in, whether it is a family she wants to have, or a marriage that is unfair and without balance. As an adult, Jane is a level headed young woman, but as a child she let her passions get the best of her. She tones down this passion quite a bit as she grows older and gains more experience, and channels it into other areas of her life.
Reed, then we follow her to Lowood, and finally, after a little gap, we end up in Thornfield when she is 18. We see how she becomes a more reserved person. The changes from when she was an outspoken, energetic child to a quiet, almost obedient women. Her maturity can be observed when Blanche Ingram is talking about Governesses and Jane Eyre remains quiet. Blanche Ingram says, “I have one word to say to that tribe; they are a nuisance.” This was the same girl who told Mr. Brocklehurst “I must keep in good health and not die” when asked “What must you do to avoid [hell]?”
Sarah Reed saw Jane as a child who doesn’t understand discipline and she felt that Jane didn’t know what the correct way to act and to react to a situation was. Mrs. Reed never showed anything but concern and disbelief towards Jane and believed every word out of her son’s mouth rather than listening and taking in what Jane had to say. “That is for your impudence in answering mama awhile since,”said he, “and for your sneaking way of getting behind curtains, and for the look you had in your eyes two minutes since, you rat!” (Bronte 9). Jane was made to have to call John Reed “Master John” but also was forced to endure brutal punishment from John but Jane attacks John right back.
But while her self-confidence appears to remains unchanged, Jane shows further transformation as she expresses her happiness instead of staying silent and obedient, relaying her rise in confidence. She is tempted by his love and admiration, while threatened by the idea of becoming permanently inferior to him. We see Jane’s desire to be loved but also her deep fear of losing her own freedo and independence by wedding a husband. This fear over losing this newfound independence by becoming indebted to Mr. Rochester is what causes her to leave her “only home” of Thornfield for the unknowing home of the Rivers
Jane Eyre is a coming of age story following a young woman and her journey of self-growth. At the start of the novel Jane is living with her aunt and three cousins. They continuously abuse her, treating her like a stranger rather than a family member. At the age of ten Jane leaves her aunt's house and attends boarding school. It is at this school where she learns lessons of forgiveness and hope from a meek young woman named Helen Burns. Subsequently studying and teaching at the school for eight years Jane decides to become a governess at the mysterious Thornfield mansion. She falls in love with the owner of Thornfield and the two make plans to marry. Nonetheless on the day of there wedding Jane discovers that Mr. Rochester is already married and that he keeps his insane wife Bertha trapped away in the attic of Thornfield. Devastated by this information, Jane flees Thornfield and nearly dies from cold and starvation. Soon after she is taken in by the Rivers, two sisters and one brother. The passing of Jane's uncle reveals that she and the Rivers are cousins. It is also revealed that this uncle has left Jane all his fortune. This in turn leaves Jane extremely wealthy. Her cousin St. John Rivers ask Jane for his hand in marriage. However Jane comes to the conclusion that she still loves Mr. Rochester. After declining St. John's proposal Jane journeys back to Thornfield. When she arrives at Thornfield Jane discovers the mysterious mansion in burnt ruins. It is revealed that the
Jane’s comfort at Thornfield and with Rochester and her rising level of maturity start to bring out more frequent episodes of autonomy and agency, with ease. The next episode rises within a few days of the last, when Jane strives to maintain her identity with Rochester. Mr. Rochester wants to dress her in new clothes and Jewelry, “I will make the world acknowledge you a beauty too […] Jane in satin and lace,” he says (221). In reply, Jane says, “And then you won’t know me, sir; and I shall not be your Jane Eyre any longer” (221). Earlier in the novel Jane had no other option but to be a governess, and so to better her situation she chose to find a new location, other than Lowood, for her “servitude”, and ended up at Thornfield, where she has ultimately fallen in love with Mr. Rochester. Ironically Jane is now in a position where she has the capability to get anything she wants, but she wants nothing, but to be herself. Autonomy and agency are
Jane Eyre is a very intresting novel as soon as you open it the first few chapters are shocking as it shows you two big themes one of which is class and the other is gender. In 1947 people would judge you depending on your class and people in society would judge you and treat you by where you are in the hierarchy tree. Another big theme was gender women were treated as third class citizens no freedom at all. Jane Eyre was a novel about an orphan who is adopted into this wealthy family. However she feels completely out the circle and not part of there family. The family certainly did not make her feel part of them either they first saw her as poor because she came from a poor background even though now she is adopted in there family they still saw her like that and secondly she was a girl so that made things worse and those two combinations were not good. At one point in the novel Mr reed said to her "You have no business to take our books; you are a dependant, mamma says; you have no money; your father left you none; you ought to beg, and not to live here with gentleman's children like us . . " he is telling her
At the beginning of Jane Eyre, we meet the protagonist Jane Eyre, a young girl who feels lost and needs a sense of belonging. Being in an environment where she felt unwanted and wasn't treated fairly, changed how she reacted in
She makes her own decision to leave Lowood after a solid ten years and earns a job with her own abilities and is determined to venture out into the world away from Lowood. When she meets Mr. Rochester, he encourages her to express herself in her own way when he admires her drawings. But as Jane falls in love with Mr. Rochester Jane learns about new emotions that she has never felt before as she finds love and learns how to suppress them. As she falls in love with Mr. Rochester, the master, she learns to conceal her feelings instead of breaking out in emotional outbursts like she did at Gateshead. They eventually fall in love and decide to get married but Jane makes a wise decision to leave Thornfield even though her decision is distressing and heartbreaking she does it for her own
Even after her untimely death, Helen serves as a beacon of hope through all the troubles Jane has to overcome. By being the first person to show Jane affection, Helen introduces Jane to the possibility of a happier life. Due to this friendship, Jane continues through the rest of her life with the understanding that she will not live in misery and deserves a happy ending. This belief comes into play when Jane decides to run away from Thornfield instead of being trapped as Rochester’s mistress. Though she loves Rochester, Jane is aware that being a mistress is not the happy ending she deserves.
Jane Eyre was born an orphan and raised under the hands of a heartless Aunt. Aunt Reed stressed to Jane that she was privileged to live so well without any
Jane Eyre feels manipulated by Mr. Rochesters sly behavior and no longer has a desire to marry him. She decides that her only option is to leave Thornfield and departs to a nearby village. This secret introduces tension to the Eyre/Rochester relationship and creates an aura of mystery and
Jane Eyre is a story about a little orphan girl who was raised by an abusive aunt and later was sent to a charity school. Though she met further hardships, she successfully educated herself and took a job as a governess for the Rochester family. The dark history of Mr. Rochester forced Jane to abandon the bond once between them. After a series of challenges and self-exploration, Jane returned as a mature and independent woman and lived a happily ever-after life with the love of her life. Although she faces all different kinds of changes in her life, she never lost the sense of dignity and the determination for maintaining her own autonomy.
Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre is a coming-of-age story about an unconventional woman's development within a society of strict rules and expectations. At pivotal moments in Jane's life, she makes choices which are influenced by her emotions and/or her reason. Through the results of those choices, Jane learns to balance passion and practicality to achieve true happiness.
Firstly, Jane Eyre is a young woman who faces hardships with great determination. Raised by Mrs. Reed, a cruel aunt, she is sent