Jane feels humiliated and angry while standing on the stool as she is falsely accused of being a liar by Mr. Brocklehurst. She refuses to accept the falsehoods being told about her and maintains her sense of pride and integrity despite the public shaming.
There is no animal called an Eyre.
Lake Eyre was named after Edward Eyre. He was the first white person to discover it. Also the Eyre Highway is named after him, and so is the Eyre Peninsula and a tiny place called Eyre.
Eyre also had an aboriganal friend called wylie who went with Eyre with on his exploration
Edward Eyre is pronounced as "Edward Air." The first name "Edward" is pronounced as it is commonly known, while the last name "Eyre" rhymes with "air."
Adelaide Ormond and Edward John Eyre did not have children together. Edward John Eyre had a son from a previous marriage named Edward John Eyre Jr.
Edward Eyre discovered Lake Eyre on 27 August 1840. Lake Eyre was one of several salt lakes which blocked Eyre's attempt to cross from south to north. Other salt lakes which seemed to Eyre to form an impassable horseshoe-shaped barrier included Lake Blanche, Lake Torrens and Lake Callabonna.
Kati Thanda, it's now called Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre since late 2012.
The poem featured in the book "Jane Eyre" is called "Pilgrim's Progress" by John Bunyan. It is referenced by Mr. Rochester and Jane Eyre as they discuss their own personal journeys and struggles.
The Eyre Peninsula has a larger population, even though the region is drier. In 2009, the Eyre Peninsula had an estimated population of 33582 (excluding the city of Whyalla) while the Yorke Peninsula had 11190.
I can only think that you mean the French whaling vessel that he and Wylie met at Rossiter Bay. If that is the case, that it was called the Mississippi. Eyre named the Bay after the captain of the Mississippi.
Lake Eyre was named after Edward Eyre, the explorer who discovered it.
Yes, it is, but at the time Eyre explored it was not yet known as the Eyre Peninsula.