Study Guide to Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë
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A comprehensive study guide offering in-depth explanation, essay, and test prep for Charlotte Brönte’s Jane Eyre, a story of a young woman who challenged social norms.
As a classic novel written in the Victorian era, Jane Eyre is thought to be one of the reasons women equality has progressed to the extent that it has. Mor
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Study Guide to Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë - Intelligent Education
INTRODUCTION TO CHARLOTTE BRONTË
THE BRONTËS
The four Brontës lived and died in the first part of the nineteenth century. They were born in the years just after the Napoleonic wars - Charlotte the year after Waterloo (1815), the victory of her hero, the Duke of Wellington. Branwell, Emily, and Anne saw the first dozen years of Queen Victoria’s long reign (1837-1901). Only Charlotte lived to see the mid-century mark and the Great Exhibition of 1851 (the ancestor of our World’s Fair), which celebrated half a century of progress.
These were years of swift and kaleidoscopic change in England. Few periods have seen such changes in the face of a country in such a short time. Though there had long been some industrial centers, England in the early years of the nineteenth century was still predominantly rural. The majority of the people were in some way connected with the land, and the typical community was the village with its parson and squire (local landed proprietor). Land was what counted in terms of power and prestige. Landowning gentry such as Rochester in Jane Eyre, the Lintons in Wuthering Heights, and Darcy and Bingley in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, were important socially and politically.
But already by the year of Waterloo, industry was growing rapidly and more and more communities became large slums. Great cotton mills had sprung up in Lancashire and with them coal mines and blast furnaces. Steam-driven machinery was installed in Yorkshire; the traditional wool industry began to feel the effects of the Industrial Revolution, and enterprising mill-owners began to buy the new machinery. Power spinning began to drive out hand spinning. Side by side with mechanized industry came better transportation. Already the roads had been greatly improved and the construction of canals begun. Coaches and barges went everywhere. In 1825, when the Brontës were small children, the first railway was built; by the time they were young people, and had a small legacy to invest, the railways offered them a good return on their money and the great iron web was spreading all over the land, taking new thoughts and new ideas as well as new goods wherever it went.
It is interesting to notice, though, that while Charlotte and Emily Brontë were in advance of their time in their independent habits of mind, they liked to place their stories in the past. The opening chapter of Wuthering Heights is dated 1802, and the main action of the story begins a generation before that. Charlotte’s Shirley deals with the Luddite riots - outbreaks of machine-smashing by unemployed factory workers - which took place during the Napoleonic wars before she was born. Jane Eyre apparently begins just before the turn of the century, or so we would conclude from the reference to Sir Walter Scott’s Marmion in Chapter 32. Marmion, published in 1808, is there described as a new work,
and Jane is about nineteen when St. John Rivers gives it to her. Thus the action of Jane Eyre takes place in the coaching era, before the advent of the railways. However, in certain respects it also reflects the economic and social changes of a little later period, as will be apparent in the next section.
SOCIAL CHANGES AND EDUCATION
Connected with the improvements in industry and transport was the rise of a new kind of ruling class, the mill-owners and mine-owners of the industrial age. As they gained in financial strength in their communities, they began to demand political power. The Reform Bill of 1832 (of which Charlotte, then a schoolgirl, wrote an enthusiastic account) gave this group the vote. They began to compete with the old landed gentry and went on in their turn to buy land, to build attractive houses, to travel, and to improve themselves generally. We see an old landed family and a member of the nouveau riche side by side in Jane Eyre, for while St. John Rivers is a member of an old family, it is Mr. Oliver, the taciturn needle manufacturer, who has the money. Notice that Oliver would be graciously willing to let his daughter marry into the Rivers family with its fine old traditions. Another example of a manufacturer of the new sort is Robert Moore in Shirley. The novel shows, among other things, the struggles of Moore to keep his mill going in the face of the opposition from workmen who have been thrown out of work by his new machines.
One of the ways in which the mill-owning families strove to improve themselves was by providing a good education for their children. In Yorkshire, as in other industrial areas, many families now had enough money to hire governesses and tutors for their children or to send them to school, if they so desired. At the same time there were many impoverished gentlewomen for whom being a governess was the one respectable career open to them. It was in this economic and social situation that girls of good background began to go out to work; and it was with this situation in mind that the Brontës made their plans for earning their living, which would one day be necessary if they were unmarried when their father died. All the girls were governesses in homes or schools, and Branwell was at one time a tutor. Eventually the girls planned to have a school of their own and so find security and independence. Two of the Brontë novels, Jane Eyre and Anne Brontë’s Agnes Grey, concern the careers of governesses and give a good idea of their circumstances. Their position was indeed often an uncomfortable one, as Charlotte and Anne both felt. They were of a higher class than the servants and yet not on a level with the family, and in consequence the often suffered from loneliness and humiliation. They were also extremely poorly paid. Even later in the century, fifteen pounds a year, Jane’s salary at Lowood, was a not uncommon sum; although it compared unfavorably with the pay received by miners and weavers, who usually earned between forty and sixty pounds a year. When she was a teacher in a boarding school, Charlotte herself wrote that when she had paid her expenses and bought clothes for herself and Anne, she had nothing left. Her heroine, Jane, was certainly one of the very poorest of wage earners.
RELIGIOUS BACKGROUND
The religious situation of the time is complex and ought to be understood, as a knowledge of it is assumed in Jane Eyre and other Brontë novels. The Church of England or Anglican Church (its American branch is called the Protestant Episcopal Church) was the Established Church of England; that is, it received financial support from the state and had essential ties with the Crown and Parliament. Reverend Patrick Brontë, the father of the Brontës, was an Anglican clergyman. Other Protestant bodies, which did not enjoy this connection with the state, were called nonconformists
or Dissenters.
They included the Methodists, the Baptists, and the Congregationalists. Roman Catholics were a small minority at the time and were widely feared and disliked, partly because in the past they had often been suspected of alliance with England’s Catholic enemies, Spain and France, and partly because they were thought to owe their first allegiance to the Pope rather than to the English Crown. Charlotte’s letters from Belgium and her novel Villette, as well as Chapter 22 in Jane Eyre, attest to a prejudice against Catholicism which seems to the modern reader sheer bigotry; it should be remembered that her views were characteristic of the only society she knew.
During the eighteenth century, the Church of England was in a state of spiritual destitution. It was substantially controlled by the conservative landowning gentry, whose younger sons frequently held livings
(positions) in the Church, lacked any real sense of vocation, and left their parish duties to their overworked subordinates. Large sections of the poorer classes, particularly in the new industrial areas, were out of touch with the Church altogether, and their widespread drunkenness and immorality seemed beyond the power of religion to redeem. Two related religious movements brought about some badly needed reformation in this state of affairs.
THE METHODIST REVIVAL
The brothers John and Charles Wesley, members of a society which undertook a methodical
cultivation of the religious life, underwent deeply felt religious conversions before the middle of the eighteenth century. They devoted the rest of their lives to highly successful preaching missions to convert others to the new understanding they had attained. They believed that in Christ was forgiveness of sins and grace for a renewed life in His service. The new life would issue in joyous and spontaneous acts of piety and charity. Their preaching was immensely successful both in England and America and affected both the Church of England, of which they were ordained ministers, and the Methodist churches which their followers founded. Methodism was more emotional, appealed to large numbers of the deprived, uneducated population, and was, therefore, numerically strong. Within the Church of England, and persons affected by the religious revival were called Evangelicals
and formed a relatively small but influential party. They wielded enormous moral power in their time and were behind such movements as the freeing of the slaves, the education of poor children, prison and factory reforms, and the distribution of pious literature to the working classes. They did much good, but, like every religion, Methodism and Evangelicalism were subject to perversion and their adherents to hypocrisy and fanaticism.
Although they were members of the Church of England, the Brontës were exposed to Methodist influence from both sides of the family. Mr. Brontë had once been connected with a Methodist school, and their Aunt Branwell, who brought them up, taught them Methodist hymns and prayers and lent them Methodist magazines. Moreover, Haworth had in the past been the scene of Methodist revivals. What was the effect on Emily and Charlotte Brontë of this exposure to Evangelical religion? To judge by the novels, their reaction seems to have been a negative one. In Wuthering Heights, we have the portrait of the grumbling, puritanical fanatic, Joseph; in Jane Eyre the meddling, loveless, hypocritical Mr. Brocklehust. Were those portraits drawn from life?
CHRONOLOGY OF THE BRONTËS
JANE EYRE
INTRODUCTION TO CHARLOTTE BRONTË LIFE OF CHARLOTTE BRONTË
The Brontës were one of the most extraordinary literary families who ever lived. They spent the greater part of their lives in an isolated Yorkshire village on the edge of the moors, not only cut off from the Victorian world of letters, but also to a large extent from the companionship of young people of their own age and education. Yet they became known and loved all over the world. Their books have been translated into many languages and are always high in reading popularity. Their home, Haworth Parsonage, is visited by Brontë lovers from many nations - by over 146,000 people in 1971. Every decade sees new attempts to dramatize their lives and works in plays or films. Finally, it has been estimated that there have been more items of critical writing on the Brontës than on any other English writer except Shakespeare. What is the source of the Brontë uniqueness and of their perennial appeal? We may seek the answer to this question in their unusual heredity and environment, in their own genius, in their effect on each other, and in the tragic nature of their lives.
Phyllis Bentley, herself a novelist and a Yorkshire-woman, has called attention to the favorable combination of Celtic heredity and Yorkshire environment in the Brontë temperament. Their parents were both Celtic, their mother being from Cornwall and their father from Ireland. Yet they grew up in Yorkshire and were in fact able to speak and write either an Irish brogue or a Yorkshire dialect with the greatest of ease. They thought of themselves as English, yet were aware of their Cornish and Irish descent. Miss Bentley comments: The Yorkshire character (descended partially from Scandinavian elements) forms a great contrast to the Irish; it is vigorous, practical, prosaic, stubborn, broadly humorous and sparing of speech where the Irish is melancholy, passionate, proud, restless, eloquent, and witty. This striking contrast between the Brontës’ heredity and their environment played, as we shall see, a highly important part in forming the nature of their work.
(See her book The Brontë Sisters, p. 12.) [The Celts, for our present purpose, were the inhabitants of the British Isles pushed to the west and north of England by the Anglo-Saxons and Danish invaders.]
Next, all the young Brontës were talented and precocious. Now, of course, gifted children are not rare. But Charlotte, Branwell, Emily, and Anne Brontë were a rare combination. What is unique in the