Jane Eyre
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About this ebook
Introduction and Notes by Dr Sally Minogue, Canterbury Christ Church University College.
Jane Eyre ranks as one of the greatest and most perennially popular works of English fiction. Although the poor but plucky heroine is outwardly of plain appearance, she possesses an indomitable spirit, a sharp wit and great courage.
She is forced to battle against the exigencies of a cruel guardian, a harsh employer and a rigid social order. All of which circumscribe her life and position when she becomes governess to the daughter of the mysterious, sardonic and attractive Mr Rochester.
However, there is great kindness and warmth in this epic love story, which is set against the magnificent backdrop of the Yorkshire moors. Ultimately the grand passion of Jane and Rochester is called upon to survive cruel revelation, loss and reunion, only to be confronted with tragedy.
Charlotte Brontë
Charlotte Bronte nació en 1816 en Thronton (Yorkshire), tercera hija de Patrick Brontë y Maria Branwell. En 1820 el padre fue nombrado vicario perpetuo de la pequeña aldea de Haworth, en los páramos de Yorkshire, y allí pasaría Charlotte casi toda su vida. Huérfanos de madre a muy corta edad, los cinco hermanos Brontë fueron educados por una tía. En 1824, Charlotte, junto con sus hermanas Emily, Elizabeth y Maria, acudió a una escuela para hijas de clérigos; Elizabeth y Maria murieron ese mismo año, y Charlotte siempre lo atribuyó a las malas condiciones del internado. Estudiaría posteriormente un año en una escuela privada, donde ejerció asimismo como maestra; fue luego institutriz, y maestra de nuevo en un pensionado de Bruselas, donde en 1842 estuvo interna con Emily. De vuelta a Haworth, en 1846 consiguió publicar un volumen de Poesías con sus hermanas Emily y Anne, con el pseudónimo, respectivamente, de Currer, Ellis y Acton Bell. Su primera novela, El profesor (ALBA CLÁSICA núm. XLIV), no encontró editor, y no sería publicada hasta 1857. Pero, como Currer Bell, publicó con éxito Jane Eyre (1847; ALBA CLÁSICA MAIOR núm. IV). En 1848, mientras morían a su alrededor Emily y Anne y su hermano Branwell, escribió Shirley (ALBA CLÁSICA núm. XXX), que sería publicada al año siguiente. Su última novela fue Villette (1853). Charlotte se casó con el reverendo A. B. Nicholls un año antes de morir en 1855.
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Reviews for Jane Eyre
13,763 ratings288 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I decided to give the new Serial Reader app a try. If you don't know about it, it is a free app for your phone that each day sends you a small section of a book, one that you can read in 10-15 minutes. Each day you get sent the next installment. For my first book, I decided to read Jane Eyre. I have never read this before, but I know a lot of people love it.
The basic story is really interesting. I liked the beginning part, when Jane is still a child. Stories about children in boarding school always fascinate me, and Jane is sent to a horrible school. Her life is so tragic, and still she manages to stay true to her self. I like how strong Jane is, and how she sticks to her moral code.
The writing style was a bit overdone for my taste, but I think this is a common style from the time that the story was written. There is much moralizing and preaching, and at times it felt like it went on way too long. I did not find Mr. Rochester to be a very likable character. The way he tries to trick Jane and lie to her felt inexcusable to me. But I know Jane is in love with him, and is willing to forgive him. I think the lesson I learned from this is the heart wants what the heart wants, and in the end it can not be denied. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This one took awhile as an audio book. I finally brought it into work to finish it. The reader did a fantastic job with emotion of each of the characters. Very enjoyable.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I’ve never read Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë before, because it wasn’t on our reading lists at school or university, but I must say that, although pious, it’s quite an enjoyable and insightful read. I especially liked that Jane Eyre is still a relatable character in some ways today, though she is tenacious and passionate, she is also kind and intelligent. Few well-rounded female characters like Jane Eyre exist today, which is a shame, considering that human beings are more than just good or just bad. There are numerous other facets to the human psyche, which Charlotte Brontë was able to project into her writing, which makes Jane more than just another literary character. I also felt quite deeply for Mr. Rochester, who so beautifully complimented Jane’s personality, especially when he became passionate and called her: “Sprite! Witch! Elf!” and other, equally silly nicknames. He might not have been incredibly handsome, like every male protagonist is in every single coming-of-age novel these days, but his flaws gave him depth and made him memorable.
Though, at times, the narrative was sometimes littered with religious babble, it’s imperative to the story and to the time. Not many readers would especially enjoy the biblical context (or at times the submissiveness of female characters), but Jane Eyre carries a lot of weight in regards to the evolution of literature. In other words, it’s a must-read novel if one is to have a well-rounded and rich literary knowledge. Funnily enough, Brontë does hint at fantasy at times with the way Jane sees the world. Fairies, sprites, magical beings, and ghosts are mentioned within the novel too …
Themes that are present in the book include: love vs. autonomy, religion, social class, and gender relations.
Jane Eyre might not be as popular lately, due to the increase of paranormal romances, but it’s definitely a book you have to read at least once in your life. Readers who enjoy coming-of-age novels, in general, will love Jane Eyre. Though, not exactly similar, I’m sure that fans of The Selection series by Kiera Cass will also take great pleasure from Brontë’s most popular novel. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I'm an old guy. Not so old that I could have dated the author in high school (she was a couple years ahead of me), but still, not exactly the prime audience for this book. So, maybe I should skip a review altogether. And maybe I should add my two-cents for those other old guys out there thinking of reading the book. This is supposed to be a romantic novel, right? A listing I just saw an online poll that says this is the third most popular classic book ever. On the other hand, my ebook reader system doesn't categorize it as "Book", but under "Kids". Why? Because the lead character starts out as a child and ends up as barely an adult? Let me ignore all that and just say I don't think this is a romance. I think it's a book about "What is love?" Plus, it's also about 350 pages too long, attaching the equivalent of a ten page lyric poem to pretty much every look out the window or walk outside. It's also very hung up on "plain" appearances, though that is one aspect of how it assesses what love is. "Is it possible to truly love a plain person?" "Does a plain person deserve love?" ("Can plain people find love and happiness just like regular folks?") Coincidentally, the author makes it easier to conclude an answer to that question by manipulating the narrative to provide a person who can't actually see the plain appearance. It should be mentioned that education and having "culture" is also thrown into the mix. Thankfully, the author seems to relent and conclude that beauty and culture are not absolute requirements for bliss, but nevertheless provide a higher standard of love, so don't pass them up if you can get them. Finally, I want to make a point about the many movies and television shows that have been made about this book and how -- I think -- they have distorted our view of the actual text of the book. For instance, I watched a video summarizing which actor played the best "Rochester". The conclusion was unquestionably, the handsome former James Bond actor, Timothy Dalton. I ask, did anyone even read the book's description of Rochester? There were other videos that compared multiple film versions of one of the first "proposal" scene. While I only viewed about six of the roughly dozen filmed versions available to me, not one of them had the right setting, the means by which the characters come together for the scene, the dialogue, and/or the reactions of the characters to the proposal discussion, as it was set in the actual book. I also watched the very start to about five films. All but two left out the entire first third of the book, with only one starting with the initial scene that sets the tone. My point isn't that a movie must be faithful to a book. My point is that I strongly suspect that what some people remember so fondly in the book was never there to begin with, and that the book simply does not measure up to the films that may be in peoples' minds.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5What can I say, I love Jane, she is such a strong and likeable heroine. Not one to shy away from adversity, and I think an introvert at heart given that she doesn't like to draw unnecessary attention her way. The story was a bit slow at the start. Is it just me or does anyone else think that Jane's childhood at Gateshead Hall and her time spent at Lowood School has a rather Dickensian atmosphere to it? It was when the scene shifted to Thornfield that I really became engrossed with the story. The interplay between Jane and Rochester is captivating! The drama. The intensity. Just perfect. I loved their intellectual conversations and the way the two would engage in word play, dancing around the elephant in the room. Readers who have read this one may understand where I am coming from when I say that my love for the story tends to ebb and flow: parts were riveting and other parts were... good, if a bit slow and sometimes a tad clichéd. The story has some really great scenes of high drama - loved those bits! - but some of the plot resolutions are a little too perfect and a bit too convenient. That being said, if I had read this one in my youth, like I did Wuthering Heights and other stories, I don't think I would have appreciated it to the level that I do reading it now, so chalking this up as being a worthy read and one that I am glad I finally got around to reading.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I taught this book as a high school sophomore to my English class; my usually-very-hip instructor refused to teach anything by "those damn Bronte sisters." I taught from the Cliff notes, the Monarch notes and my own head; we watched the 1944 movie with Orson Welles as Rochester and Joan Fontaine as Jane.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5I don't understand why this book is considered to be a classic-- not at all.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The best book ever!
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Loved this classic.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Love the dark, brooding Brontes....
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Have always meant to reread this; glad I did. Still romantic but as an adult I'm less distracted by the melodramatic plot (still gotta love a crazy lady locked in the attic) and more impressed and entertained by Jane's spunk.
This illustrated version is cooooool, too. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Proto-feminist does love on her own terms.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Now I know why this is a classic. I've never been so fascinated with the mundane life struggles a single woman could face in 19th century England. It held me enthralled throughout and I eagerly anticipated each turn of the plot.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5At 57 I realize I've come late to the party. I did not take literature english classes in high school and by the way my friends acted about the classics I had no desire to read them either. For years now I try to add a classic into my choices for the year and this spring after watching a show on PBS on the Bronte sisters I decided it was time to read Jane Eyre. I won't even begin to give a review. I will just say that I love historical novels, the speech used at this time always leaves me feeeling rather proper when I give leave of my book. :) . I learn more about the era that the book takes place in and this is a fun way to learn about history. Some more than likely find this old style writing tedious, but I enjoy it when I am in the mood. Miss Bronte does do a masterful job of keeping the pace up and situations shifting enough to keep you wanting more. I am very happy I chose to read Jane Eyre. I will be on my list of one of my favorite classics!
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I have now read this book three times and loved it each time. It's a tragic love story that really shows the growth of the main character. Even though it works out in the end it keeps you wondering what is going to happen all the way through. The characters are very easy to relate to and they make you want to follow them through their lives.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5It's a good book, but I don't quite see why it's such a classic. Or rather, I can see why people are so interested in it, but it doesn't seem noticeably better than others of similar age. I don't know. It was odd reading it, because of course I know the twist - I was waiting for Rochester's wife to show up as soon as he did. I quite like Jane, and her cousins; I quite dislike St. John, and Rochester is annoying too. I'm not sure he redeemed himself, at the end...though he did _not_, as I almost expected him to, reject her because he was damaged. Now I want to read some of the stories based on this, that I've read before - The Eyre Affair, for one - now that I know how this one goes.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5well it was actually a lot better than i was expecting; the characters were really developed and the writing was superb; the story itself was a little predictable but what story isn't now a days. overall really glad i finally read it.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Absolutely wonderful, awesome, and illuminating!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I enjoyed this. I think it was evident early on that there had to be the requisite "happy ever after" ending. Still it was an enjoyable read with some interesting characters.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Loved this, the psychological aspects of Jane's character being so thoroughly explored and the unconventional romance.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Too bad I missed this classic in my early teens – I would have loved it then: the romance, the period detail, the discovery of words. Now I think, “Attempted bigamism & gross deceit, and too many words.”
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Her style of writing is wonderful. I love how she really makes you love the characters and feel their feelings. Charlotte Brontë is one of the best writers of all time. Jane Eyre will always be a classic.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5What's not to love? It's a sexist, racist, misanthropic novel, but still fascinating. Very Victorian.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This was my first Bronte novel. I enjoyed it overall, but found it rather uneven. The early chapters when Jane was growing up and being ill-treated by her aunt and at the school to which she was sent away were reminiscent of David Copperfield and enjoyable in a melancholy sort of way. But then I found the development of Jane's relationship with Mr Rochester rather implausible and was put off by the way in which she subjected herself to his domineering character, though he became more sympathetic at the dramatic turn of the plot when his secret was revealed. Jane's lonely wanderings on the moor and her stumbling upon the cottage wherein dwell a brother and two sisters who later, in classic 19th century fashion, turn out to be her cousins, was a good sequence, though St John was another unattractive male character who wanted to control Jane. The final denouement when Jane returned to Mr Rochester also seemed rather unrealistic, though made for a satisfying resolution in terms of the plot.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I really should re-read this as I only remember the basic storyline from my reading it as a young person. I know that there are many interesting facets of the novel to be found when it is read with a little more experience behind one!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Like many of the classics, this book was a long and difficult read, but ultimately satisfying.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I just reread Jane Eyre for the first time in thirty years and found that I loved it as much now as I did when I was seventeen. Interestingly (perhaps not surprisingly), this reading was an entirely different experience and I noticed a number of things that had completely passed me by before. I think that as a teenager I was most fascinated with Jane Eyre's childhood experiences and with her relationship with Rochester. Now, I notice how her moral code is developed through the book and found that the entire section with St. John and his sisters were as wonderful as the other sections.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Excellent book. It's pure, exquisite, elegant literature- with all its characteristic British wit, restraint and grace. Definitely a book to re-read.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5I couldn't get past the first few chapters. The author gives you no one to like, everyone is so hateful.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The last time I read this book was when I was a teenager, I didn't think of it much until I had to reread it for "Fiction of Relationship". But now that I fully comprehend the title and its content as an adult, I didn't think I've changed my initial perception on this book. Its a difficult book in content and atmosphere. The title are more appropriate autobiography of Jane Eyre unlike the Manon Lescaut. The more I studied the novel, the more I find its harder for me to completely dislike the book and completely like it too. I find its puzzling when people constantly associate this novel with grandness of love. Sure the most memorable part of this book was a romance but I find the majority of the book quite hard to define on certain trope genre except to say that the book is just about Jane Eyre's life herself. If I were to classify the novel, its a fictionalized autobiography divided in parts from a broken childhood where a child grew up too fast, a romance about the plight of a grown girl in face of a man who tempt her soul, the come of age of a child-woman into adulthood, a deeply religious novel with various embedded indoctrination, a satire and rebellion on the polite society and also a gothic tale of horror.
The book started with Jane reminiscing about her childhood in Gateshead Hall where she lived with her abusive cousins and unloved by her stern aunt who took delight in making a 10 year old suffer in misery. After a traumatic experience inside the Red Room (a word pun for "Murder" dont you think?), the apothecary who treated her recommended that Jane should be sent to a school. Instead, her aunt gave her to Mr Brocklehurst who managed the Lowood Institution where he believe that the more abusive nature he cause against the students, which are essentially by beating, starving them and depriving them from many things, for the sake of building good Christian 'habits' among the students. It was until an epidemic that wipe out nearly half of the students that left Jane mourning after a dear friend and the Lowood shift in management that Jane began to appreciate a new life in the school. She stayed for more years as a teacher until she decided to leave the school when she lost her reason to stay after the leaving of her teacher, Miss Temple, who somehow became a mother figure to her. Then she came to Thornfield Manor to teach the ward of a Mr Rochester, Adele Varens and found herself intrigued by her new master.
Jane Eyre is a very deathly long book to read for studying and as an assignment. Although I do enjoy the descriptive of the book, from the details of the interior of the manor, the fashions and textiles of 18th century which made Brontë a faithful contemporary writer of her time and also the beautiful nature the book explores which complement to the darker side of the novel where supernatural theme are quite prominent in dreams, interpretation and the secrets that alluded Jane so much.
As a character, Jane Eyre are quite a passionate proud independent woman and ahead of her time in a society where woman are encouraged to be sensible, demure and submissive. Even as a child, she basically reduce her aunt into tears and fears when Jane was accused to being a liar and spiteful child by her aunt which guarantee Jane a difficult life in Lowood. Although she soon grew up and leaving her childish fits, this streak of rebelliousness is obvious in her interaction between Mr Rochester, her reaction against the guests in his house who belittle and insulting her status as a governess, her fight with inner demons, her confrontation against the difficult St John Rivers and her stubbornness and loyalty with the Rochester in the end. Since I remember the story more from Ruth Wilson's take on Jane Eyre, I do find its hard to completely interpret Jane into any adaptation. I became more sympathetic towards her in the book and understand her world and her personality more than I do from the various novel adaptations I chanced to watch. Its hard to not like the obvious fire inside of her which became alive when someone torment her enough until she reach her limit. I do find its intriguing between the polarity of Jane and Bertha, especially the fact that they virtually mirror each other. I guess thats the purpose of the author.
Personally, I don't really care for Jane Eyre and her relationship with Mr Rochester. I know, that he's supposed to be a Byronic fallen hero figure and the story have been emulated into hundreds of historical romance with governesses and their liaison with their masters. But I do find Rochester simply too hateful to be liked by me. I do notice he had moments when he was too sarcastic, too masculine, too abrupt. He even enjoy torturing Jane to gauge the level of her love for him instead of giving her hints or even seduces her or display some sort of kindness for her. He even flaunt his past rendezvous and listing his lovers to Jane who seemingly perfectly fine with a guy detailing his past romances and neglected to mention about his marital status at the same. As much I love reading Alpha male dominance, I don't think being jackass is right up in my alley. And although he completely changed after Jane left him and became what he is in the end after he lost her, I dont think its healthy to anticipate some God-like convenient intervention to punish the character. In fact, I am puzzled by Jane's reaction on his sexual activities and she only took it as his "passionate nature and manly needs". Up until she was back to Thornfield, she seemed to be accepting that about it and the fact he's readily wanting to commit adultery with her and the fact she accept it as she convinced that Rochester have been outside England and back to his wicked ways. Which made Jane's complexity and mood swings bewilder to me as her reader. But one thing I like about the two of them is that Jane saved his life from the fire and douse it alone without him waking up. That's really impressive even to me.
As a prominent male historical romance figure, I kept drawing a comparison between Mr Darcy (Pride and Prejudice), Mr Rochester and Mr Thornton (North and South). I still insist that Mr Thornton are realistically more appropriate and admirable male figure rather than the other two and probably because Elizabeth Gaskell choose to write in third-person omniscient than the first-person narratives between these two novels. I seriously don't get the whole excessive hero worshiping between Darcy and Rochester who apparently doesn't do much except being richly inherited (Thornton grew up poor and work his way up and are married to his work unlike the other two romantic heroes). Although I do find Jane Eyre and Margaret Hale (North and South) with obvious similarities but I kept seeing Jane to be more concerned about her own welfare than the world around her. Margaret are born in an easy life only to have her world, family, reality crumble all around her even when she tried to make some differences and try to understand it. Jane however instead of confronting her problem, she kept it all in her inside until it burst or until she couldn't handle it anymore and run away and keep making everything worst and leading everyone around. Throughout her novel, its so apparent that the things that drove her on was her own need, her happiness and the fault of her pride which kept getting in her away which was often confused as being passionate. This book is maze of confusion and the fact that it kept jumping multiple genre until the author gave up the charade near the end which reminded me of Jane Austen's Northanger Abbey at some point.
I think the only thing that made me emotionally invested with the story was when Jane found out that she's not alone in the world and that she has living relatives. The story started as a story of abuse on a child who are so alone and unloved and jealous of others with family only to be a grown up teenager trying to be an adult and only to find the world continue to disappoint her happiness again. At this, I had wished the book explore that side of her more especially her solitude and loneliness instead of diverting toward longing for a male companion and the endless descriptive on the weather and insertions of constant foreboding Gothic descriptive atmosphere, and observance of people, religion and Jane's monologues et cetera. For a thick book, it does feel like a patchwork of stories compiled into one. But as a thick book, I wished it could have been more revolutionary instead of a master guide toward modern romance writing.
Book preview
Jane Eyre - Charlotte Brontë
Trayler
general introduction
Wordsworth Classics are inexpensive editions designed to appeal to the general reader and students. We commissioned teachers and specialists to write wide ranging, jargon-free introductions and to provide notes that would assist the understanding of our readers rather than interpret the stories for them. In the same spirit, because the pleasures of reading are inseparable from the surprises, secrets and revelations that all narratives contain, we strongly advise you to enjoy this book before turning to the Introduction.
General Adviser
Keith Carabine
Rutherford College, University of Kent at Canterbury
introduction
‘Conventionality is not morality’:¹ so Charlotte Brontë proudly defended Jane Eyre against the ‘timorous or carping few’ (p. xxvii) who had not shared in its general acclaim. The words could be Jane’s own, hot in self-defence after she has suffered a wrong. We think of her ‘ Unjust! – unjust!’
(p. 10) when she has been locked in the red room in punishment for fighting back, while John Reed escapes blame in spite of having struck the first blow with – how appropriate – a book. A deep sense of injustice is indeed the imaginative spring of this great novel, and it was apparently still ready to well up in its author when she felt that Jane Eyre, her first published novel, was misunderstood. In fact it was a sensational success, both popular and critical, immediately following its publication in October 1847; and second and third editions were speedily prepared (January and April, 1848) – satisfyingly material evidence for its author of her achievement.
But popularity does not guarantee understanding. In her eponymous heroine, Brontë had sought to create a deeply unconventional character who was nonetheless a deeply moral being. The paradoxes created were too much for some Victorian readers. While the Christian Remembrancer deplored its ‘coarseness’ and warned that ‘every page burns with moral Jacobinism’,² Queen Victoria herself would describe it as ‘a really wonderful book . . . [with] such fine religious feeling.’³ In truth the novel was large enough to embrace these apparently opposing views: as Brontë’s publisher, George Smith, pointed out, ‘Even those who regard it as coarse must admit its strange fascination’⁴ – one that has indeed persisted to the present day.
For some contemporary critics that popular fascination made Jane Eyre downright dangerous. In December 1848, the Quarterly Review took stock and launched a damaging attack on the novel and its author. If Brontë had willingly, even wilfully, set up the terms of her individualistic morality, the Quarterly’s reviewer, Elizabeth Rigby (later Lady Eastlake), was more than ready to knock them down. Her remark that if the author were indeed a woman, she must have ‘long forfeited the society of her own sex’ (McNees, p. 53) was nasty enough. But this blow below the belt originated in a deeper moral and political anxiety, expressed in her judgement of the novel as
pre-eminently an anti-Christian composition. There is throughout it a murmuring against the comforts of the rich and against the privations of the poor, which, as far as each individual is concerned, is a murmuring against God’s appointment – there is a proud and perpetual assertion of the rights of man, for which we find no authority either in God’s word or in God’s providence . . . the tone of mind and thought which has overthrown authority and violated every code human and divine abroad, and fostered Chartism and rebellion at home, is the same which has also written Jane Eyre (McNees, p. 51).
Here the gloves are off, and one part at least of Victorian society is defending its morality, based firmly on ‘God’s appointment’ (the same which in ‘All Things Bright and Beautiful’ was at this very time placing ‘The rich man in his castle, the poor man at his gate’).⁵ Clearly Brontë had scored a palpable hit, though at the end of 1848, a year in which both Branwell and Emily had died and Anne had fallen mortally ill, personal sorrows had eclipsed her interest in literary fame: ‘For ourselves’, she replied to the concerned enquiry of her publisher’s reader, W. S.Williams, ‘we are almost indifferent to censure. I read the Quarterly
without a pang – ’.⁶ Before this temporary domestic retreat, Brontë’s correspondence with Williams had frequently featured open-minded discussion of contemporary political issues, including Chartism.⁷ Rigby’s review is alert to the larger historical circumstances – revolution in Europe and unrest at home – in which Jane Eyre was written, produced and received; for all its conservatism, it usefully reminds us of the political dimension of a novel more recently seen as foregrounding the personal, the bourgeois and the domestic.⁸
Jane’s Progress
So what unconventional morality is Charlotte Brontë exploring in the novel? In what way, if any, does its concern for personal injustice engage with larger structures of inequality? And what does all this have to do with the overwhelmingly romantic love story at the heart of the novel? Robert B. Heilman has perceptively noted that ‘a tendency to work through the conventions of fictional art was a strong element in [Brontë’s] make-up. This is true of all her novels, but it is no more true than her counter-tendency to modify, most interestingly, those conventions.’⁹ In Jane Eyre an extraordinary heroine is firmly placed within the framework of Victorian fiction, but the moral challenges she encounters (and issues) in her progress allow Brontë to explore new ways of looking at the relationship of the self to the world. As she does so she must also find narrative solutions which themselves inevitably challenge the conventions of her chosen genre. The novel is at its best when moral and narrative inventiveness elide; at times however, in Brontë’s very attempt to push out the moral boundaries, she is forced back on to standard, even hackneyed, devices of the nineteenth-century novel to extricate her heroine from a cul-de-sac. (For example, when Jane’s moral stance places her at what seems an irretrievable distance from Rochester, Brontë has to find a means to re-unite them.) The resulting inconsistencies and contradictions, as well as the innovative brilliancies, are part of the nature of this much-loved novel. Many critical readings of Jane Eyre have made the mistake of artificially resolving, or simply ignoring, these difficulties, fixing on an interpretative path to lead us safely through the novel. But, just as Jane can, retrospectively, see various possible selves at key moments of her past life (and as Brontë draws on various fictional genres, forms and languages – sometimes at odds with each other – to reflect those different selves), so as readers we need rather to keep an open sensibility, ready to respond to the shifts of both consciousness and narrative which make up Jane’s erratic progress.
So, for example, the journeying nature of the novel has been frequently remarked: Jane moves from place to place as the narrative progresses, each marking a new structural departure.¹⁰ Gateshead is the font of her development and her point of entry into life; Lowood is the site both of decay and growth; at Thornfield, we are waiting for the hero and heroine to snare themselves on briars; conversely, when Jane heads for her reunion with Rochester at the dolorous Ferndean, green shoots of cheerfulness will keep breaking through. But this is, I think, an over-schematic way to see the novel. It implies that at each stage of her journey Jane Eyre matures, as in a classic bildungsroman,¹¹ moving inexorably through personal development towards happiness in the closure of marriage. Yet Jane sees herself as ‘cut adrift from every connection’ (p. 81), ‘a wanderer on the face of the earth’ (p. 200) – more akin then to Thomas Hardy’s characters who later cross and recross the English landscape almost at random. True, Brontë alludes frequently to John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress, and Jane’s isolation and her spiritual vicissitudes echo those of Christian. But in so far as this is a model, Brontë uses it to place her heroine in contradistinction to Bunyan’s hero: Jane’s struggle forward is individual rather than symbolic, and rather than reinforcing moral axioms it leads to their revision or even reversal. ¹²
Similarly, Marxist, feminist, psychoanalytic and post-colonialist readings of Jane Eyre construct singular, unified views of the novel, and while these are often individually illuminating, they tend to smooth out its interesting bumps.¹³ Brontë herself certainly sets up various models – developmental, allegorical, psychological, symbolic – but she constantly ironises these systems, undercutting them with Jane’s idiosyncratic form of progress.
This is not to be a regular autobiography
If there is a pattern in the novel, it is, I shall argue, one of revisitation and reinterpretation. In its first four editions Jane Eyre was subtitled An Autobiography (with the added conceit, in the first edition only, of ‘Currer Bell’ credited as editor, not author). However, as Jane – herself, of course, a fictional character – says, ‘this is not to be a regular autobiography’ (p. 71); the benefit of retrospect allows her to highlight particular events and passages of feeling, for she knows, as the reader does not, what is significant. Brontë creates that significance narratively by frequently anti-realist means: the veils of Gothic, the terrors of melodrama, and coincidences that would presuppose divine intervention – if authorial intervention were not already present. But these are always underpinned by the foundations of realism. G. H. Lewes was the earliest critic to recognise that ‘the grand secret of [Jane Eyre’s] success . . . was its reality. From out the depths of a sorrowing experience, here was a voice speaking to the experience of thousands’ (McNees, p. 466).
Generation after generation of readers, even as they know that they are reading a fiction, have thought of that voice as real; they – we – seem to be reading at the very moment of feeling, event, narrative explosion. Indeed quite frequently the narrative is in the present tense, and the past becomes the present.¹⁴ We feel the excitement and intimacy of a life being discovered to us, and this is not just a matter of the standard first person narrative, or the prolific use of the ‘dear reader’ device. These place us in an intimate relationship to the heroine. What is revolutionary is Brontë’s exploration of the dynamic between the Jane who looks back on her past life from a position of safety, and the various selves she revisits and reconstructs. The tension between lived and relived experience is thus both tangible and shifting, as both are mediated through the selective recollection of the writing process. We see a life as it unfolds for the subject who is ignorant of what is to come, and in parallel we see the incumbent of that life unfolding it again to herself.
Crucial to our sense of involvement is the fact that we see the origins of the mature Jane in the ten-year-old child who occupies the first nine chapters of the novel. Here the adult Jane identifies so completely with her earlier self that even second-time readers have the sense that the child is telling her own story – the first extended example of such a narration in English fiction. Brontë could have milked the pathos of the orphan’s plight (Dickens would have); instead she introduces us to a difficult child and renders her very rebelliousness sympathetic. She also makes Jane interesting, because she thinks, and indeed acts, in ways we would not expect of a child, especially perhaps of that era. The retrospective gaze of the narration rests long, and longingly, on this young Jane: according to her adult voice, ‘to the first ten years of my life I have given almost as many chapters’ (p. 71), but in fact all of those chapters are devoted to just one year of Jane’s life, her tenth. In psychoanalytic depth this year is quarried for its meaning, and the adult’s focus on the past child-self yields up brief moments of understanding and forgiveness:
What a consternation of soul was mine that dreary afternoon! . . . I could not answer the ceaseless inward question – why I thus suffered; now, at the distance of – I will not say how many years, I see it clearly.
I was a discord in Gateshead Hall; I was like nobody there; . . . [I was] a heterogeneous thing . . . a useless thing (p. 10).
This interpolating adult counter-commentary, markedly rational, perceptive and generous, complements the child’s hot bitterness, but never undermines or denies it.
I resisted all the way
This childhood section, and so the whole novel, begins in a deceptively quiet fashion – ‘There was no possibility of taking a walk that day’ (p. 3) – announcing the centrality of the life of the mind in the novel, with Jane’s mental wanderings through the pages of Bewick. Of all the books Brontë might have chosen to suggest the hunger of Jane’s imagination, a History of British Birds does not at first strike us as the most illuminating. But Bewick’s etchings (which as real readers we can still share with the fictional Jane) are the clue here: monochrome, darkly suggestive, yet fine, they echo Jane’s imagination: ‘the words . . . connected themselves with the succeeding vignettes [the etchings], and gave significance . . . to the rock standing up alone . . . to the broken boat . . . to the cold and ghastly moon’ (p. 4). History of British Birds? This is the romantic history of Jane’s spirit. British birds seasonally inhabit a whole other geography, which itself quickly becomes a novel landscape of the mind for the comfortless child, holed up in her window-seat like an explorer in a tent. Just outside – for her, inside – are the ‘death-white realms’ (p. 4) of the Arctic zone, but rather than confirming spiritual despair, they answer to that despair in her and make of it, through the power of imagination, a positive. Thus Jane is able to say, truthfully, ‘with Bewick on my knee, I was then happy; happy at least in my way’ (p. 5). ‘In my way’ is the only way she will be happy, stretching the mind to those unknown possibilities that lie within the most ordinary things (birds; window seats; books). It is precisely this sense of her own mental power that disturbs and threatens the familial and social conventions within which she lives, for, mute as her resentment largely is, it speaks on her face.
Of course this precocious and difficult child gets her come-uppance for such hubris; John Reed strikes her with the very book she has been lost in, and she cuts her head as she falls. We scarcely need his words – ‘You have no business to take our books; you are a dependant’ (p. 6) – to remind us of the structures of power poised against Jane. But the imaginative power of books is greater, since it can be endlessly reproduced; Jane has Bewick, and all it signifies beyond itself, already in her head, and John Reed can’t reclaim that, though he may take back the actual book. Thus empowered, she can easily withstand a bit of bloodletting.
The red room is a different matter. While it is intended to quell her insubordination, rather it fosters it by fixing her sense of injustice at this dramatic moment of consciousness – but not without damaging her first. Thus, classically formative, it marks her for life and provides a template against which all subsequent events are measured, recurring in Jane’s consciousness at moments of crisis, and similarly reverberating through the whole of the novel. Even on first reading we somehow sense that this will be the case, since these six pages are written at a pitch of intensity answering to the extremity of Jane’s feelings, and to the peculiarly heightened quality of childhood experience. Chapter 2, which is wholly given over to this incident, begins: ‘I resisted all the way: a new thing for me’ (p. 7); this is to set a habit of mind, as she later tells Helen Burns, ‘ I must resist those who punish me unjustly
’ (p. 48). Thrust into the red room, her inner thoughts and feelings conspire to build on the daily, the domestic, the matter-of-fact, to produce terror. This is the downside of the imagination, and under its relentless gaze, returned to her through the ‘great looking-glass’ (p. 9), Jane sees herself. The expanded mind of the first chapter is answered here by ‘ the strange little figure there gazing at me, with a white face and arms specking the gloom’ (p. 9). She reminds herself of ‘one of the tiny phantoms’ (p. 9) of Bessie’s stories, and soon she contemplates making herself such a phantom, imagining ‘never eating or drinking more, and letting myself die’ (p. 10).
To today’s reader the anorexic connotations here are striking, particularly the uncontrollable alterations in scale which afflict Jane. The bed, the ‘piled up mattress and pillows’ (p. 9), the wardrobe all seem huge, while she is tiny and lacking bodily substance; yet at the same time she fears that the power of her thoughts is great enough to call up her uncle’s ghost. Is the ‘streak of light’ (p. 10) which hovers over her natural or supernatural? That is a question prompted by several further unexplained phenomena in the novel, which tease the reader, and finally leave ambiguous Jane’s adult view of the relationship between the known world and the unknown. But at the age of ten, and in her state of agitation, it is entirely realistic that she should have thought the light which appears in the red room ‘a herald of some coming vision from another world’ (p. 12). Indeed Brontë uses a language suggestive of the supernatural cleverly to reinforce the natural in this scene; everything in it is produced from Jane’s mental power working on the actuality of her environment and combining with her knowledge (that her uncle died in the room, for example) to create a crisis of dread. But the epiphenomena of her state (‘My heart beat thick, my head grew hot; a sound filled my ears which I deemed the rushing of wings’, (p. 12) are carefully noted in the same consciousness that has helped to create them. The drama can end only when ‘unconsciousness closed the scene’ (p. 13).
When Jane comes round in her nursery bed, reality still assumes an alien shape, and her relation to the world is for a time altered. The surest sign of her depression is that even her precious books fail to move her: ‘all was eerie and dreary’ (p. 15). But the loss of appetite, for food, for the beauty of the plate on which the food is served, for life itself, is blessedly temporary. The incident which might have felled a lesser spirit leads instead to the possibility of change (as well as an actual change in Jane’s self-understanding as she hears the story of her parenthood from the servants’ gossip), and her resilience returns. ‘I gathered enough of hope to suffice as a motive for wishing to get well’ (p. 20). It is Jane’s ability to recover equilibrium and perspective which is her strength; as a good athlete’s pulse returns quickly to normal after vigorous exercise, so her mental and emotional faculties, which have here been overstretched, soon steady themselves. All that internal exercise behind the curtain of the window-seat has stood her in good stead; by Chapter 5 Jane’s childhood exuberance allows her to bid a cheery ‘ Goodbye to Gateshead!
’ (p. 33).
Resurgam
The re-awakening from the red room incident proves the first of several new dawns for Jane, either actual or metaphorical, often parallelled by a structure of reversal. Thus the distress of the red room awakening actually leads to a positive; conversely some later hopeful dawns bring unexpected disappointment. Jane’s meeting with Helen Burns is to bring a similarly paradoxical awakening. Helen, in her shining capacity for love and forgiveness, almost knocks Jane off her own personal path of righteousness. Rather than the punitive and exclusive Christianity of the Reverend Brocklehurst, Helen offers her own wonderfully generous ‘creed’ (p. 49) which extends salvation to all human souls.¹⁵ For Jane this is, in its own way, a temptation; its corollary is a desire for the death hastening towards Helen. But just as Jane flirted only briefly with self-starvation, now she proves miraculously resistant to Helen’s consumption: prescient was her vow to ‘keep in good health, and not die’ (p. 26) – and though that was in order to avoid hellfire, here it is also proof against the lure of salvation. Even as Helen proclaims her certainty that they will meet again after death in ‘the same region of happiness: be received by the same mighty universal Parent’, Jane mentally questions ‘ Where is that region? Does it exist?
’ (p. 70).
Nonetheless, from Helen she draws the healing power of love, warm and fleshly as much as it is spiritual; and she learns to give love, too, instinctively seeking out the dying Helen’s bed: ‘I must see Helen, – I must embrace her before she died, – I must give her one last kiss’ (p. 68). These imperatives (intensified by the italic) are characteristic in the early part of the narrative, and their recurrence later in the more restrained adult self signals an insistence which we recognise as ungainsayable. Here, however, finally it is Helen’s wraith-like body, recalling the phantoms of the red room, that embraces and consoles the living and thrusts her back into life. Thereafter Jane reclaims Helen’s epitaph, Resurgam – I will rise again – for worldly existence (and in doing so she appropriates the resurrectional imagery of a male Christ for the actuality of her female existence).
Jane’s next significant awakening comes eight years, but only two chapters, later in her new room, and her new position, at Thornfield, where her youthful strength of spirit, and the power of life itself offer regeneration: ‘My faculties, roused by the change of scene, the new field offered to hope, seemed all astir’ (p. 84). Yet the same faculties that enable her to spring up when she has been knocked down also lead her to desire more – much more. Standing on ‘the leads’, the highest point of the house, she looks out over the surrounding countryside:
. . . then I longed for a power of vision which might overpass that limit; which might reach the busy world, towns, regions full of life I had heard of but never seen – . . . then I desired more of practical experience than I possessed; more of intercourse with my kind, of acquaintance with variety of character, than was here within my reach (pp. 94–5).
The scene carries echoes both of Christ’s temptation and of the Miltonic Satan’s overview of Paradise. Certainly it is hubristic, and as such it is exciting, particularly for the woman reader. But Jane has now learnt to extrapolate from her personal plight to that of others. This passage is followed by an eloquent, a defining expression of human impotence and its equivalent desire:
It is in vain to say that human beings ought to be satisfied with tranquillity: they must have action; and they will make it if they cannot find it. Millions are condemned to a stiller doom than mine, and millions are in silent revolt against their lot. Nobody knows how many rebellions besides political rebellions ferment in the masses of life which people earth (p. 95).
We see where the Quarterly’s alarm stems from! Only after identifying life’s injustice, and justifying human rebelliousness, in these general terms does she go on to specify it in peculiarly female terms: ‘Women are supposed to be very calm generally: but women feel just as men feel; they need exercise for their faculties, and a field for their efforts, as much as their brothers do; they suffer from too rigid a restraint, too absolute a stagnation, precisely as men would suffer’ (p. 95).
This last part of the passage is in didactic mode; there is a sense of an impassioned address to the reader, with Brontë’s voice overriding her heroine’s. As it continues it becomes an almost direct appeal to the male reader, berating him for expecting women ‘to confine themselves to making puddings and knitting stockings, to playing on the piano and embroidering bags’ (p. 95). But what makes this statement of female frustration so powerful is that the author has recognised its continuity with aspects of the male condition. The bathos inherent in the structure of this long passage, which begins with overpassing the limit and ends with puddings, stockings and embroidery, embodies the under-fulfilment of much female existence, but also, crucially, of much human existence.
Conflagration
Without these stirring passages of thought we might read Jane Eyre purely as a great romantic love story, one which has launched a thousand Mills and Boon novels. As if answering Jane’s mental call, as in the future she will his, Rochester rides into the novel in a parodic version of the knight in shining armour. Indeed Brontë ironises his entry by gently mocking her heroine’s romanticism. Out under the rising moon (which acts structurally almost as her familiar), when Jane hears an approaching horse her mind goes back to Bessie’s tales (as it did in the red room), and she expects the Gytrash – indeed temporarily Rochester’s huge rushing dog seems such a monster. But he is soon domesticated to a snuffling, tail-wagging creature, a ‘Pilot’ leading Jane to his master – who is himself brought down to size by his collapse on the ice, a neat way of bringing him to Jane’s level, indeed dependent on her, from the very outset. (The democracy of their first meeting also resonates with her earlier reflections on those who lack power.) This tendency to use bathos to undercut fantasy is a characteristic feature of the narrative, and it allows Brontë to indulge the reader’s pleasure in romance, the Gothic, the supernatural, but within a realist frame. Often, as here, one sort of romance is rejected, but replaced by another, more human, sort. For this first meeting between Rochester and Jane is fateful, and it immediately enters her imagination to be revivified and expanded there: ‘The new face . . . was like a new picture introduced to the gallery of memory . . . it was masculine . . . it was dark, strong, and stern’ (p. 101). So the Byronic hero is freed of previous ironies; and however much Brontë insists that he is ugly, what hangs round him always is the romance of that moonlight meeting, rather than its bathos. Whatever else, this is a great love story.
Central to that is the sexual attraction generated between these two unlikely lovers. Jane’s sexual awareness possibly began very early: the change from the docile nine-year-old to the uncontainable ten-year-old may signal the onset of puberty. As her sexuality must break out, so must she, and social and sexual nonconformity are only more deeply fused by the attempt, via the red room, to modify and moderate them. At that very first ‘awakening’, she shuns the anorexic pull to remain a child, restores the appetite which will allow her to grow, and finds the voice (Bessie remarks ‘ you’ve got quite a new way of talking
’, p. 32) to express her rebellious spirit. Now, in Rochester, she has an object for her desire, and again sexual and social nonconformity are linked. The remarkable equality of the relationship, signalled in that first meeting, is articulated by Jane herself, again finding a new voice: ‘ I don’t think, sir, you have the right to command me, merely because you are older than I, or because you have seen more of the world than I have’ (p. 117). It is an unusual voice from a governess, and Rochester respects it: ‘
I mentally shake hands with you" ’ (p. 118).
The deep feeling between them is developed largely through this mental exchange, which is manna to Jane: ‘So happy, so gratified did I become with this new interest added to life, that I ceased to pine after kindred: my thin crescent-destiny seemed to enlarge; the blanks of existence were filled up; my bodily health improved; I gathered flesh and strength’ (p. 128). Of course, the consummation of their passion would, logically, fill those empty spaces even more satisfactorily; but its necessary deferral (in a Victorian novel) only produces greater sexual tension, heightened by the suspense created by the Gothic plot. Bertha Mason may set the conflagration in Rochester’s bed, and Jane may put it out, but in the aftermath passion is set alight in what is close to a bedroom seduction scene. Jane is now truly ‘awake’ (p. 133).
Damping Down
The sleepless, joyful night which follows (Chapter 15, p. 133) closes Volume One, in the original three-volume publication of the novel. But though Volume Two (Chapter 16) begins on the same note of excitement and sense of possibility as earlier new dawns, hope is raised only to be dashed, as Jane discovers almost accidentally from Mrs Fairfax that Rochester has departed for a week’s stay in the company of Blanche Ingram. The emotional momentum of the novel is peremptorily checked, leaving the reader as well as the heroine to reconsider and regroup – a feature that will recur. But as the plot moves backward, Jane herself makes headway: ‘When once more alone, I reviewed the information I had got; looked into my heart, examined its thoughts and feelings, and endeavoured to bring back with a strict hand such as had been straying through imagination’s boundless and trackless waste, into the safe fold of common sense’ (p. 140). Imagination has again become double-edged: the ‘boundless and trackless waste’, recalling Bewick, suggests endless possibility, but also endless emptiness; and the struggle she has to control it is reflected in the masochism of her method. She draws a portrait of herself, and another of Blanche, labelling the first ‘Portrait of a Governess, disconnected, poor and plain’, and the second ‘Blanche, an accomplished lady of rank’ (pp. 140–1). Contemplating these portraits and their disparities, she puts herself firmly in her place.
Yet this, we know by now, is not her way; ‘place’ doesn’t come into her relationship with Rochester. Ironically, incidents which arise from the one impediment to their happiness, and Rochester’s deepest secret, now bring them even further together. The pretended obstacle, Blanche, with which Rochester cruelly teases Jane, is herself somewhat cruelly used by him, as a decoy. This is an interesting point in the novel. The reader knows by now that Rochester wants Jane, and the fractures and diversions of the narrative line act in counterpoint to the momentum of their desire for each other – and of the reader’s desire for its fruition. The demands of the Victorian three-volume construction also exert an influence here. With a large part of the novel still to develop, Volume Two ends (Chapter 26) not with marriage but its disruption, not with a fair future but with a disastrous past; and the Gothic phantom that has haunted the novel, hidden in the recesses of the third storey, is here revealed in full flesh and blood: ‘that purple face, – those bloated features’ (p. 259). Rochester’s bitter comparison of Jane with Bertha, ‘this young girl, who stands so grave and quiet at the mouth of hell, looking collectedly at the gambols of a demon’ (p. 259) is like a horrid parody of Jane’s self-comparison with Blanche. What should have been Jane’s happiest day, and with it the novel’s central section, closes as it had opened with Jane yet again reflecting on the loss of her hopes.
Yet there is a poetic justic in this, as Jane’s own ethic of equality should allow her to recognise, and as Brontë narratively recognises in the deferral of Jane’s personal happiness. For in a sense the real subject of this central section of the novel is not Jane but the hidden Bertha (who is, remember, fully known to the adult Jane narrating these events). Immediately after her eloquent reflection on human impotence, out on ‘the leads’, Jane had heard the uncanny laugh, ‘the same low, slow ha! ha! which, when first heard, had thrilled me’ (p. 95). It is almost as though Bertha were eavesdropping on Jane’s thoughts, her desire for a wider liberty, and seeing it as a cosmic joke. For if Jane needs agency, how much more so does Bertha. Charlotte Brontë breaks many conventions, fictional and actual, but her portrait of Rochester’s wife is, sadly, as firmly constrained as Bertha herself. It is the one dimension of the novel which today’s reader will properly jib at, not so much because it is floridly Gothic, but because Brontë’s understanding of female consciousness has proved so sensitive that this sudden crudely hyperbolic image of female appetite undermines her careful exegesis of Jane’s similar appetite.
It took another brave woman novelist a century later, Jean Rhys, to understand and give voice to Bertha (here given her middle name Antoinette). Rhys’s novel, The Wide Sargasso Sea (1966), tells the story which is never told in Jane Eyre. Rhys, born in Dominica, is also able to address issues raised by Bertha’s Creole mother. In the nineteenth-century text Bertha’s Creole blood is used to ‘explain’ both her sexual appetite and her associated madness; that both are passed down the female line links racist and anti-female ideology in Jane Eyre. At the same time, Jamaica as a source of commerce for second sons without estate in England is happily utilised for fictional expediency: Rochester is bought by Bertha’s family for thirty thousand pounds (thirty pieces of silver?) ‘ because I was of a good race’ (p. 269). Rhys’s novel neatly lays bare Brontë’s unthinking prejudices.
Bertha as alter ego
If we look at Jane Eyre in psychoanalytic rather than realist terms, as Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar do in their groundbreaking study of nineteenth-century fiction, The Madwoman in the Attic, we can be persuaded that Bertha’s Gothic disruptions are Jane’s rebellions writ large. Both threaten social stability, and both are contained, Bertha physically, Jane by self-restraint. The red room is deliberately recalled in Bertha’s incarceration in the third storey, and the she-devil Mrs Reed sees in the ten-year-old Jane, ‘all fire and violence’ (p. 211), prefigures Bertha’s rage. In the only scene where we see Bertha directly, she has to be ‘pinioned’ and ‘bound’ (p. 259) to a chair, the threat of which led Jane, in the red room, to sit on her hands as evidence of self-control, promising ‘ I will not stir
’ (p. 7). Bessie and Miss Abbott on that occasion remained doubtful, ‘incredulous of my sanity’ (p. 8); but the overall implication is that Jane saves herself from madness by suppressing the part that Bertha allows full rein.
Significant here is Bertha’s nocturnal visitation to Jane before her wedding, recounted in the narrative at a remove from the event and mediated by Rochester to whom Jane recounts ‘this vision’ (p. 250). There is something of the comic grotesque in the scene described, as the existing wife tries on the future wife’s wedding veil and admires her ‘blackened’ ‘ghastly’ (p. 250) features in the mirror. The earlier diminished, phantom self Jane saw in the red room mirror is now replaced by a swollen reflection; all the language here speaks of gross inflation (and in the post-wedding exhibition of Bertha there is again a horrified fascination with size – ‘tall’, ‘bloated’, ‘corpulent’, ‘virile’, ‘bulk’, pp. 258–9). And if the lesson were not clear, Brontë makes it so with Bertha’s rending of the wedding veil; in a parodic pre-empting of the sexual act, Bertha emblematically tears Jane’s virginity asunder, denying Rochester that pleasure, and making it fearful to Jane herself. And then for good measure she tramples on it.
But in my view Jane Eyre is not first and foremost a feminist or post-colonial fable. If we see Bertha as Jane’s ‘true’ self, this is to deny the worth of those painful struggles Jane has made to find, develop and sustain herself through her conscious rather than her unconscious mind. Similarly, Bertha’s own tragic history is reduced by this reading to a strategic fictional device; Gilbert and Gubar’s appropriation of her to their larger thesis fixes her forever as ‘the madwoman in the attic’, and does her no feminist favours. This essentially realist novel explicitly tells the story of a particular woman, Jane Eyre, and her developing consciousness; part of the structure of that story is that Bertha’s story is suppressed – as so many other stories are when each of us tells our own. Jane is able, briefly, to find a point of sympathy with her, when she reproaches Rochester: ‘ you speak of her with hate – with vindictive antipathy. It is cruel – she cannot help being mad
’ (p. 265). But that moment does not last; Jane can’t make the imaginative connection between her own need for self-expression (‘Speak I must’, p. 29) and Bertha’s silencing. This is a weakness, in her and in the novel – a poignant one given that earlier rousing cry for common liberty; but against it we must set the strength with which Brontë challenged convention in so many other ways.
‘I care for myself’
An important dimension of a realist reading of the novel is that Jane does not fear or deny her own sexuality. When the wedding is so cruelly aborted, she regrets that ‘Jane Eyre, who had been an ardent, expectant woman – almost a bride, was a cold, solitary girl again’ (p. 261); and when Rochester, at the start of Volume Three (Chapter 27) turns the full power of his sexual passion on her to persuade her to stay, she is tempted by it, not repulsed: ‘He seemed to devour me with his flaming glance: physically I felt, at the moment, powerless as stubble exposed to the draught and glow of a furnace’ (p. 280). It is against the pull of her own desire (not in favour of the pull of chastity, that pale phantom-like girlhood) that she decides she must depart.
That decision may be difficult for today’s reader, especially perhaps a young female reader, raised in a sexually permissive society, to understand. Given that Jane recognises her own passion for Rochester, and that she apparently accepts his view that he was falsely trapped into marriage, why, if ‘conventionality is not morality’, cannot she take the ultimately unconventional step and live with him unmarried? After all, her first naked declaration to him had been in terms of spurning society’s expectations: ‘ I am not talking to you now through the medium of custom, conventionalities, nor even of mortal flesh; – it is my spirit that addresses your spirit; just as if both had passed through the grave, and we stood at God’s feet, equal, – as we are!
’ (p. 223). Yet her rebellion now is turned against her own desires, not against the conventions of society, to which she now conforms.
In this respect the red room has perhaps taught a bad lesson; this might be a moment when Jane would indeed do better to break out, rather than control herself. Her testing point comes when Rochester asks: ‘ Is it better to drive a fellow-creature to despair than to transgress a mere human law?
’ (p. 280). But even here Jane considers his plea in terms of saving him rather than pleasing herself. It is a pity that the scene is so designed that she must, with Bertha still much in mind, condemn her own desire to stay as a sort of madness; and unusually she appeals to society’s precepts over her own instincts, without, apparently, seeing any contradiction: ‘Laws and principles are not for the times when there is no temptation: they are for such moments as this, when body and soul rise in mutiny against their rigour’ (p. 280). We might look wistfully back at the resisting, red-room Jane here. But that Jane’s way coincides, uncharacteristically, with convention at this point does not mean that it is determined by it.
Importantly, it is herself she decides to save rather than Rochester – that tenacious self which, in its ‘baby-phantom’ (p. 194) form, has been such a trouble to her dreams, but which must be nourished:
"Who in the world cares for you? or who will be injured by what you do?"
Still indomitable was the reply – "I care for myself. The more solitary, the more friendless, the more unsustained I am, the more I will respect myself" (p. 280).
Jane’s dreams are beautifully used to investigate the ‘care’ that is involved in caring for that self. They work simultaneously as psychological expressions of the atmosphere of anxiety that haunts Jane, despite her happiness, at Thornfield; as Gothic forebodings which contribute to the novel’s flirtation with the supernatural; and as ingenious narrative devices which remain realist because dreams, in all their strangeness, are a constitutive part of human existence.
These dreams figure strongly in the pre-marriage period and link with two experiences which are important to Jane’s self-discovery. One is Jane’s return to Gateshead, where she makes peace with her past, and where the red room resumes its proper proportions: ‘I experienced firmer trust in myself and my own powers . . . The gaping wound of my wrongs, too, was now quite healed; and the flame of resentment extinguished’ (p. 200). Mrs Reed cannot extend her forgiveness (or even accept Jane’s), but she gives her something better – news of an uncle and an inheritance. This naked plot device comes in psychologically handy when, in her second key experience, Rochester wishes to shower her with jewels, dress her in brilliantly coloured silks, and chain her with heirloom diamonds. These are the seals of ownership, and she astutely notes ‘his smile was such as a sultan might, in a blissful and fond moment, bestow on a slave his gold and gems had enriched’ (p. 237). To allow him to change her plain style in this way would, she sees, really estrange her from herself, while her acute understanding of the relationship between financial and sexual equity leads her to write the letter to her uncle which has the unwitting effect of bringing Mason back to Thornfield to stop the wedding.
Far-fetched as the coincidence of Mason’s knowing her uncle may be, the narrative irony Brontë sets up here suggests that she sees the mid-novel relationship with Rochester as flawed, whether Bertha existed or not. Jane’s erratic progress is not yet over; she has to live out the true meaning of that ‘I care for myself’ before she can meet Rochester again on equal terms.
On the third day I was better
The final stage of the novel deals with Jane’s self-affirmation; that it begins, in Chapter 28, with Jane at her lowest point confirms the novel’s linking of hope and reversal. Yet while her state places her at the mercy of the elements, entirely isolated and friendless, she trusts nature itself to protect her: ‘Nature seemed to me benign and good: I thought she loved me, outcast as I was . . . ’ (p. 286). There is no impulse to starve herself, rather she eats eagerly the bilberries of the moor with the bread bought with her last coin; and though she wishes that death might have come to her on the heath, she accepts her fate when it does not: ‘Life, however, was yet in my possession, with all its requirements, and pains, and responsibilities. The burden must be carried . . . ’ (p. 287).
The pantheistic dimension of this wilderness experience might lead us to think that she also has God on her side; certainly her flight from her human idol, Rochester, signals the development of a greater religiosity in her thinking, and in the novel. Yet Brontë continues to appropriate the imagery of Christian salvation for her female subject, and in the service of entirely human ends, complete with Jane’s resurrection from grief after three days’ prostration of the spirit: resurgam again. Alongside this, the final section of the novel mounts a powerful attack on a particular religious figure, St John Rivers, and on his brand of Calvinism.¹⁶ Rivers’s attempt to subdue Jane is as insidious as Rochester’s appeal to her to defy convention and save him; in comparison, John Reed’s throwing the book at her seems a more appealingly overt attempt at subjugation.
But Jane is woman enough for them all, and against the run of an increasingly conventional narrative she reasserts her moral independence. She defies Rivers’s suggestion that she save her soul by saving those of others; and indeed what saves her is that the proposed bargain entails marriage to her cold cousin: ‘ Can I . . . endure all the forms of love (which I doubt not he would scrupulously observe) and know that the spirit was quite absent?
’ (p. 358). The answer is no. This is indeed the most interesting examination in the novel of sexual feeling, both of St John’s suppressed attraction to Jane, which he dresses in the rhetoric of duty, and of Jane’s repulsion at the thought of physical subjection on St John’s terms. Rochester’s telepathic call comes in the nick of time.
The hand of the author rather than that of God is apparent to the reader here; what Jane makes of that call is not so clear. Certainly, in rejecting St John (and dismissing his belief that she is destined to burn in hell), she chooses happiness in this world – and – perhaps – rejects any possible world beyond.¹⁷ All the narrative thrust of the final chapters propels the heroine along this resolutely worldly path. With useful strengthening work behind her, and armed with her (fictionally conventional) inheritance, which she has, in keeping with her egalitarian principles, been careful to share with her cousins, Jane makes with all speed – and finally – towards her pleasure.
Reader, I married him
As far as Jane knows, the Rochester she chooses to seek out now is no different from the one she left; so she makes her decision to return to him believing that he is still married. But she is different, and able now to make that decision in full possession of herself.¹⁸ As St John runs to meet his Lord, and his death, she runs to her human love, and life. That the novel ends with St John’s death, rather than her life, reminds us of what Jane has gained by losing him, rather than of what he has gained by losing her.¹⁹
It is true that in the structures of this fiction, Bertha’s potentially tragic fate spells a clear warning against transgression, and Rochester’s guilt can be expiated only through emasculation; while Jane’s ending, happy as it is, buries that brilliantly iconoclastic spirit in marriage, children and a ‘new servitude’ (p. 73). Puddings and embroidery cannot be far away. But if her sights are lowered from those visionary moments on ‘the leads’, Jane Eyre surely will not cease from mental fight. Her story still speaks for those ‘millions . . . in silent revolt against their lot’ (p. 95); if, at its ending, she opts for the refuge of personal happiness, who among us will blame her?
Dr Sally Minogue
Canterbury Christ Church University College
introduction notes
1 Author’s Preface to the second edition of Jane Eyre, p. xxvii
2 Christian Remembrancer, 15 April 1848, in McNees, pp. 17–18; for full details of this and other references turn to the Bibliography at the end of this Introduction.
3 Diary entry, 23 November 1880, quoted in Myer, p. 107; she had first read it with Albert in 1858, staying up late into the night because it ‘proved so interesting.’ (Diary entry, 2 August 1858, quoted in Allott, p. 140)
4 Quoted in Allott, p. 142
5 Cecil Frances Humphreys (Mrs Alexander)’s Hymns for Little Children, 1848; it was published after Jane Eyre but before Rigby’s review.
6 Letter, 4 February 1849, in Wise and Symington, p. 307
7 See the letters of 25 February, 28 February, 11 March, 29 March, all 1848, on affairs in France and their relationship to England; and especially 20 April 1848, on Chartism (Wise and Symington, pp. 188–203)
8 See Eagleton, Lodge, Moglen
9 Heilman, in Allott, p. 195
10 See especially Leavis; also Gilbert and Gubar, Martin, Maynard, Moglen, Shannon
11 Recent criticism has seen it more specifically as a female bildungsroman, see e.g. Gilbert and Gubar, Showalter, though see Rich for a counter-view.
12 See Myer for a thoughtful overview of the debate about whether or not Jane Eyre is a Christian novel
13 See Eagleton for a Marxist reading, Gilbert and Gubar for a feminist account, Maynard, Moglen for variations on a psychoanalytic theme, and Meyer (in Glen, pp. 92–129) for a post-colonial reading
14 See Shannon for an account of the structural dimensions of the use of the present tense
15 The Guardian reviewer, 1 December 1847, was particularly alarmed by the endorsement of this creed, ‘even though it be in a novel’ (McNees, p. 10).
16 See Winnifrith for an exhaustive account of the complexities of Victorian religious belief
17 But see Martin and Macpherson, who, coming from very different critical positions, take the view that Rochester’s call is a call from God.
18 See Leavis, p. 25
19 See Williams for an interesting account of the intertextuality of the ending
bibliography
The definitive scholarly edition of Jane Eyre is edited by Jane Jack and Margaret Smith, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1969.
Biography
Rebecca Fraser, Charlotte Brontë, Methuen, London, 1988
Elizabeth Gaskell, The Life of Charlotte Bronte (Smith, Elder & Co., 1857), ed. Alan Shelston, Penguin, Harmondsworth, 1975
Lyndall Gordon, Charlotte Brontë: A Passionate Life, Vintage, London, 1995
Helene Moglen, Charlotte Brontë: The Self Conceived, W.W.Norton & Co., New York, 1978; combines biography with criticism
Thomas J. Wise and John A. Symington (eds), The Brontës: Their Lives, Friendships and Correspondence, (1st. edition, 1933), reprinted in 2 vols., Basil Blackwell, Oxford, 1980
Criticism
Miriam Allott (ed.), Charlotte Brontë: Jane Eyre and Villette, Casebook Series, Macmillan, London, 1973; a useful adjunct to the New Casebook
Terry Eagleton, Myths of Power (1st edition 1975), reprinted with a new introduction, Macmillan, London, 1988; an early Marxist account of the Brontës’ work – weak on Jane Eyre but of historical interest
Inga-Stina Ewbank, Their Proper Sphere: A Study of the Brontë Sisters as Early Victorian Female Novelists, Arnold, London, 1966
Sandra M. Gilbert and Susan S.Gubar, The Madwoman in the Attic: the Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-Century Literary Imagination, Yale University Press, New Haven and London, 1979; highly influential feminist account
Heather Glen (ed.), Jane Eyre, New Casebook series, Macmillan, London, 1997; a good range of recent readings, predominantly by female critics
Robert B. Heilman, ‘Charlotte Brontë’s New
Gothic’ in From Jane Austen to Conrad, ed. R.C.Rathbone and M. Steinmann, University of Minnesota Press, Minnesota, 1958; classic, and still fresh, account of Brontë’s revolutionary use of Gothic techniques
Q. D. Leavis, Introduction to Jane Eyre, Penguin, Harmondsworth, 1966; now out of print, but reprinted in McNees, pp. 131-149. Stands up well.
David Lodge, ‘Fire and Eyre: Charlotte Brontë’s War of Earthly Elements’, in The Language of Fiction: Essays in Criticism and Verbal Analysis of the English Novel, Routledge and Kegan Paul, London, 1966
Pat Macpherson, Reflecting on Jane Eyre, Routledge, London and New York, 1989; personal, engaged, sometimes irritating
Robert B. Martin, The Accents of Persuasion, Faber and Faber, London, 1966
John Maynard, Charlotte Brontë and Sexuality, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1984; good on the Rivers section of the novel
Eleanor McNees (ed.), The Brontë Sisters: Critical Assessments, Helm Information, Robertsbridge, East Sussex, 1996; Vol. 3 relates to Jane Eyre
Susan L. Meyer, Imperialism at Home: Race in Victorian Women’s Fiction, Cornell University Press, Ithaca, New York, 1996
Valerie Grosvenor Myer, Charlotte Bronte: Truculent Spirit, Vision/Barnes and Noble, London and New Jersey, 1987
Margot Peters, Charlotte Brontë: Style in the Novel, University of Wisconsin Press, Wisconsin, 1973
F. B. Pinion, A Brontë Companion: Literary Assessments, Background, and Reference, Macmillan, London, 1975
Barry Qualls, The Secular Pilgrims of Victorian Fiction: The Novel as Book of Life, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1981
Doreen Roberts, ‘Jane Eyre and The Warped System of Things
’ in Reading the Victorian Novel: Detail Into Form, ed. Ian Gregor, Vision Press, London, 1980; reprinted in Glen
Edgar F. Shannon Jr., ‘The Present Tense in Jane Eyre’, Nineteenth-Century Fiction, 10, 1955, pp. 141-5; reprinted in McNees
Elaine Showalter, A Literature of Their Own: British Women Novelists from Brontë to Lessing, Princeton University Press, Princeton, 1977; Virago, London, 1978, revised 1982; early, influential feminist account
Sally Shuttleworth, Charlotte Brontë and Victorian Psychology, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1996
Patsy Stoneman, Brontë Transformations: The Cultural Dissemination of Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights, Prentice Hall/ Harvester Wheatsheaf, Hemel Hempstead, 1996; fascinating account of Jane Eyre spin-offs
John Sutherland, Can Jane Eyre Be Happy? More Puzzles in Classic Fiction, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1997
Kathleen Tillotson, Novels of the Eighteen-forties, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1954
Carolyn Williams, ‘Closing the Book: The Intertextual End of Jane Eyre’ in Victorian Connections, Jerome McGann (ed.), University Press of Virginia, Charlottesville, 1989; reprinted in McNees
Tom Winnifrith, The Brontës and their Background: Romance and Reality, Macmillan, London, 1973
Internet links
Voice of the Shuttle: http://humanitas.ucsb.edu/shuttle/eng-vict.html; general site with excellent links to contextual as well as author-specific material
George P. Landow’s Victorian Web Site; the Jane Eyre site is on http://landow.stg.brown.edu/victorian/bronte/cbronte/bronteov2.html
http://www.cwrl.utexas.edu/~gsiesing/314/webresources/brontewebresources.html; gives a range of web links for Charlotte Brontë
http://lang.nagoya-u.ac.ip/~matsuoka/Bronte.html; a miscellany, including links to the Jane Eyre musical – fun!
All the above sites were visited 17/9/99.
author’s preface
to the second edition
A preface to the first edition of Jane Eyre being unnecessary, I gave none: this second edition demands a few words both of acknowledgment and miscellaneous remark.
My thanks are due in three quarters.
To the public, for the indulgent ear it has inclined to a plain tale with few pretensions.
To the press, for the fair field its honest suffrage has opened to an obscure aspirant.
To my publishers, for the aid their tact, their energy, their practical sense, and frank liberality have afforded an unknown and unrecommended author.
The press and the public are but vague personifications for me, and I must thank them in vague terms; but my publishers are definite: so are certain generous critics who have encouraged me as only large-hearted and high-minded men know how to encourage a struggling stranger; to them, i.e. to my publishers and the select reviewers, I say cordially, gentlemen, I thank you from my heart.
Having thus acknowledged what I owe those who have aided and approved me, I turn to another class; a small one, so far as I know, but not, therefore, to be overlooked. I mean the timorous or carping few who doubt the tendency of such books as Jane Eyre: in whose eyes whatever is unusual is wrong; whose ears detect in each protest against bigotry – that parent of crime – an insult to piety, that regent of God on earth. I would suggest to such doubters certain obvious distinctions; I would remind them of certain simple truths.
Conventionality is not morality. Self-righteousness is not religion. To attack the first is not to assail the last. To pluck the mask from the face of the Pharisee, is not to lift an impious hand to the crown of thorns.
These things and deeds are diametrically opposed: they are as distinct as is vice from virtue. Men too often confound them; they should not be confounded: appearance should not be mistaken for truth; narrow human doctrines, that only tend to elate and magnify a few, should not be substituted for the world-redeeming creed of Christ. There is – I repeat it – a difference; and it is a good, and not a bad action to mark broadly and clearly the line of separation between them.
The world may not like to see these ideas dissevered, for it has been accustomed to blend them; finding it convenient to make external show pass for sterling worth – to let white-washed walls vouch for clean shrines. It may hate him who dares to scrutinize and expose – to rase the gilding, and show base metal under it – to penetrate the sepulchre, and reveal charnel relics: but, hate as it will, it is indebted to him.
Ahab did not like Micaiah, because he never prophesied good concerning him, but evil: probably he liked the sycophant son of Chenaannah better; yet might Ahab have escaped a bloody death, had he but stopped his ears to flattery, and opened them to faithful counsel.
There is a man in our own days whose words are not framed to tickle delicate ears: who, to my thinking, comes before the great ones of society, much as the son of Imlah came before the throned Kings of Judah and Israel; and who speaks truth as deep, with a power as prophet-like and as vital – a mien as dauntless and as daring. Is the satirist of Vanity Fair admired in high places ? I cannot tell; but I think if some of those amongst whom he hurls the Greek fire of his sarcasm, and over whom he flashes the levin-brand of his denunciation, were to take his warnings in time – they or their seed might yet escape a fatal Ramoth-Gilead.
Why have I alluded to this man? I have alluded to him, Reader, because I think I see in him an intellect profounder and more unique than his contemporaries have yet recognised; because I regard him as the first social regenerator of the day – as the very master of that working corps who would restore to rectitude the warped system of things; because I think no commentator on his writings has yet found the comparison that suits him, the terms which rightly characterize his talent. They say he is like Fielding: they talk of his wit, humour, comic powers. He resembles Fielding as an eagle does a vulture: Fielding could stoop on carrion, but Thackeray never does. His wit is bright, his humour attractive, but both bear the same relation to his serious genius, that the mere lambent sheet-lightning playing under the edge of the summer-cloud, does to the electric death-spark hid in its womb. Finally; I have alluded to Mr Thackeray, because to him – if he will accept the tribute of a total stranger – I have dedicated this second edition of Jane Eyre.
Currer Bell
21 December 1847
author’s note to the third edition
I avail myself of the opportunity which a third edition of Jane Eyre affords me, of again addressing a word to the public, to explain that my claim to the title of novelist rests on this one work alone. If, therefore, the authorship of other works of fiction has been attributed to me, an honour is awarded where it is not merited; and consequently, denied where it is justly due.
This explanation will serve to rectify mistakes which may already have been made, and to prevent future errors.
Currer Bell
13 April 1848
to
w. m. thackeray, esq
this work is
respectfully inscribed
by the author
Chapter 1
There was no possibility of taking a walk that day. We had been wandering, indeed, in the leafless shrubbery an hour in the morning; but since dinner (Mrs Reed, when there was no company, dined early) the cold winter wind had brought with it clouds so sombre, and a rain so penetrating, that further outdoor exercise was now out of the