In Charlotte Brontë's "Jane Eyre," Adele is revealed to be the illegitimate daughter of Mr. Rochester's former mistress, Celine Varens. Adele's future is left uncertain at the end of the novel as Jane and Mr. Rochester depart Thornfield Hall together.
Jane Eyre's love was undoubtedly Mr. Rochester. Though she considered marriage to St.John, she did not truly love him, but instead respected him and his devotion to his faith. But it Mr. Rochester whom she loved, and married and lived as happily ever after as the imagination of Charlotte Bronte would have allowed.
Jane Eyre starts off as a teacher at the school she attended, I can't remember it's name but you should find it somewhere if you Google it. She then becomes governess in the Rochester house teaching a french girl called Adele. Near the end of the book she becomes a teacher again before quitting to be a carer for Mr Rochester.
The climax of Jane Eyre is when Jane travels back to Thornwood and sees that there was a fire. This fire resulted in Rochester maiming an arm and losing his vision. It also resulted in the death of Bertha which finally got rid of all the legal troubles associated with a marriage between Jane and Rochester.
Rochester ended his affair with Celine Varens because he discovered that she was cheating on him with someone else for money, and he realized she was only interested in his wealth. This betrayal made him lose interest in her and break off the relationship.
By the end of these chapters, Jane and Rochester's relationship has deepened as they both express their love for each other more openly. Rochester is more vulnerable and open with Jane, while Jane feels more empowered and confident. They continue to grow closer emotionally and spiritually.
i'm not sure all i know is that michael and jane end the wedding and then rafeal asks her to marry him, she rejects and ruins the relation ship. Who does she marry in season two? stay tuned to find out.
Jane Eyre as a title is both simple yet very significant. It is significant because the book really is about Jane finding out who she is - becoming Jane Eyre, you could say. During the beginning of her life, she was lost. She had no family who loved her, and the family she did have (Mrs. Reed and her three children) despised her. She developed into a quiet, humble child who was scarred from the demons of her past. She never really believed that she could or should be anything other than subservient and unassuming.This is reinforced during the time she spends in Lowood School, where she is forced into a conforming academy where everybody is like everyone else, from the way they dress to the way the speak. There is no individuality. Jane again learns to be quiet, simple.But the adventure she has at Thornfield (Mr. Rochester's house) totally transforms her. She finds people like Mrs. Fairfax and Adele, who immediately treat her nicely and with respect, who want to be her friend; and people like Mr. Rochester, who understands her better than anyone and who loves what he sees. Jane feels more comfortable with this environment, more herself.And when she removes herself from Thornfield after hearing of Mr. Rochester's wife, she becomes independent. She struggles with the loss of Mr. Rochester, but ultimately learns how self-reliant she can be; Jane Eyre, though she loves him, is not defined by Edward Rochester. She finds she is her own person, with thoughts and firm beliefs that are unyielding (which is why she refuses her half-cousin's marriage proposal because she didn't love him.) Receiving her uncle's inheritance furthers this feeling of self-worth.Once she returns to Edward, at the end of the story, she is finally his equal. Jane knows who she is, what she believes in, and is not ashamed of it. She is not ashamed to speak her mind and be something other than humble and submissive. Jane marries Mr. Rochester in the end not as the quiet, harassed person from her childhood - but as the new, greatly improved, strong Jane Eyre that she was always meant to be.
Jane went to Marsh End, the home of St. John Rivers and his sisters, where she found employment as a teacher. She later discovered her own inheritance and returned to Thornfield to find it in ruins before reuniting with Rochester at Ferndean.
Jane Eyre and The Mysteries of Udolpho are both Gothic novels, however, the way they operate is opposite: Udolpho would provide an unexplained reasoning for happenings, whereas Jane Eyre would be rational: Bertha Mason is an actual woman. Further to this, Radcliffe wraps her narratives up neatly at the end, whereas for Bronte the ending carries the unexplainable that brought Jane back to Rochester. This then affects our interpretations of the novella: are the ghosts real, and the Governess' actions therefore rational? Or are they hallucinaitons and therefore the Governess possessed?
Jane Eyre is only really independent in the end of the novel. When she quits as a teacher and becomes the governesse of Adele - she is not really independent because she has to work to earn money - there is no income from her familiy (Aunt Reed). When she inherits the money from her uncle she comes up the the social class and stands on the same step as Mr. Rochester. Now she is his equal and she don't have to marry anymore if she don't want to. Now she could live as she chooses - without having to work or to marry. In the 19th century, young women were only independent (not in the same sense as we nowadays) if there had their own money - inherited or due a settlement. Anyway, we should not forget, that Jane Eyre is progressive enough to arrange her own occupation as governess and still expresses sometimes her own mind and acts after it. But never forget, she learned to accept the patriarchal system during her time which confined her in a petty role.
The following characters in Jane Eyre die:Mr. Rochester's wife Bertha Antoinetta Mason dies when she commits suicide by burning down Thornfield Hall.Jane's cousin John Reed.Jane's aunt Sarah Reed.Jane's best friend at Lowood Helen Burns.The following characters also die but the death is not depicted in the book as it takes place before the time the book is set:Jane's parents who died of typhus.Jane's uncle Mr. Reed who adopted Jane when her parents died. His last wish was for his wife (Sarah Reed) to continue caring for her.