Fortune Telling Collection - Comprehensive fortune-telling - Jane Eyre's Reading Notes

Jane Eyre's Reading Notes

Jane Eyre's Reading Notes

Unusual past, shocking love. Unforgettable memories, unforgettable feelings, the love between them is rock-solid, and the belief in their hearts is unshakable. This is the extraordinary fate of Jane Eyre and Rochester, an ordinary woman and an extraordinary man, which made Charlotte Brontexq, the author of Jane Eyre, famous in history and verified that sentence? Everything is fine if it ends well? An old saying.

They first met on a quiet night. Rochester is riding a horse, while Jane is sitting on the steps leading to the field. So the accident happened? Rochester fell, and God gave Jane a chance to talk to Rochester. The author subverts the tradition that the prince saves the princess, and instead, the ugly duckling saves a Gothic prince, which fully exaggerates this romantic encounter. Cupid's golden arrow hit the prince and the ugly duckling, making them fall in love at first sight. However, the ugly duckling doesn't know that the prince is her master. Rochester kept telling Jane, but he didn't show any flaws. Unsuspecting Jane told the whole truth. This cocaine destroyed Rochester. The last sentence? Thank you. Now go to Haicun to post a letter. Go back quickly. ? Rochester's concern for Jane, a master's concern for the tutor, is vividly displayed. Although Rochester is the owner of a large manor, he also knows how to care for those who work for him. There is no doubt that Rochester is a good man.

The formal first meeting between Rochester and Jane is full of mystery to Jane, and Jane is also full of curiosity about its owner. Jane was afraid of strangers and felt uncomfortable being summoned by Rochester, so she carefully answered Mr. Rochester's questions one after another, and Mr. Rochester pressed on as if Jane Eyre had to say something wrong. They just kept defending and attacking each other, and no one would let anyone. Until talking about Jane's life, the atmosphere was a little relaxed, because they finally found each other. Anger at the cruelty of lowood school. Later, when Jane played the piano for Rochester and showed her paintings to Rochester, Rochester further affirmed Jane's talent. But he insisted on pretending to question and said: Is that your hand? [2]? Even if he said such sharp language and said such seemingly critical things as praise, it didn't annoy Jane. Jane keeps a supercilious attitude, answers every question carefully and tries her best to maintain her personal dignity, even though she is a tutor.

Jane's unique personality makes Rochester fall in love with her even more. Jane's simplicity and purity are so precious compared with the vanity of those rich girls. Rochester decided to test Jane's feelings for him, so he pretended to be a gypsy witch to tell Jane's fortune. As he expected, he saw Jane's anxiety and affection for him when she didn't know her fate. He tried his best to explore Jane's psychology and gave the whole novel a mysterious color.

As the fairy tale says, the ugly duckling will eventually become a white swan, and Charlotte once again subverts this legend, because the ugly duckling cannot become a white swan. Jane's marriage with Rochester failed because she had a crazy ex-wife. Jane left Rochester not only for faith and morality, but also for her own dignity. She can't cross the moral line. She has been looking for a balance between humanism and theology, and choosing between reason and emotion. But Jane loves Rochester too much to care if she can't be with him. She rejected the false Christian St. John's proposal to her and cherished her true love.

It was not until the fire destroyed Thornfield House, killed Rochester's Gothic ex-wife, blinded Rochester's eyes and burned all Rochester's Gothic things that Rochester became clear and thorough. At this time, Jane finally had a chance to be with Rochester. Although people have changed and the mirror has moved, her heart remains the same, true love lives on, and all shall be well, jack shall have Jill. Only Jane can tolerate Rochester as a villain and hero. Misfortune tests the sincerity of friends. Rochester is blind. He doesn't have that much property, let alone his previous charm. At this time, only Jane is willing to marry him.

Although the ugly duckling didn't turn into a white swan, God turned the Gothic prince into a frog. At the end of the story, the frog and the ugly duckling lived happily ever after.

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