equality, respect

Rachelle 2022-04-21 09:02:19

Jane Eyre's life was not good since she was a child. Jane Eyre's aunt, Mrs. Reed, not only took away the inheritance left by her parents, but also began to abuse her after the death of her uncle who loved her dearly, and even kept her in the attic. , The dark memories of Jane Eyre are almost nightmarish, and the cousins ​​and cousins ​​sneered at her, just punching and kicking. Later, she was sent to Lowood Charity School (orphanage) by her aunt, and she was punished physically and mentally. Such a tragic life did not make Jane Eyre a shy person full of resentment, but a strong and self-reliant girl with sunshine in her heart. In the face of love, there must be an equal personality and soul. Zhang Ailing once confessed to Hu Lancheng that in front of you, I became very low, low into the dust. But my heart likes it, and flowers bloom from the dust. The love that is as low as the dust finally gets the betrayal of the other party. In love, many people are blind. For the sake of the person they love, they are willing to give up the bottom line, give up self-esteem, and give up on themselves. However, Jane Eyre did not. She said to Rochester, do you think that I am poor and mediocre, so I have no feelings? I swear to you that if God gives me wealth and beauty, I will make it as hard for you to leave me as it is for me to leave you. God did not arrange it this way, but our spirits are equal. Just as you and I walked past the grave and stood before God as equals. Jane Eyre and Rochester's love began at Turnfield Manor, where they met and fell in love with each other. Her love was not because of money, status, wealth, or appearance. It was because the two sides truly loved each other, and she fell in love with him because he could treat people equally and be honest with her. Jane Eyre's love is also noble. When she found Rochester's crazy wife, Jane Eyre collapsed and was very painful, but she still left Rochester, unwilling to become a third party. Later, St. John proposed to Jane Eyre, just because Jane Eyre was suitable to be a missionary's wife, but Jane Eyre rejected him. In the face of love, only the equality of personality and soul can be exchanged for sincere love and the true respect of the other party. Jane Eyre is a girl who loves reading very much. It is this good habit that nourishes her whole life and keeps her from bowing to her fate in hardships. She is a strong, simple, independent and positive woman. She came from a humble background and looked ordinary, but she did not feel inferior. She despised the arrogance of the powerful and ridiculed them... Jane Eyre, a 19th-century British writer Charlotte. Brontë's representative work, she successfully created a new female image who is brave in resistance, pursues self-esteem, self-love, equality and independent personality. Especially her pursuit of pure love still has its practical significance today. In conclusion, Jane Eyre is a woman who has endured the hardships of life, but can be self-reliant, self-respect and self-love, and pursue equality. She has a firm pursuit of her own thoughts and personality. In today's society, people are madly drowning in love for money and status. Few people would abandon everything for love and personality like Jane Eyre. This is the charm of Jane Eyre's personality!

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Extended Reading
  • Clemmie 2022-03-27 09:01:09

    Every girl loves Jane Eyre.

  • Marianna 2021-12-15 08:01:14

    How many roads a woman has to run to get closer to her ideal self; how much fire a man has to burn before she can learn to love again; the butler Fairfax is unprecedentedly rich and subtle, and Judy Dench really suppressed the field; Mia Wasikowska still carried Alice's one. Face suspicion formed a wonderful intertextual relationship; flashbacks from Jane Eyre's departure provide a new perspective.

Jane Eyre quotes

  • Rochester: From whence do you hail? What's your tale of woe?

    Jane Eyre: Pardon?

    Rochester: All governesses have a tale of woe. What's yours?

    Jane Eyre: I was brought up by my aunt, Mrs. Reed of Gateshead, in a house even finer than this. I then attended Lowood school where I received an education as good as I could hope for. I have no tale of woe, sir.

    Rochester: Where are your parents?

    Jane Eyre: Dead.

    Rochester: Do you remember them?

    Jane Eyre: No.

    Rochester: And why are you not with Mrs. Reed of Gateshead now?

    Jane Eyre: She cast me off, sir.

    Rochester: Why?

    Jane Eyre: Because I was burdensome and she disliked me.

    Rochester: [Incredulous] No tale of woe?

  • Mr. Brocklehurst: [Helen is about to be beaten by Ms. Scatcherd] I see you are mortifying this girl's flesh.

    Miss Scatcherd: Sir, she was not...

    Mr. Brocklehurst: It is your mission to render her contrite and self-denying. Continue.

    [Ms. Scatcherd begins beating Helen with a rod. Jane drops her chalkboard as a distraction]

    Mr. Brocklehurst: And you, girl.

    [He has Jane stand on her stool]

    Mr. Brocklehurst: This is the pedestal of infamy, and you will remain on it all day long. You will have neither food nor drink for you must learn how barren is the life of a sinner. Children, I exhort you to shun her, exclude her, shut her out from this day forth. Withhold the hand of friendship and deny your love to Jane Eyre, the liar.