Friday, December 19, 2008

A12,A13,A14

If I were Jane, I wouldn’t even consider having a relationship with Rochester or better yet a mutual friendship with him either. She doesn’t because she’s still hurt from what has previously happened. She was basically involved with a married man whom she put all her trust in and he still ended up lying to her and hurting her. I think Jane feels that she has no place at Thornefield anymore and that there was no purpose of her still being there if she couldn’t be with the person who she loved. I think Rochester should have explained himself way earlier before he even proposed to her so that things wouldn’t have happened like this and Jane wouldn’t feel like a fool. I think Jane dream of her mother simply because of the fact that Rochester had mentioned Bertha’s mother’s personality and also because of Jane’s curiosity of her own mother and what she was like. Jane ends up leaving Rochester anyway because it’s the only way to help her get better from the shocking situation that she had witnessed. Im not sure what name I would give it, but I know it would have something to do with restarting something right again.

Now that Jane is completely on her own now. She is clueless on her next move and doesn’t know which way to go until she ends up at a house where the Rivers family live. With a clergyman the head of the household and his two sisters living with him they take her in and try to figure out her life. They are a very curious family and ask her many questions about her and how she got to this point in her life. St. John is another one of those mysterious men who have a lot of emotion hidden inside of them. I think he was the most curious about Jane and where she came from out of everyone else. Of course Jane becomes a teacher, which I am not surprised about. Seeing that she was a governess before, she knew what she was doing so it didn’t take long for her to get adjusted to her new title as a teacher. But in the mist of it, she is satisfied of where she is and gets along with the family very well.

Jane finds out some good news that brings her back to life. The Rivers are her cousins from her father’s side of the family and she is excited to know that she finally has family out here for her and that makes her happy. But things take a turn as St. John looks at it differently, he wants to make Jane his wife so that he can travel and she can go along with him on his journeys. Jane is against this and tries to get out of it, but St. John rejects it. To me, that isn’t fair that she is being forced to marry her cousin who doesn’t even love her. Jane isn’t afraid to speak up or voice her opinion so every chance she gets she states her opinion.

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