Wednesday, September 18, 2019
How do Janeââ¬â¢s experiences at Lowood contribute to her development? Essa
How do Janeââ¬â¢s experiences at Lowood contribute to her development?    Before arriving at Lowood Jane lived at Gateshead, with her aunt and  three cousins. She was unloved and treated badly, and had already  developed a determination to stand up for herself and fight for her  independence. The young Jane had baffled Mrs Reed, who could obviously  not understand ââ¬Å"how for nine years you could be patient and quiescent  under any treatment, and in the tenth break out all fire and  violenceâ⬠. At Gateshead she is unhappy and when Mr Lloyd questions her  after the ââ¬Å"red-room incidentâ⬠, she is shown to be naà ¯ve and ignorant  of life. She has no real picture of honest, decent, working people and  her experience of poverty is limited to her auntââ¬â¢s nasty comments  about her relatives and to the few poor villagers she has seen. Jane  is not religious yet, as the logical answer to Mr Brocklehursts  question reveals, and she again shocks him with her comments about the  psalms. Her sense of injustice, would not allow Mrs Reed to insult her  and call her deceitful, forcing her to speak her mind. Jane identifies  herself with the role of mutinous slave, likening her cousin to a  slave driver. She appears to be afraid that she will never find a true  sense of home or community, Jane feels the need to belong somewhere,  to find "kin", or at least "kindred spirits."    After Janeââ¬â¢s open act of rebellion, she is sent to Lowood. An  institution run by Mr Brocklehurst, whose mission it is to ââ¬Å"mortify in  these girls the lusts of fleshâ⬠. Lowood institution is based upon  Charlotte Brontà «Ã¢â¬â¢s own experiences at the Clergy Daughters School,  Cowan Bridge, which she attended at the age of 8, with her sisters. As  in ââ¬Å"Jane Eyreâ⬠, typhus broke out at the school,...              ...brance of Godâ⬠ is the same as when she  acknowledges to herself her love for Rochester, where she says that  Rochester has become so important in her life that he even displaces  religion and stands between her and God.    Jane also has the power of forgiveness in her. She is ready to forgive  Mrs Reed for her wrongs and she returns to Thornfield to find and  forgive Rochester. It is possible for her learnings from Lowood to be  forgotten or ignored in a trice. She stoops low to begging when she  leaves Rochester and when she lets St. John take over her feelings,  but regains them at both times, refusing his proposal of marriage and  being taken in by the Rivers.    Lowood made Jane a capable woman with morals, who knew her place. It  was all that she needed to have back in the 19th century when at the  time the book was written, women were considered inferior to men.                      
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