Because Charlotte Brontë, the author of the novel, had two sisters who died of tuberculosis while they were at boarding school; this pattern suggests a parallel that Brontë has created between her and Jane's lives.
Helen Burns
Jane Eyre's friend at Lowood was Helen Burns. Helen was a kind and gentle girl who befriended Jane during their time at the school.
Helen Burns, Jane Eyre's friend at Lowood school, is around 14 years old when they first meet. Helen is portrayed as kind, devout, and wise beyond her years, providing Jane with comfort and guidance during their time together at Lowood.
Helen Burns suffers from consumption, which is an archaic term for tuberculosis. This disease contributes to her eventual death in the novel "Jane Eyre" by Charlotte Brontë.
Helen Burns is Jane Eyre's close friend at Lowood School. She is portrayed as a pious and compassionate character who endures suffering with grace and forgiveness. Helen's influence on Jane highlights themes of patience, forgiveness, and faith in the novel.
This question refers to Jane Eyre, the eponymous heroine of the 1847 novel by Charlotte Bronte, of the famed literary Bronte Sisters, the others being Emily (Who wrote 'Wuthering Heights') and Anne, whose literary achievements have generally been overshadowed by those of her more prolific and fame-seeking sisters. Jane Eyre, a young orphan, is sent at the age of ten to be educated at the Lowood Charity School by her wealthy but cruel Aunt Reed. She is even obliged to spend her school holidays there alone while the other students go home. She survives a raging epidemic of Typhus which carries off half of the student body, although among the dead is Helen Burns, her best friend, and huge influence on her spiritual and moral growth, who dies of consumption (Tuberculosis) in her very arms. The other major influence on Jane's development at Lowood School is its Headmistress, Miss Temple, who shows her for the first time in her life the qualities of fairness and kindness, and under her careful handling, Jane comes to thrive at Lowood, eventually becoming a teacher there. This is where the story picks up again. Miss Temple has left to get married, and Jane, now age eighteen, feels herself at a crossroads in her life. She desires a change, if only that of a "new servitude", and places an advertisement in the newspaper in order to find a place as a governess. This she achieves, and leaves Lowood to take up her position as governess to Miss Adele Varens, ward of Mr. Edward Rochester of Thornfield Hall, and this is the point of the novel in which the main events of the plot begin to play out.
Helen Burns was drawn to Miss Temple, the kind and fair-minded superintendent at Lowood School in Jane Eyre. Miss Temple provided Helen with a sense of comfort and stability, becoming a significant figure in her life.
Helen Burns is most fond of Miss Temple, her instructor and friend at Lowood School in the novel "Jane Eyre" by Charlotte Bronte. Miss Temple serves as a compassionate and understanding maternal figure for Helen and the other girls at the school.
Helen Davis Dell has written: 'Students' rights and responsibilities' -- subject(s): Students, Right to education
Tuberculosis of the hip
Helen is gay
Yes, Helen Keller went there!