Jane Eyre short summary & analysis

Ratings


8.1
Very Good

Jane Eyre - Charlotte Bronte

Categories:Classics

Jane Eyre Analysis

Jane Eyre is a novel by British woman writer Charlotte Bronte which was initially published in 1847. Charlotte Brontë published her work under the pseudonym Currer Bell; which is a male name, for nobody respected and valued woman writers in England in that period. Yet, later on, the book began to be published under Charlotte Brontë’s name.

As she was writing Jane Eyre, Charlotte Brontë was inspired by her own life. Lowood School; mentioned in the book, was fictionalized through being inspired by the school where educated the children of the clergy and Charlotte Brontë herself was taught with her sisters. Furthermore, the rumor has it that the death scene in the book mirrors the death of Charlotte Brontë’s elder sister, Maria.

The main issues which form the keystone of the book are women rights and the preservation of women rights. The book is in the possession of a feminine language and is written from Jane Eyre’s own mouth. Jane Eyre is one of the most crucial books which were written via adhering to Romanticist movement. It has not lost its popularity for years and it is still read and appreciated by the readers.

For my part, Jane Eyre turned out to be a book that I very fondly read again. Personally, I barely remember I have read a bad book by Brontë sisters. I can say that Charlotte Brontë is going to be counted among my favorite authors. The author’s language was genuine and I felt as if Jane Eyre was herself telling me her personal history while reading the book. It was a very fluent novel. I hope, you will also read Jane Eyre and you will like it very much, as I did.

Jane Eyre Short Summary

Jane is a little girl who has lost her both parents one after another and begins to live at her uncle’s house after the loss of her family upon her mother’s last will. Yet, her uncle has also passed away in a short time after her settling in her uncle’s house. Her uncle has a wife and three children; two girls and a boy. All of them hate Jane and treat her unfairly. After her uncle’s death Jane Eyre becomes in need of the mercy of her aunt and her cousins. The only person who loves Jane and watches her over even for a bit is the maid, Bessie. Yet, Bessie’s love is pale in comparison with the hatred of her aunt and her cousins.

When Jane turns ten, her aunt decides to send her to a boarding school. The school that Jane is to attend is Lowood School where serves the children of poor families and is a foundation school. Yet, despite everything Jane is content that she will get rid of this house where she is mistreated.

Jane spends eight fine years in Lowood School in spite of the difficulties she encounters with. She teaches in the school in the last two years. After these eight years, she decides that she must leave the school and she puts an advert in the newspaper for the families who search for governesses. Her advert is replied by a lady named Mrs. Fairfax who lives in a place called Thornfield. She is supposed to govern a nine-year-old girl. She immediately accepts this offer and she takes the road to Thornfield.

As she arrives to Thornfield Hall, she meets Mrs. Fairfax, who is an elderly and amiable woman. Mrs. Fairfax is the housekeeper of Thornfield Hall. The owner of the house is a gentleman named Mr. Rochester, but, Jane cannot have the chance to meet Mr. Rochester for he travels a lot. The little girl whom she will govern is a petite, lovely girl named Adele. Although her English is poor due to the fact that she was born in France, Jane has been taught in French in Lowood; and she does not have any difficulty to communicate with Adele. They get on well with Adele and Jane teaches her a lot of things in a short period. She loves Mrs. Fairfax as well. Yet, Mr. Rochester; the owner of the house, has not stopped by the house for all this time that she spends in Thornfield. Afterwards, she has an opportunity to meet Mr. Rochester by coincidence; yet, she is unaware of how this coincidence would change the flow of her life.

Comments

Jane Eyre Snuff Mathilda The Importance of Being Ernest To Have and Have Not In Dubious Battle The BFG (Big Friendly Giant) The House of Paper The Snows of Kilimanjaro Choke The Education of Little Tree The New Atlantis Me Before You Everything, Everything Out of My Mind The Boy in the Striped Pajamas A Midsummer Night's Dream Bartleby, The Scrivener The Glass Castle Beloved Gulliver's Travels The Old Curiosity Shop Heart of Darkness Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea Martin Eden Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl Life on the Mississippi A Farewell to Arms The Sound and the Fury Annabel Lee The Diaries of Adam and Eve The Prince and the Pauper Othello Brave New World Breakfast at Tiffany's Lord of the Flies The Green Mile Man in the Iron Mask The Fault in Our Stars Frankenstein Silas Marner Man's Search for Meaning Why Nations Fail Planet of the Apes Romeo and Juliet Hard Times The Secret of Letting Go Tuck Everlasting A House at the Bottom of a Lake The Call of the Wild A Christmas Carol Dead Poets Society Macbeth Utopia Hamlet Emma The Idiot Anna Karenina Moby Dick Don Quixote To Kill a Mockingbird The Adventures of Tom Sawyer Dracula Alice's Adventures in Wonderland Crime and Punishment War and Peace The Little Prince My Left Foot Fahrenheit 451 The Old Man and the Sea Charlie and the Chocolate Factory Jonathan Livingston Seagull White Fang The Kite Runner The Count of Monte Cristo Journey to the Centre of the Earth The Three Musketeers Treasure Island David Copperfield The Picture of Dorian Gray The Happy Prince Pride and Prejudice The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Wuthering Heights Oliver Twist The Art of War Adventures of Huckleberry Finn A Tale of Two Cities Animal Farm The Pearl The Grapes of Wrath Bird Box Little Women Robinson Crusoe The Girl on the Train Jane Eyre The Great Gatsby Fear (Angst) Of Mice and Men