Jane eyre who is bessie




















Chapter I. Chapter II. Chapter III. Chapter IV. Chapter V. Chapter VI. Chapter VII. Chapter 8. Chapter IX. Chapter X. Chapter XI. Chapter XII. Chapter XIII. Chapter XIV. Chapter XV. Chapter XVI. At Lowood, Jane is once again faced with contrasting qualities in the women she meets. Miss Temple is very kind and genuinely cares about the students, including Jane. Miss Temple is compassionate and against injustice and Jane admires her.

When Mr. Brocklehurst called Jane careless and a liar in front of the school, Miss Temple tells gives Jane a chance to prove the opposite, and publicly announces her innocent. Jane learns a lot from Miss Temple at Lowood, until she leaves the school to get married.

Eventually, Jane decides she needs change and leaves Lowood for a new servitude at Thornfield. Now a grown woman, Jane arrives at Thornfield to start her new job as a governess for a child named Adele.

When dealing with Adele, Jane exerts many of the same qualities that Bessie and Miss Temple had previously shown and taught her. Jane is kind and caring and acts as a mother-figure towards Adele, who is also an orphan. Jane feels close to the child because they have a similar past, lacking parents throughout their childhood.

Jane especially shows her kindness towards Adele one day when Mr. At times, Bessie can be kind and loving towards Jane, offering her treats as a child, whereas, on other occasions, she can scold and punish Jane for no apparent reason. At the end of the novel, the reader learns Bessie cares for Jane, as she is excited to see Jane as an adult and is pleased she is happy.

John Rivers. Later in her life, Jane attempts reconciliation with her aunt, but the old woman continues to resent her because her husband had always loved Jane more than his own children. Read an in-depth analysis of Mrs. Always kind to Jane, Mr. The beautiful Georgiana treats Jane cruelly when they are children, but later in their lives she befriends her cousin and confides in her. Reed of the arrangement and sabotages the plan. After Mrs. Reed dies, Georgiana marries a wealthy man.

Not as beautiful as her sister, Eliza devotes herself somewhat self-righteously to the church and eventually goes to a convent in France where she becomes the Mother Superior. John treats Jane with appalling cruelty during their childhood and later falls into a life of drinking and gambling.

John commits suicide midway through the novel when his mother ceases to pay his debts for him. She endures her miserable life there with a passive dignity that Jane cannot understand.

Read an in-depth analysis of Helen Burns. The cruel, hypocritical master of the Lowood School, Mr. Brocklehurst preaches a doctrine of privation, while stealing from the school to support his luxurious lifestyle.

Maria Temple is a kind teacher at Lowood, who treats Jane and Helen with respect and compassion. Miss Temple helps clear Jane of Mrs. Alice Fairfax is the housekeeper at Thornfield Hall.



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