1
Chapters
1–4
Summary:
Chapter 1
The
novel opens
on a dreary November afternoon at Gateshead,
the home of the wealthy Reed family. A young girl named Jane Eyre sits in the drawing
room reading
Bewick’s History
of British Birds. Jane’s aunt, Mrs. Reed, has forbidden her
niece to play
with her cousins Eliza, Georgiana, and the bullying
John. John
chides Jane for being a lowly orphan who is only permitted to live with
the
Reeds because of his mother’s charity. John then hurls a book at the
young
girl, pushing her to the end of her patience. Jane finally erupts, and
the two
cousins fight. Mrs. Reed holds Jane responsible for the scuffle and
sends her
to the “red-room”—the frightening chamber in which her Uncle Reed died—as punishment.
Summary:
Chapter 2
Two
servants,
Miss Abbott and Bessie Lee, escort Jane to the
red-room,
and Jane resists them with all of her might. Once locked in the room,
Jane
catches a glimpse of her ghastly figure in the mirror, and, shocked by
her
meager presence, she begins to reflect on the events that have led her
to such
a state. She remembers her kind Uncle Reed bringing her to Gateshead
after her
parents’ death, and she recalls his dying command that his wife promise
to
raise Jane as one of her own. Suddenly, Jane is struck with the
impression that
her Uncle Reed’s ghost is in the room, and she imagines that he has
come to
take revenge on his wife for breaking her promise. Jane cries out in
terror,
but her aunt believes that she is just trying to escape her punishment,
and she
ignores her pleas. Jane faints in exhaustion and fear.
Summary:
Chapter 3
When
she wakes,
Jane finds herself in her own bedroom, in the care of Mr. Lloyd, the family’s kind
apothecary.
Bessie is also present, and she expresses disapproval of her mistress’s
treatment of Jane. Jane remains in bed the following day, and Bessie
sings her
a song. Mr. Lloyd speaks with Jane about her life at Gateshead,
and he suggests to Jane’s aunt that the girl be sent away to school,
where she
might find happiness. Jane is cautiously excited at the possibility of
leaving Gateshead.
Soon
after her
own reflections on the past in the red-room, Jane learns more of her
history
when she overhears a conversation between Bessie and Miss Abbott.
Jane’s mother
was a member of the wealthy Reed family, which strongly disapproved of
Jane’s
father, an impoverished clergyman. When they married, Jane’s wealthy
maternal
grandfather wrote his daughter out of his will. Not long after Jane was
born,
Jane’s parents died from typhus, which Jane’s father contracted while
caring
for the poor.
Summary:
Chapter 4
About
two months
have passed, and Jane has been enduring even crueler treatment from her
aunt
and cousins while anxiously waiting for the arrangements to be made for
her
schooling. Now Jane is finally told she may attend the girls’ school
Lowood,
and she is introduced to Mr. Brocklehurst, the
stern-faced man who
runs the school. Mr. Brocklehurst abrasively questions Jane about
religion, and
he reacts with indignation when she declares that she finds the psalms
uninteresting. Jane’s aunt warns Mr. Brocklehurst that the girl also
has a
propensity for lying, a piece of information that Mr. Brocklehurst says
he
intends to publicize to Jane’s teachers upon her arrival. When Mr.
Brocklehurst
leaves, Jane is so hurt by her aunt’s accusation that she cannot stop
herself
from defending herself to her aunt. Mrs. Reed, for once, seems to
concede
defeat. Shortly thereafter, Bessie tells Jane that she prefers her to
the Reed
children. Before Jane leaves for school, Bessie tells her stories and
sings her
lovely songs.
Chapters
5–10
Summary:
Chapter 5
Four
days after
meeting Mr. Brocklehurst, Jane boards the 6
a.m. coach and travels alone to Lowood. When
she arrives at the school, the day is dark and rainy, and she is led
through a
grim building that will be her new home. The following day, Jane is
introduced
to her classmates and learns the daily routine, which keeps the girls
occupied
from before dawn until dinner. Miss Temple, the superintendent of
the school,
is very kind, while one of Jane’s teachers, Miss Scatcherd, is unpleasant,
particularly
in her harsh treatment of a young student named Helen Burns. Jane and Helen
befriend one
another, and Jane learns from Helen that Lowood is a charity school
maintained
for female orphans, which means that the Reeds have paid nothing to put
her
there. She also learns that Mr. Brocklehurst oversees every aspect of
its
operation: even Miss
Temple must answer
to
him.
Summary:
Chapter 6
On
Jane’s second
morning at Lowood, the girls are unable to wash, as the water in their
pitchers
is frozen. Jane quickly learns that life at the school is harsh. The
girls are
underfed, overworked, and forced to sit still during seemingly endless
sermons.
Still, she takes comfort in her new friendship with Helen, who
impresses Jane
with her expansive knowledge and her ability to patiently endure even
the
cruelest treatment from Miss Scatcherd. Helen tells Jane that she
practices a
doctrine of Christian endurance, which means loving her enemies and
accepting
her privation. Jane disagrees strongly with such meek tolerance of
injustice,
but Helen takes no heed of Jane’s arguments. Helen is self-critical
only
because she sometimes fails to live up to her ascetic standards: she
believes
that she is a poor student and chastises herself for daydreaming about
her home
and family when she should be concentrating on her studies.
Summary:
Chapter 7
For
most of Jane’s
first month at Lowood, Mr. Brocklehurst spends his time away from the
school.
When he returns, Jane becomes quite nervous because she remembers his
promise
to her aunt, Mrs. Reed, to warn the school
about Jane’s
supposed habit of lying. When Jane inadvertently drops her slate in Mr.
Brocklehurst’s presence, he is furious and tells her she is careless.
He orders
Jane to stand on a stool while he tells the school that she is a liar,
and he
forbids the other students to speak to her for the rest of the day.
Helen makes
Jane’s day of humiliation endurable by providing her friend with silent
consolation—she covertly smiles at Jane every time she passes by.
Summary:
Chapter 8
Finally,
at five
o’clock, the students disperse, and Jane collapses to the floor. Deeply
ashamed, she is certain that her reputation at Lowood has been ruined,
but
Helen assures her that most of the girls felt more pity for Jane than
revulsion
at her alleged deceitfulness. Jane tells Miss
Temple that she is not a liar,
and
relates the story of her tormented childhood at Gateshead.
Miss Temple seems to believe Jane and
writes
to Mr. Lloyd requesting
confirmation of Jane’s
account of events. Miss
Temple offers Jane
and
Helen tea and seed cake, endearing herself even further to Jane. When
Mr.
Lloyd’s letter arrives and corroborates Jane’s story, Miss Temple
publicly declares Jane to be innocent. Relieved and contented, Jane
devotes
herself to her studies. She excels at drawing and makes progress in
French.
Summary:
Chapter 9
In
the spring,
life at Lowood briefly seems happier, but the damp forest dell in which
the
school resides is a breeding-ground for typhus, and in the warm
temperatures
more than half the girls fall ill with the disease. Jane remains
healthy and
spends her time playing outdoors with a new friend, Mary Ann Wilson. Helen is sick,
but not
with typhus—Jane learns the horrific news that her friend is dying of
consumption. One evening, Jane sneaks into Miss Temple’s
room to see Helen one last time. Helen promises Jane that she feels
little pain
and is happy to be leaving the world’s suffering behind. Jane takes
Helen into
her arms, and the girls fall asleep. During the night, Helen dies. Her
grave is
originally unmarked, but fifteen years after her death, a gray marble
tablet is
placed over the spot (presumably by Jane), bearing the single word
Resurgam,
Latin for “I shall rise again.”
Summary:
Chapter 10
After
Mr.
Brocklehurst’s negligent treatment of the girls at Lowood is found to
be one of
the causes of the typhus epidemic, a new group of overseers is brought
in to
run the school. Conditions improve dramatically for the young girls,
and Jane
excels in her studies for the next six years. After spending two more
years at
Lowood as a teacher, Jane decides she is ready for a change, partly
because Miss
Temple
gets married and leaves the school. She advertises in search of a post
as a
governess and accepts a position at a manor called Thornfield.
Before
leaving,
Jane receives a visit from Bessie, who tells her what has
happened at Gateshead since Jane
departed for Lowood. Georgiana attempted to run away
in secret
with a man named Lord Edwin Vere, but Eliza foiled the plan by
revealing it to
Mrs. Reed. John has fallen into a life of debauchery and dissolution.
Bessie
also tells Jane that her father’s brother, John Eyre, appeared at Gateshead
seven years ago, looking for Jane. He did not have the time to travel
to Lowood
and went away to Madeira (a Portuguese island west of Morocco)
in
search of wealth. Jane and Bessie part ways, Bessie returning to Gateshead, and Jane leaving for her new life at
Thornfield.
Chapters
11–16
Summary:
Chapter 11
Jane’s driver is late picking
her up from
the station at Millcote. When she finally arrives at Thornfield it is
nighttime. Although she cannot distinguish much of the house’s facade
from
among the shadows, she finds the interior “cosy and agreeable.” Mrs. Fairfax, a prim, elderly woman,
is waiting
for Jane. It turns out that Mrs. Fairfax is not, as Jane had assumed
from their
correspondence, the owner of Thornfield, but rather the housekeeper.
Thornfield’s
owner, Mr. Rochester, travels regularly and
leaves
much of the manor’s management to Mrs. Fairfax. Jane learns that she
will be
tutoring Adèle, an eight-year-old French
girl whose
mother was a singer and dancer. Mrs. Fairfax also tells Jane about Rochester,
saying that he
is an eccentric man whose family has a history of extreme and violent
behavior.
Suddenly, Jane hears a peal of strange, eerie laughter echoing through
the
house, and Mrs. Fairfax summons someone named Grace, whom she orders to make
less noise
and to “remember directions.” When Grace leaves, Mrs. Fairfax explains
that she
is a rather unbalanced and unpredictable seamstress who works in the
house.
Summary:
Chapter 12
Jane
finds life
at Thornfield pleasant and comfortable. Adèle proves to be exuberant
and
intelligent, though spoiled and at times a bit petulant. Nonetheless,
Jane is
frequently restless and collects her thoughts while pacing Thornfield’s
top-story passageway. One evening a few months after her arrival at
Thornfield,
Jane is alone watching the moon rise when she perceives a horse
approaching. It
calls to her mind the story Bessie once told her of a spirit
called a
Gytrash, which disguises itself as a mule, dog, or horse to frighten
“belated
travellers.” Oddly enough, a dog then appears as well. Once she
realizes that
the horse has a rider, the uncanny moment ceases. Just after the horse
passes
her, it slips on a patch of ice, and its rider tumbles to the ground.
Jane
helps the man rise to his feet and introduces herself to him. She
observes that
he has a dark face, stern features, and a heavy brow. He is not quite
middle-aged. Upon reentering Thornfield, Jane goes to Mrs. Fairfax’s
room and
sees the same dog—Pilot—resting on the rug. A servant answers Jane’s
queries,
explaining that the dog belongs to Mr. Rochester, who has just returned
home
with a sprained ankle, having fallen from his horse.
Summary:
Chapter 13
The
day
following his arrival, Mr. Rochester invites Jane and Adèle to have tea
with
him. He is abrupt and rather cold toward both of them, although he
seems
charmed by Jane’s drawings, which he asks to see. When Jane mentions to
Mrs.
Fairfax that she finds Rochester
“changeful and abrupt,” Mrs. Fairfax suggests that his mannerisms are
the
result of a difficult personal history. Rochester
was something of a family outcast, and when his father died, his older
brother
inherited Thornfield. Rochester
has been Thornfield’s proprietor for nine years, since the death of his
brother.
Summary:
Chapter 14
Jane
sees little
of Rochester
during his first days at Thornfield. One night, however, in his
“after-dinner
mood,” Rochester
sends for Jane and Adèle. He gives Adèle the present she has been
anxiously
awaiting, and while Adèle plays, Rochester
is uncharacteristically chatty with Jane. When Rochester
asks Jane whether she thinks him handsome, she answers “no” without
thinking,
and from Rochester’s
voluble reaction Jane concludes that he is slightly drunk. Rochester’s
command that she converse with
him makes Jane feel awkward, especially because he goes on to argue
that her
relationship to him is not one of servitude. Their conversation turns
to the
concepts of sin, forgiveness, and redemption. When Adèle mentions her
mother,
Jane is intrigued, and Rochester
promises to explain more about the situation on a future occasion.
Summary:
Chapter 15
A
while later, Rochester
fulfills his
promise to Jane to tell her about his and Adèle’s pasts. He had a long
affair
with Adèle’s mother, the French singer and dancer named Celine Varens. When he
discovered that
Celine was engaged in relations with another man, Rochester ended the relationship. Rochester has
always
denied Celine’s claim that Adèle is his daughter, noting that the child
looks
utterly unlike him. Even so, when Celine abandoned her daughter, Rochester brought Adèle to England
so that she would be
properly cared for.
Jane
lies awake
brooding about the strange insights she has gained into her employer’s
past.
She hears what sound like fingers brushing against the walls, and an
eerie
laugh soon emanates from the hallway. She hears a door opening and
hurries out
of her room to see smoke coming from Rochester’s
door. Jane dashes into his room and finds his bed curtains ablaze. She
douses
the bed with water, saving Rochester’s
life. Strangely, Rochester’s
reaction is to visit the third floor of the house. When he returns, he
says
mysteriously, “I have found it all out, it is just as I thought.” He
inquires
whether Jane has ever heard the eerie laughter before, and she answers
that she
has heard Grace Poole laugh in the same way. “Just so. Grace Poole—you
have
guessed it,” Rochester
confirms. He thanks Jane for saving his life and cautions her to tell
no one
about the details of the night’s events. He sleeps on the library sofa
for the
remainder of the night.
Summary:
Chapter 16
The
next
morning, Jane is shocked to learn that the near tragedy of the night
before has
caused no scandal. The servants believe Rochester
to have fallen asleep with a lit candle by his bed, and even Grace
Poole shows
no sign of guilt or remorse. Jane cannot imagine why an attempted
murderer is
allowed to continue working at Thornfield. She realizes that she is
beginning
to have feelings for Rochester
and is disappointed that he will be away from Thornfield for several
days. He
has left to attend a party where he will be in the company of Blanche Ingram, a beautiful
lady. Jane
scolds herself for being disappointed by the news, and she resolves to
restrain
her flights of imaginative fancy by comparing her own portrait to one
she has
drawn of Blanche Ingram, noting how much plainer she is than the
beautiful
Blanche.
Chapters
17–21
Summary:
Chapter 17
Rochester has been gone for a
week, and Jane is dismayed to learn that
he may
choose to depart for continental Europe
without returning to Thornfield—according to Mrs. Fairfax, he could be gone for
more than a
year. A week later, however, Mrs. Fairfax receives word that Rochester will
arrive in three days with a
large group of guests. While she waits, Jane continues to be amazed by
the
apparently normal relations the strange, self–isolated Grace Poole enjoys with the rest
of the
staff. Jane also overhears a conversation in which a few of the
servants
discuss Grace’s high pay, and Jane is certain that she doesn’t know the
entire
truth about Grace Poole’s role at Thornfield.
Rochester arrives at last, accompanied by a party of elegant and
aristocratic
guests. Jane is forced to join the group but spends the evening
watching them
from a window seat. Blanche Ingram and her mother
are among the
party’s members, and they treat Jane with disdain and cruelty. Jane
tries to
leave the party, but Rochester
stops her. He grudgingly allows her to go when he sees the tears
brimming in
her eyes. He informs her that she must come into the drawing room every
evening
during his guests’ stay at Thornfield. As they part, Rochester nearly
lets slip more than he
intends. “Good-night, my—” he says, before biting his lip.
Summary:
Chapter 18
The
guests stay
at Thornfield for several days. Rochester
and Blanche compete as a team at charades. From watching their
interaction,
Jane believes that they will be married soon though they do not seem to
love
one another. Blanche would be marrying Rochester
for his wealth, and he for her beauty and her social position. One day,
a
strange man named Mr. Mason arrives at Thornfield. Jane dislikes him at
once
because of his vacant eyes and his slowness, but she learns from him
that Rochester once lived in the West Indies, as he himself has done. One
evening, a gypsy woman comes
to Thornfield to tell the guests’ fortunes. Blanche Ingram goes first,
and when
she returns from her talk with the gypsy woman she looks keenly
disappointed.
Summary:
Chapter 19
Jane
goes in to
the library to have her fortune read, and after overcoming her
skepticism, she
finds herself entranced by the old woman’s speech. The gypsy woman
seems to
know a great deal about Jane and tells her that she is very close to
happiness.
She also says that she told Blanche Ingram that Rochester was not as wealthy as he
seemed,
thereby accounting for Blanche’s sullen mood. As the woman reads Jane’s
fortune, her voice slowly deepens, and Jane realizes that the gypsy is Rochester in
disguise.
Jane reproaches Rochester
for tricking her and remembers thinking that Grace Poole might have
been the
gypsy. When Rochester
learns that Mr. Mason has arrived, he looks troubled.
Summary:
Chapter 20
The
same night,
Jane is startled by a sudden cry for help. She hurries into the
hallway, where Rochester
assures
everyone that a servant has merely had a nightmare. After everyone
returns to
bed, Rochester
knocks on Jane’s door. He tells her that he can use her help and asks
whether
she is afraid of blood. He leads her to the third story of the house
and shows
her Mr. Mason, who has been stabbed in the arm. Rochester asks Jane to stanch the
wound and
then leaves, ordering Mason and Jane not to speak to one another. In
the
silence, Jane gazes at the image of the apostles and Christ’s
crucifixion that
is painted on the cabinet across from her. Rochester
returns with a surgeon, and as the men tend to Mason’s wounds, Rochester sends
Jane to find a potion
downstairs. He gives some of it to Mason, saying that it will give him
heart
for an hour. Once Mason is gone, Jane and Rochester
stroll in the orchard, and Rochester
tells Jane a hypothetical story about a young man who commits a
“capital error”
in a foreign country and proceeds to lead a life of dissipation in an
effort to
“obtain relief.” The young man then hopes to redeem himself and live
morally
with a wife, but convention prevents him from doing so. He asks whether
the
young man would be justified in “overleaping an obstacle of custom.”
Jane’s
reply is that such a man should look to God for his redemption, not to
another
person. Rochester—who
obviously has been describing his own situation—asks Jane to reassure
him that
marrying Blanche would bring him salvation. He then hurries away before
she has
a chance to answer.
Summary:
Chapter 21
Jane
has heard
that it is a bad omen to dream of children, and now she has dreams on
seven
consecutive nights involving babies. She learns that her cousin John Reed has committed suicide,
and that her
aunt, Mrs. Reed, has suffered a stroke
and is
nearing death. Jane goes to Gateshead,
where
she is reunited with Bessie. She also sees her
cousins Eliza and Georgiana. Eliza is plain and
plans to
enter a convent, while Georgiana is as beautiful as ever. Ever since
Eliza
ruined Georgiana’s hopes of eloping with a young man, the two sisters
have not
gotten along. Jane tries to patch things up with Mrs. Reed, but the old
woman
is still full of hostility toward her late husband’s favorite. One day,
Mrs.
Reed gives Jane a letter from her father’s brother, John Eyre. He declares that he
wishes to
adopt Jane and bequeath her his fortune. The letter is three years old;
out of
malice, Mrs. Reed did not forward it to Jane when she received it. In
spite of
her aunt’s behavior, Jane tries once more to smooth relations with the
dying
woman. But Mrs. Reed refuses, and, at midnight, she dies.
Chapters
22–25
Summary:
Chapter 22
Jane remains at Gateshead
for a month because Georgiana dreads being left
alone with Eliza, with whom she does not
get along.
Eventually, Georgiana goes to London to
live
with her uncle, and Eliza joins a convent in France.
Jane tells us that Eliza
eventually becomes the Mother Superior of her convent, while Georgiana
marries
a wealthy man. At Gateshead, Jane receives a letter from Mrs. Fairfax, which says that Rochester’s guests have departed
and that
Rochester has gone to London to buy a new carriage—a sure sign of his
intention
to marry Blanche. As Jane travels toward
Thornfield,
she anxiously anticipates seeing Rochester
again, and yet she worries about what will become of her after his
marriage. To
her surprise, as she walks from the station at Millcote, Jane
encounters Rochester.
When he asks
her why she has stayed away from Thornfield so long, she replies, still
a bit
bewildered, “I have been with my aunt, sir, who is dead.” Rochester asks
Jane whether she has heard
about his new carriage, and he tells her: “You must see the carriage,
Jane, and
tell me if you don’t think it will suit Mrs. Rochester exactly.” After
a few
more words together, Jane surprises herself by expressing the happiness
she
feels in Rochester’s
presence: “I am strangely glad to get back again to you; and wherever
you are
is my home—my only home.” Back at the manor, Mrs. Fairfax, Adèle, and the servants greet
Jane warmly.
Summary:
Chapter 23
After a blissful two weeks, Jane encounters Rochester in the
gardens.
He invites her to walk with him, and Jane, caught off guard, accepts. Rochester confides that he has finally decided to
marry
Blanche Ingram and tells Jane that he knows of an available governess
position
in Ireland
that she could take. Jane expresses her distress at the great distance
that
separates Ireland
from Thornfield. The two seat themselves on a bench at the foot of
1
the
chestnut
tree, and Rochester
says: “we will sit there in peace to-night, though we should never more
be
destined to sit there together.” He tells Jane that he feels as though
they are
connected by a “cord of communion.” Jane sobs—“for I could repress what
I
endured no longer,” she tells us, “I was obliged to yield.” Jane
confesses her
love for Rochester,
and to her surprise, he asks her to be his wife. She suspects that he
is
teasing her, but he convinces her otherwise by admitting that he only
brought
up marrying Blanche in order to arouse Jane’s jealousy. Convinced and
elated,
Jane accepts his proposal. A storm breaks, and the newly engaged couple
hurries
indoors through the rain. Rochester
helps Jane out of her wet coat, and he seizes the opportunity to kiss
her. Jane
looks up to see Mrs. Fairfax watching, astonished. That night, a bolt
of
lightning splits the same chestnut tree under which Rochester and Jane had been sitting
that
evening.
Summary:
Chapter 24
Preparations
for
Jane and Rochester’s
wedding do not run smoothly. Mrs. Fairfax treats Jane coldly because
she
doesn’t realize that Jane was already engaged to Rochester when she allowed him to
kiss her.
But even after she learns the truth, Mrs. Fairfax maintains her
disapproval of
the marriage. Jane feels unsettled, almost fearful, when Rochester calls
her by what will soon be her
name, Jane Rochester. Jane explains that everything feels impossibly
ideal,
like a fairy-tale or a daydream. Rochester
certainly tries to turn Jane into a Cinderella-like figure: he tells
her he
will dress her in jewels and in finery befitting her new social
station, at
which point Jane becomes terrified and self-protective. She has a
premonitory
feeling that the wedding will not happen, and she decides to write her
uncle, John Eyre, who is in Madeira.
Jane reasons that if John Eyre were to make her his heir, her
inheritance might
put her on more equal footing with Rochester, which would make her feel
less
uncomfortable about the marriage.
Summary:
Chapter 25
The
night before
her wedding, Jane waits for Rochester,
who has left Thornfield for the evening. She grows restless and takes a
walk in
the orchard, where she sees the now-split chestnut tree. When Rochester
arrives, Jane tells him about
strange events that have occurred in his absence. The preceding
evening, Jane’s
wedding dress arrived, and underneath it was an expensive veil—Rochester’s
wedding gift to Jane. In the
night, Jane had a strange dream, in which a little child cried in her
arms as
Jane tried to make her way toward Rochester
on a long, winding road. Rochester
dismisses the dream as insignificant, but then she tells him about a
second
dream. This time, Jane loses her balance and the child falls from her
knee. The
dream was so disturbing that it roused Jane from her sleep, and she
perceived
“a form” rustling in her closet. It turned out to be a strange,
savage-looking
woman, who took Jane’s veil and tore it in two. Rochester tells her that the woman
must have
been Grace Poole and that what she
experienced
was really “half-dream, half-reality.” He tells her that he will give
her a
full explanation of events after they have been married for one year
and one
day. Jane sleeps with Adèle for the evening and cries because she will
soon
have to leave the sleeping girl.
Chapter
26
Summary
Sophie helps Jane dress for the wedding, and Rochester and Jane walk to the
church. Jane
notes a pair of strangers reading the headstones in the churchyard
cemetery.
When Jane and Rochester
enter the church, the two strangers are also present. When the priest
asks if
anyone objects to the ceremony, one of the strangers answers: “The
marriage
cannot go on: I declare the existence of an impediment.” Rochester
attempts to
proceed with the ceremony, but the stranger explains that Rochester is
already
married—his wife is a Creole woman whom Rochester wed fifteen years
earlier in
Jamaica. The speaker explains that he is a solicitor from London, and he
introduces himself as Mr. Briggs. He produces a signed
letter
from Richard Mason affirming that Rochester is
married to
Mason’s sister, Bertha. Mr. Mason himself then
steps
forward to corroborate the story. After a moment of inarticulate fury, Rochester admits
that his
wife is alive and that in marrying Jane he would have been knowingly
taking a
second wife. No one in the community knows of his wife because she is
mad, and Rochester
keeps her
locked away under the care of Grace Poole. But, he promises
them all,
Jane is completely ignorant of Bertha’s existence. He orders the crowd
to come
to Thornfield to see her, so that they may understand what impelled him
to his
present course of action.
At
Thornfield,
the group climbs to the third story. Rochester
points out the room where Bertha bit and stabbed her brother, and then
he lifts
a tapestry to uncover a second door. Inside the hidden room is Bertha Mason, under the care of
Grace
Poole. Jane writes:
In
the deep
shade, at the farther end of the room, a figure ran backwards and
forwards.
What it was, whether beast or human being, one could not, at first
sight tell:
it grovelled, seemingly, on all fours; it snatched and growled like
some
strange wild animal: but it was covered with clothing, and a quantity
of dark,
grizzled hair, wild as a mane, hid its head and face.
Bertha
attempts
to strangle Rochester,
who reminds his audience, “this is the sole conjugal embrace I am ever
to
know.” Jane leaves the room with Mason and Briggs, who tells her that
he
learned of her intent to marry Jane via a letter from Jane’s uncle,
John Eyre,
to Mason. It turns out that the two men are acquaintances, and Mason
had
stopped in Madeira on his way back to Jamaica when John received
Jane’s
letter. Approaching death, John asked Mason to hurry to England
to save
his niece. After the wedding crowd disperses, Jane locks herself in her
room
and plunges into an inexpressible grief. She thinks about the almost
calm
manner in which the morning’s events unfolded and how it seems
disproportionate
to the immense effect those events will have on her life. She prays to
God to
be with her.
Chapters
27–28
Summary:
Chapter 27
After
falling
asleep for a short while, Jane awakes to the realization
that she
must leave Thornfield. When she steps out of her room, she finds Rochester waiting in a chair on
the
threshold. To Rochester’s
assurances that he never meant to wound her, and to his pleas of
forgiveness,
Jane is silent, although she confides to the reader that she forgave
him on the
spot. Jane suddenly feels faint, and Rochester
carries her to the library to revive her. He then offers her a new
proposal—to
leave England
with him for the South of France, where they will live together as
husband and
wife. Jane refuses, explaining that no matter how Rochester chooses to view the
situation, she
will never be more than a mistress to him while Bertha is alive. Rochester
realizes that he must explain why
he does not consider himself married, and he launches into the story of
his
past.
Unwilling
to
divide his property, Rochester’s father left his entire estate to his
other
son, Rowland, and sent Rochester to Jamaica to marry Bertha, who was to
inherit
a massive fortune—30,000
pounds. Bertha was beautiful, and although she and Rochester spent hardly any time
alone, the
stimulated, dazzled, and ignorant youth believed himself to be in love
and
agreed to the marriage. Shortly after the wedding, Rochester learned that Bertha’s
mother was
not, as he had been led to believe, dead, but mad and living in an
insane
asylum. Bertha’s younger brother was a mute idiot. Rochester’s father and brother had
known
about the family’s unpromising genetic legacy, but they had promoted
the
marriage for the sake of the money. Bertha soon revealed herself to be
coarse,
perverse, and prone to violent outbreaks of temper and unhealthy
indulgences.
These excesses only hastened the approach of what had been lurking on
her
horizon already: absolute madness. By this time, Rochester’s
father and brother had died, so Rochester
found himself all alone with a maniacal wife and a huge fortune. He
considered
killing himself but returned to England
instead. He resolved to place Bertha at Thornfield Hall “in safety and
comfort:
[to] shelter her degradation with secrecy, and leave her.” Rochester then
drifted around the continent
from one city to the next, always in search of a woman to love. When he
was met
with disappointment, he sank into debauchery. He was always
disappointed with
his mistresses, because they were, as he puts it, “the next worse thing
to
buying a slave.” Then he met Jane. Rochester
retells the story of their introduction from his point of view, telling
her
that she enchanted him from the start.
Jane
feels torn.
She doesn’t want to condemn Rochester
to further misery, and a voice within her asks, “Who in the world cares
for
you?” Jane wonders how she could ever find another man who values her
the way Rochester
does, and
whether, after a life of loneliness and neglect, she should leave the
first man
who has ever loved her. Yet her conscience tells her that she will
respect
herself all the more if she bears her suffering alone and does what she
believes to be right. She tells Rochester
that she must go, but she kisses his cheek and prays aloud for God to
bless him
as she departs. That night, Jane has a dream in which her mother tells
her to
flee temptation. She grabs her purse, sneaks down the stairs, and
leaves
Thornfield.
Summary:
Chapter 28
Riding
in a
coach, Jane quickly exhausts her meager money supply and is forced to
sleep
outdoors. She spends much of the night in prayer, and the following day
she
begs for food or a job in the nearby town. No one helps her, except for
one
farmer who is willing to give her a slice of bread. After another day,
Jane
sees a light shining from across the moors. Following it, she comes to
a house.
Through the window, Jane sees two young women studying German while
their
servant knits. From their conversation Jane learns that the servant is
named
Hannah and that the graceful young women are Diana and Mary. The three women are
waiting for
someone named St. John (pronounced “Sinjin”).
Jane knocks
on the door, but Hannah refuses to let her in. Collapsing on the
doorstep in
anguish and weakness, Jane cries, “I can but die, and I believe in God.
Let me
try to wait His will in silence.” A voice answers, “All men must die,
but all
are not condemned to meet a lingering and premature doom, such as yours
would
be if you perished here of want.” The voice belongs to “St. John,” who
brings Jane into the house. He
is the brother of Diana and Mary, and the three siblings give Jane food
and
shelter. They ask her some questions, and she gives them a false name:
“Jane
Elliott.”
Chapters
29–32
Summary:
Chapter 29
After
she is
taken in by the Rivers siblings, Jane spends three days
recuperating in bed.
On the fourth day, she feels well again and follows the smell of baking
bread
into the kitchen, where she finds Hannah. Jane criticizes Hannah for
judging
her unfairly when she asked for help, and Hannah apologizes. Hannah
tells the
story of Mr. Rivers, the siblings’ father, who lost most of the family
fortune
in a bad business deal. In turn, Diana and Mary were forced to work as
governesses—they are only at Marsh End (or Moor House) now because
their father
died three weeks ago. Jane then relates some of her own story and
admits that
Jane Elliott is not her real name. St. John promises to find her a
job.
Summary:
Chapter 30
Jane
befriends
Diana and Mary, who admire her drawings and give her books to read. St. John, on the
other
hand, remains distant and cold, although he is never unkind. After a
month,
Diana and Mary must return to their posts as governesses. St. John has found a position for Jane, running a
charity school for
girls in the town of Morton.
Jane accepts, but St. John
presumes that she will soon leave the school out of restlessness,
perhaps
because he himself is quite restless. His sisters suspect he will soon
leave England
for a
missionary post overseas. St.
John
tells his sisters that their Uncle John has died and left them nothing,
because
all his money went to another, unknown, relative. Jane learns that it
was Uncle
John who led Mr. Rivers into his disastrous business deal.
Summary:
Chapter 31
At
Morton, the
wealthy heiress Rosamond Oliver provides Jane
with a
cottage in which to live. Jane begins teaching, but to her own regret,
she
finds the work degrading and disappointing. While on a visit to Jane, St. John reveals
that he,
too, used to feel that he had made the wrong career choice, until one
day he
heard God’s call. Now he plans to become a missionary. The beautiful
Rosamond
Oliver then appears, interrupting St. John and Jane’s conversation.
From their interaction,
Jane believes that Rosamond and St. John are in love.
Summary:
Chapter 32
Jane’s
students
become more familiar and endeared to her, and Jane becomes quite
popular among
them. At night, though, she has troubling nightmares that involve Rochester. Jane continues to pay
attention
to the relationship between St. John
and
Rosamond, who often visits the school when she knows St. John will be
there. Rosamond asks Jane to
draw her portrait, and as she is working on it one day, St. John pays
her a visit. He gives her a new
book of poetry (Sir Walter Scott’s Marmion)
and looks at the drawing. She offers
to draw him a duplicate, and then boldly declares that he ought to
marry
Rosamond. St. John
admits that he loves her and is tempted by her beauty, but he explains
that he
refuses to allow worldly affection to interfere with his holy duties.
The
flirtatious, silly, and shallow Rosamond would make a terrible wife for
a
missionary. Suddenly, St. John
notices something on the edge of Jane’s paper and tears off a tiny
piece—Jane
is not certain why. With a peculiar look on his face, he hurries from
the room.
Chapters
33–35
Summary:
Chapter 33
One
snowy night,
Jane sits reading Marmion
when St. John appears at the door.
Appearing
troubled, he tells Jane the story of an orphan girl who became the
governess at
Thornfield Hall, then disappeared after nearly marrying Edward Rochester: this runaway
governess’s
name is Jane Eyre. Until this point, Jane has been cautious not to
reveal her
past and has given the Rivers a false name. Thus although it is clear
that St. John
suspects her of
being the woman about whom he speaks, she does not immediately identify
herself
to him. He says that he has received a letter from a solicitor named Mr. Briggs intimating that it is
extremely
important that this Jane Eyre be found. Jane is only interested in
whether Mr.
Briggs has sent news of Rochester, but St. John says that Rochester’s
well-being is not at issue: Jane Eyre must be found because her uncle, John Eyre, has died, leaving her
the vast
fortune of 20,000
pounds.
Jane
reveals
herself to be Jane Eyre, knowing that St. John has guessed already. She
asks him how he knew. He
shows her the scrap of paper he tore from her drawing the previous day:
it is
her signature. She then asks why Mr. Briggs would have sent him a
letter about
her at all. St. John
explains that though he did not realize it before, he is her cousin:
her Uncle
John was his Uncle John, and his name is St. John Eyre Rivers. Jane is
overjoyed to have found a family at long last, and she decides to
divide her
inheritance between her cousins and herself evenly, so that they each
will
inherit 5,000
pounds.
Summary:
Chapter 34
Jane
closes her
school for Christmas and spends a happy time with her newfound cousins
at Moor
House. Diana and Mary are delighted with the
improvements
Jane has made at the school, but St. John seems colder and more
distant than ever. He tells
Jane that Rosamond is engaged to a rich
man named Mr.
Granby. One day, he asks Jane to give up her study of German and
instead to
learn “Hindustani” with him—the language he is learning to prepare for
missionary
work in India.
As time goes by, St. John
exerts a greater and greater influence on Jane; his power over her is
almost
uncanny. This leaves Jane feeling empty, cold, and sad, but she follows
his
wishes. At last, he asks her to go to India with him to be a
missionary—and to be his wife. She agrees to go to India
as a missionary but says that
she will not be his wife because they are not in love. St. John harshly
insists that she marry him,
declaring that to refuse his proposal is the same as to deny the
Christian
faith. He abruptly leaves the room.
Summary:
Chapter 35
During
the
following week, St. John
continues to pressure Jane to marry him. She resists as kindly as she
can, but
her kindness only makes him insist more bitterly and unyieldingly that
she
accompany him to India
as his wife. Diana tells Jane that she would be a fool to go to India with St. John, who considers her merely a
tool to aid his great
cause. After dinner, St. John
prays for Jane, and she is overcome with awe at his powers of speech
and his
influence. She almost feels compelled to marry him, but at that moment
she
hears what she thinks is Rochester’s
voice, calling her name as if from a great distance. Jane believes that
something fateful has occurred, and St. John’s spell over her is broken.
Chapters
36–38
Summary:
Chapter 36
Jane contemplates her
supernatural
experience of the previous night, wondering whether it was really Rochester’s voice that she heard
calling to
her and whether Rochester
might actually be in trouble. She finds a note from St. John urging her to resist
temptation,
but nevertheless she boards a coach to Thornfield. She travels to the
manor,
anxious to see Rochester
and reflecting on the ways in which her life has changed in the single
year
since she left. Once hopeless, alone, and impoverished, Jane now has
friends,
family, and a fortune. She hurries to the house after her coach arrives
and is
shocked to find Thornfield a charred ruin. She goes to an inn called
the
Rochester Arms to learn what has happened. Here, she learns that Bertha Mason set the house
ablaze several
months earlier. Rochester
saved his servants and tried to save his wife, but she flung herself
from the
roof as the fire raged around her. In the fire, Rochester lost a hand and went blind.
He has
taken up residence in a house called Ferndean, located deep in the
forest, with
John and Mary, two elderly servants.
Summary:
Chapter 37
Jane
goes to
Ferndean. From a distance, she sees Rochester
reach a hand out of the door, testing for rain. His body looks the
same, but
his face is desperate and disconsolate. Rochester
returns inside, and Jane approaches the house. She knocks, and Mary
answers the
door. Inside, Jane carries a tray to Rochester,
who is unable to see her. When he realizes that Jane is in the room
with him,
he thinks she must be a ghost or spirit speaking to him. When he
catches her
hand, he takes her in his arms, and she promises never to leave him.
The next
morning they walk through the woods, and Jane tells Rochester about her experiences the
previous
year. She has to assure him that she is not in love with St. John. He
asks her again to marry him, and
she says yes—they are now free from the specter of Bertha Mason. Rochester tells
Jane that a few nights
earlier, in a moment of desperation, he called out her name and thought
he
heard her answer. She does not wish to upset him or excite him in his
fragile
condition, and so she does not tell him about hearing his voice at Moor
House.
Summary:
Chapter 38
Jane
and Rochester
marry with no
witnesses other than the parson and the church clerk. Jane writes to
her
cousins with the news. St.
John
never acknowledges what has happened, but Mary and Diana write back with their good
wishes.
Jane visits Adèle at her school, and finds
her unhappy.
Remembering her own childhood experience, Jane moves Adèle to a more
congenial
school, and Adèle grows up to be a very pleasant and mild-mannered
young woman.
Jane
writes that
she is narrating her story after ten years of marriage to Rochester, which
she describes as
inexpressibly blissful. They live as equals, and she helps him to cope
with his
blindness. After two years, Rochester
begins to
regain his vision in one eye, and when their first child—a boy—is born,
Rochester
is able to see
the baby. Jane writes that Diana and Mary have both found husbands and
that St. John went to India
as he had planned. She notes
that in his last letter, St.
John
claimed to have had a premonition of his own approaching death. She
does not
believe that she will hear from St. John again, but she does not
grieve for him, saying
that he has fulfilled his promise and done God’s work. She closes her
book with
a quote from his letter, in which he begs the Lord Jesus to come for
him
quickly.
|