Perfection and darkness: Jane Eyre's selection When I read Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre, I noticed myself supporting Rochester himself. After completing this book, I asked myself why Jane chose Rochester instead of Saint John. After all, Rochester had a "crazy" wife, Bertha Mason. While suggesting marrying Jane, he was trapped in the attic of Thornfield Hall. He has a word of living with him and may be a descendant of an illegal relationship with a French dancer. He is arrogant, aggressive and basically disgusted.
Passion and practicality of Jane Eyre Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre is a mature story about nontraditional women's development in society with strict rules and expectations. At the critical moment of Jane's life, the choices she made were influenced by her emotions and rationality. Through these selections, Jane learns to balance passion and practice to achieve true happiness. Jane is a dynamic woman, her emotions give her a unique personality for the female heroine of this age.
The title character Jane Steele is not clear about Jane Eyre. Like Jane Eyre, she is a leading Victorian orphan and Jane Eyre is her favorite book. Like Jane Eyre, Jane Steele was sent to her charity school by her evil aunt and eventually became a magical country house tutor owned by a man with a dark secret - She inevitably falls into her Love the river. The story structure of Jane Steele reflects the story of Jane Eyre, but when Jane Steele and Jane Eyre were attacked by wealthy and evil cousins, she killed him. When she got hungry abused in front of a sadistic charity principal like Jane Eyre, she killed him. Jane Eyre finished with an epoch-making route "reader, I married him", "Jane Steele begins with" The Reader, I murdered him ".
Jane Eyre is a growing novel. This means that Jane Eyre 's book focuses on Jane Eyre' s spirit, morality, psychology, social development, and growth from girls to adulthood. In this long and difficult journey, the hero must feel some loss or discontent at the young age, forcing him to embark on this journey. During the Victorian era, adults thought they should see their children, but they did not ask. A typical example of this is that Jane served as a tutor for a tutor at Rochester's house. Mr. Rochester has customers in his mansion; his guest commented and commented on Adele's behavior.