Mr. Rochester and Mr. Jane Air, Charlotte Bronte and the Broad Magason Sea, writer Jane Lease, but this relationship is not certain. The main male character of Jane Eyre is Mr. Rochester with a very strange history in the Caribbean. On the other hand, the "Broad Sargasso Sea" moved to the Caribbean after the lifetime in the UK. Jean Rees never said that the two men were the same, but the similarity between the two led the reader to believe it is.
Edward Rochester is a wealthy man with Thornfield Manor and plenty of land. He has no living parents, brothers and sisters. Mr. Rochester is a gloomy old man, "almost 40 years old". Mr. Rochester loves Jane passionately and I think she is equal. He pays attention to her and he talks about his feelings about her. He is not overly devout. On the contrary, Saint John is not a wealthy person. He has brothers and sisters. He has two sisters, Mary and Diana. He is a young man. Saint John is pathetic, but he really does not love her. For practical reasons he wanted to marry her. He thinks that she will be a good missionary's wife. Saint John proposed Jane admit himself as "he will never love him, but he will approve." Saint John is very religious, he is planning to become a missionary
In the whole novel, John and Rochester each provided very different Jane. As is common in novels, Mr. Rochester is not a handsome guy, Jane is also very flat. "When you see me, Ay, do you think I am handsome," she asked immediately when she asked: "No, teacher", there is no detention. Clearly, the perfect aspect of the body is not important to Jane. Because she transcends this superficial quality and still loves the man he is in. Perhaps the physique that her lover's charm is not so much more comfortable around him that he may not want to follow the beautiful traditional features she does not have. Saint John is the opposite of Mr. Rochester. As Jane said, "St. John is very well dressed, he is a handsome man: the image of the Greeks, tall, fair, blue eyes"
Jane Air is rebellious in the women's world demanding obedience. Jane rebelled against Mrs. Reed, Mrs. Reed, John Rivers in his own way and Mr. Rochester who married at the end of the book. Jane's character includes many qualities that are considered ideal for British women; she lacks candid, straightforward, and personal vanity. However, the rebellion she opposed was mainly aimed at "social inequality". Because of her class and gender, she reacted strongly when she was infamous. One of the main signs of Jane Eyre is the burning of Thornfield. Prior to meeting Jane, Mr. Rochester was impulsive and crazy. He wants to change Jane's purity to motivate his change. Mr. Rochester will not change even if there is Jane's influence. Until Burnfield burned, Mr. Rochester lost his hand and saw that he could change. Symbolically, it seems that his lies and passions have finally exploded.