If you are obscure, plain, poor and little, life may not be smooth and easy for you. Ask Jane Eyre. You may have to bite wicked older cousins who want to torture you, defend yourself from a jealous aunt who wishes you were dead, you may have to survive long solitary hours locked in a scary red room, then to strive to keep yourself sane and alive in a bleak, heartless place like a school for poor girls, you must accept to go on living without anybody caring for you or loving you ... but, in the end, you'll meet your hero, your Mr Rochester and have your own reward. He is not tender and handsome, maybe, but impetuous, fascinating, authoritative, mysterious, restless. Anyhow, he doesn't trample on you, he doesn't make you feel a nobody, he treats you as his equal and trusts you. Last but not least, he desires you passionately. What if you discover on your wedding day that he has a mad wife in the attic and can't marry you? No panic, hold on, you can make it. You'll have to endure the awesome shock, run away and give up your dreams for a while, live among strangers you'll learn to love for about a year, but be sure, at last, you'll have your reward, you'll have your happy ending.
Well, told like that, this incredibly beautiful story loses all its gripping quality. I'm not as good as a Bronte sister as a story-teller, I know. But I can assure you, that's not how I usually tell about JANE EYRE to my students. It is, in fact, one of those novels I have read and studied several times and in different moments of my life, and which I respect and deeply love.
It's been some time since I last worked on it and read from it with my students (5 years?). I'm glad it is part of my syllabus this year and it is the subject of my lessons just these days.
Every time I deal with the series of incredible tragic events in the Brontes' lives or read one of their novels, I wonder how strong they must have been. Those fragile little girls living at Haworth must have been as brave as Victorian heroines in their short unfortunate lives. As strong and brave as their own heroines.
Because how can you not admire Jane Eyre's temper and strong will? Her love for life, self - respect, endurance and intelligence, her independent spirit and simpathetic attitude to other human beings, especially those complex and damaged like her? She's strong and she manages to tame reckless Mr Rochester, her own passionate temper as well as life itself. She is a real winner: someone who gets to self-realization never accepting compromises. She doesn't cheat nor pretend, she doesn't hide her weaknesses, she doesn't complain nor surrender.
The novel made quite a stir in its time since Jane shows a courage and a determination which contrast with Victorian ideals of female delicacy - such qualities were considered typical of men only. Jane Eyre is a passionate woman, but she's never slave to love, she is ready to sacrifice it to her own notion of honour and duty. We can see this when Jane prays God to give her the strength to leave Thornfield and Mr Rochester once she discovers he deceived her, or when she goes back to him in the end. She only goes back when she feels strong enough to do so and even then the dialogue between her and Mr Rochester shows the woman teasing the man and leading the game rather than mildly surrendering to him.
We can definitely consider Jane Eyre a modern heroine. She wants to dispose of her life and her future according to her conscience, beyond conventions and circumstances, defending her own dignity and free will, stating she is Mr Rochester's equal, a man's equal. That can sound obvious to us, present day readers, but definitely it was not current opinion in Victorian England. In fiction as in real life, the social and psychological inferiority of women was a dogma universally accepted.
So, if you are looking for a real self-made woman, the forerunner of many modern women, able to build their lives day by day with strength and courage, facing adversities and counting only on themselves, no workarounds and no compromises ... ask Jane Eyre.
(Random thoughts on Charlotte Bronte's character come to my mind while preparing notes and videos for my lessons. The pictures above are for BBC Jane Eyre, featuring Ruth Wilson as Jane and Toby Stephens as Mr Rochester)
My favourite passage from the novel
You can also read my post at http://www.literaryladiesguide.com/essays/ask-jane-eyre/
You can also read my post at http://www.literaryladiesguide.com/essays/ask-jane-eyre/
4 comments:
Wonderful post--Jane Eyre is a heroine for all time, and it's hard to really understand the mindset that condemned her and her author and labeled them "monstrous."
I thought your synopsis of the story to be quite good actually--Bronte fleshes it out and makes it sing, but you've captured the essence and grit of it.
I think Jane's self-respect and refusal to made to feel small, regardless of physical stature, is what I most admire about her. There was a lot of Charlotte Bronte in Jane, methinks!
@JaneGS I agree with you, Jane. I also feel there's much of Charlotte in Jane Eyre. And the plain, obscure, poor and little heroine of this novel is somewhat one of the heroines I most easily sympathize with. I deeply admire her strength.
Thanks for appreciating and for leaving your comment.
Couldn't agree more, JaneGS.
The marriage proposal chapter is excellent. Excellent choice, Maria Grazia! And a beautifully written post too. :)
Thank you, Traxy. Glad you liked it. I know how much you love this novel!
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