Shapiro DefenseJaneEyre 1968
Shapiro DefenseJaneEyre 1968
Shapiro DefenseJaneEyre 1968
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Literature, 1500-1900
Freud, whereby she so manipulates the plot of her novel that, while the
governess retains her psychic health through the most fearsome tribula-
tions, the master, Edward Fairfax Rochester, must be nearly demanned
-blinded and deprived of a hand in a holocaust that is as symbolic as
it is real-before the governess can submit to what at least was his
passion, and what remains, at least, his affection." Introduction to Jane
Eyre, Riverside Editions (Boston, 1959), p. v.
"'Jane Eyre and Vanity Fair," Quarterly Review, LXXXIV (1848),
173-174. Kathleen Tillotson in her Novels of the Eighteen-Forties (Ox-
ford, 1954), also quotes from this review and cites several other attacks
on Jane Eyre made on Christian grounds (p. 260, n. 1).
'T. J. Wise and J. A. Symington, eds., Jane Eyre: An Autobiography,
The Shakespeare Head Bronte, 2 vols. (Oxford, 1931), n. p. All refer-
ences in the text are to this edition.
ideal, but Jane has learned the lesson of the Reeds all too
well. She is not a saint; she is human, trying to cope with a
world that she sees as completely hostile. Her doctrine has
little to do with the Sermon on the Mount, since she has seen
little of the Sermon in her own life: "If people were always
kind and obedient to those who are cruel and unjust, the
wicked people would have it all their own way: they would
never feel afraid, and so they would never alter, but would
grow worse and worse. When we are struck at without a
reason, we should strike back again very hard; I am sure
we should-so hard as to teach the person who struck us
never to do it again" (Chapter 6, 1, 69). Helen helps Jane
when Brocklehurst makes an example of her and forces her
to stand on a stool in the middle of the schoolroom. But
Helen herself is the victim of the world. At the time, she is
wearing the "untidy badge" and has been condemned to a
supper of bread and water by her tormentor, Miss Scatcherd.
Most important, she cannot stay with Jane, and once she
leaves, Jane collapses: "Now I wept: Helen Burns was not
here; nothing sustained me; left to myself I abandoned my-
self, and my tears watered the boards" (Chapter 8, I, 83).
Unlike Helen, Jane has no inner security; doctrine alone is
not sufficient for her; belief in an afterlife is meaningless
when one is suffering now. In one of the most terrible out-
bursts of the book, she tells Helen that she desperately needs
others in order to survive: "'I know I should think well of
myself; but that is not enough: if others don't love me, I
would rather die than live-I cannot bear to be solitary and
hated, Helen. Look here; to gain some real affection from
you, or Miss Temple, or any other whom I truly love, I would
willingly submit to have the bone of my arm broken, or to
let a bull toss me, or to stand behind a kicking horse, and let
it dash its hoof at my chest,-'" (Chapter 8, I, 84-85).7
One cannot simply ignore this outburst or any of the Gates-
head or Lowood episodes of Jane Eyre in trying to understand
^While Barbara Hardy notes that Jane and Helen have different views,
she feels that eventually "Jane comes to accept Helen Burns's faith"
(The Appropriate Form, p. 66) and that this change in Jane's beliefs
is not dramatized in the novel. My point is that, though Jane often
uses the language of religion and spirituality, her conflicts are always
moral and human ones, and she resolves them in human terms. Cer-
tainly when she leaves Rochester, after he reveals his marriage to
Bertha, she feels none of the security a person sure of his religious faith
would feel, even though she claims she is following "God's law."
11I am indebted here to Mrs. Tillotson who notes the pattern of recur
character types in the novel. St. John especially "gathers into himself
the cousinship of John Reed, the formidable religious sanctions of Mr.
Brocklehurst, and the desire for possession of Mr. Rochester. . ..
Novels of the Eighteen-Forties, p. 304.
"This is a point that must be emphasized. While the voice that Jane
hears certainly does represent "supernatural aid"-as Mrs. Tillotson
notes (Novels of the Eighteen-Forties, p. 304)-Jane does not receive
this aid until she is ready and willing to respond to it. She began seek-
ing news of Rochester's whereabouts long before she heard the voice.
Her rejection of St. John comes from within, not from without.