Shapiro DefenseJaneEyre 1968

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In Defense of Jane Eyre

Author(s): Arnold Shapiro


Source: Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900 , Autumn, 1968, Vol. 8, No. 4,
Nineteenth Century (Autumn, 1968), pp. 681-698
Published by: Rice University

Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/449473

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In Defense of Jane Eyre
ARNOLD SHAPIRO

Critics have accused Jane Eyre (the character) of cowardice and


Jane Eyre (the novel) of inconsistency, even duplicity: Jane is a cow-
ard when she runs away from Rochester, unable to meet his love's
challenge; the supernatural voice which calls her back to Rochester
is unbelievable; at the end, only her vision prevails and Rochester is
helpless in her hands. Charlotte Bronte, however, throughout the novel
is consistent in her call for openness and freedom between individuals.
In the Gateshead and Lowood sections we see society attempting to
crush the individual. With Rochester, Jane has a chance at openness
but Rochester is closed and peremptory, offering her an untenable re-
lationship. She leaves, torn apart and guilty at not being able to ful-
fill his needs or their love. With St. John Rivers, however, Jane finally
rejects all attempts to suppress human-heartedness. When she hears the
voice, it is "within" her because she is ready to return to Rochester.
Significantly, she returns before she knows anything of the change in
his condition. The vision at the end then is not of Jane triumphant
but of humanity, the feeling heart, triumphant over the social forces
which have tried to suppress them.

THE LATE RICHARD CHASE'S charges


against Jane Eyre (the character) and Jane Eyre (the novel)
have never been fully answered, I think. Rather, they have
been picked up by other critics and made sticks with which
to beat Charlotte BrontS's second novel. First of all, Chase
accuses Jane Eyre herself of cowardice, when she refuses to
remain with Rochester, despite his pleadings, after their
abortive wedding and the revelation of Bertha Mason's ex-
istence. Jane, Chase says, "cannot permit the proffered in-
timacies of this man who keeps a mad wife locked up in his
attic. And if her moral scruples would allow his embrace, still
she could not endure the intensity of his passion. The noble,
free companionship of man and woman does not present it-
self to her as a possibility. She sees only two possible modes
of behavior; meek submission or a flirtatious, gently sadistic
skirmishing designed to keep her lover at bay."l This is a

"The Brontes: Or Myth Domesticated," in Forms of Modern Fiction,


ed. William Van O'Connor (Minneapolis, 1948), p. 107. Professor G.
Armour Craig, in a different sort of criticism of Jane's behavior at
this point, says that Jane is asserting her moral superiority over
Rochester: ". . . after Rochester's explanations and protestations of
love, she confirms her superiority by refusing to fly with him to the
south of France as his mistress." "The Unpoetic Compromise: On the

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682 JANE EYRE

serious charge to level at someone who, all along-at Gates-


head and Lowood and in the earlier weeks at Thornfield-
has complained of her own isolation and claimed to want com-
panionship, a meaningful relationship with another human
being, above all else.
Second, Chase accuses Charlotte Bronte of duplicity at the
end of the novel when she suddenly has Jane Eyre hear the
voice of Rochester (at the moment of greatest intensity in her
struggle with St. John Rivers): "The universe, not previously
amenable to supernatural communication between the parted
lovers, now allows them to hear each other though they are
leagues apart."2 Finally, and perhaps this is the most serious
charge of all, Chase accuses Charlotte Bronte of cowardice.
At the end, Chase implies, the novelist cannot be true to her
own call for love and passion made earlier in the book (for
example in the orchard scene, when Jane cries out that her
spirit is speaking to Rochester's, that caste and custom must
not be allowed to separate them). The injuries that Rochester
incurs during the destruction of Thornfield are, according to
Chase and other critics, "a symbolic castration. The faculty
of vision . . . is often identified in the unconscious with the
energy of sex. When Rochester had tried to make love to Jane,
she felt a 'fiery hand grasp at her vitals'; the hand, then, must
be cut off. ... It is as if the masterless universe had been
subdued by being lopped, blinded, and burned." Chase does
admit that Rochester and Jane have a child-presumably not
through the intervention of the supernatural-but still the
conclusion represents the triumph of Jane, "a patient, practi-
cal woman"; and the universe, as well as Rochester, has been
"quelled."3

Relation between Private Vision and Social Order in Nineteenth-Century


English Fiction," in Society and Self in the Novel, ed. Mark Schorer,
English Institute Essays. 1955 (New York, 1956), pp. 32-33.
"The Brontes: Or Myth Domesticated," p. 109. Barbara Hardy, in her
recent discussion of Jane Eyre, picks up this charge. Rochester's "c
version," which presumably lets his voice get through to Jane, "is even
less elaborated than Jane's, and once again it is a pattern of action and
change imposed from without, grace rather than organic process, which
determines and completes the story." The Appropriate Form: An Essay
on the Novel (London, 1964), p. 70.
3"The Brontes: Or Myth Domesticated," pp. 108-109. Mark Schorer
echoes this, and views the end of the novel as the governess's reven
"Charlotte Bronte, like her creation, Jane Eyre, was a governess, and
it is amusing to contemplate her counter-device, fifty years before

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ARNOLD SHAPIRO 683

This criticism of the novel seems to me to show either a


lack of understanding of what Jane Eyre is all about or a lack
of sympathy with the themes of the book. The attack on Jane
for leaving Rochester in the first place pays no attention to
the terrible torment Jane undergoes during this period, her
fantastic struggle within herself as to what she should do,
and the guilt and anguish she feels when she does leave. The
attack on the conclusion of the novel ignores what happens
to Jane during her struggles with St. John Rivers-her com-
plete denial of Rivers's philosophy and view of existence, her
affirmation of her own individuality and right to self-expres-
sion, and, most important, her very refusal to turn away from
humanity, from the real needs of real people, to an other-
worldly life-denying selfish existence nominally carried out in
the name of God.
Chase's criticisms, moreover, seem paradoxical in the light
of Charlotte Bronte's own professed intentions for her book.
For Charlotte Bronte seems to be against the very things that
Richard Chase is against. In the largest sense, Jane Eyre is
a protest novel. It is a protest against all that would stifle or
repress the individual-against the inhuman treatment of hu-
man beings. The famous review of the book, in the Quarterly
Review, was correct (for the wrong reasons) when it com-
plained that the novel was

pre-eminently an anti-Christian composition. There is


throughout it a murmuring against the comforts of the
rich and against the privations of the poor, which, as far
as each individual is concerned, is a murmuring against
God's appointment-there is a proud and perpetual as-
sertion of the rights of man, for which we find no au-
thority either in God's word or in God's providence....
We do not hesitate to say that the tone of mind and
thought which has overthrown authority and violated
every code human and divine abroad, and fostered Chart-
ism and rebellion at home, is the same which has also
written Jane Eyre.4

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-

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684 JANE EYRE

Charlotte Bronte herself corroborates this view of the book,


when in the preface to the second edition, she lashes out at
her critics: "I mean the timorous or carping few who doubt
the tendency of such books as Jane Eyre: in whose eyes what-
ever is unusual is wrong; whose ears detect in each protest
against bigotry-that parent of crime-an insult to piety, that
regent of God on earth." She continues by making a plea for
originality, for the right of the individual to express himself:
"Conventionality is not morality. Self-righteousness is not
religion. To attack the first is not to assail the last. To pluck
the mask from the face of the Pharisee, is not to lift an im-
pious hand to the Crown of Thorns."
Jane Eyre, then, is a considerable extension of what Char-
lotte Bronte began in The Professor. Where, in the latter
novel, she showed the inhumanity of the businessman, the
person who would use others for profit, here she enlarges the
protest. The world may be content "to make external show
pass for sterling worth-to let white-washed walls vouch for
clean shrines." But she is going to penetrate beneath the sur-
face, to "expose-to rase the gilding, and show the base metal
under it-to penetrate the sepulchre, and reveal charnel
relics.... "6 This is strong language-no wonder the Quarter-
ly Review critic was frightened at the possible results of such
an assault on the established citadels of respectability. And it
is interesting that Charlotte Bronte uses the language of re-
ligion to combat those critics who attacked the novel on re-
ligious grounds. For one of the things she is going to show in
her book is that religion is not simply the religious establish-
ment, that it is not properly represented by conventionality or
the maintenance of the status quo. The spiritual values the
novel evidences are closely bound up with moral and human
values. True religion, true spirituality, must be the very ob-
verse of the creeds espoused by Brocklehurst and St. John
Rivers. It must have as a basis that same "proud and per-
petual assertion of the rights of man" that the Quarterly Re-
view was so terrified of.
We can see this clearly at the start of Jane Eyre when

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.

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A R N O L D SH A P I R O 685

Charlotte Bronte makes evident the close bond between Mrs.


Reed and Brocklehurst, the upholders of the social order, of
things as they are, and the enemies of freedom and openness.
In the first few pages of the book we learn that the Reeds
do not like Jane because she is different from them, because
she does not try to keep up appearances and lets her feelings
be made known. Mrs. Reed, Jane tells us, ". . . regretted to
be under the necessity of keeping me at a distance; but that
until she heard from Bessie, and could discover by her own
observation that I was endeavouring in good earnest to ac-
quire a more sociable and childlike disposition, a more attrac-
tive and sprightly manner,-something lighter, franker, more
natural as it were-she really must exclude me from privileges
intended only for contented, happy, little children." There
is real irony here, in that Jane is expected to put on a better
surface, like a coat of paint, and thus become more natural.
Her problem is that she is a child, but does not act like a child,
or the way that everyone thinks a child should act. Society
has standards for even its youngest members, and one must
comply or be cast out. When Jane asks what she has done
wrong, Mrs. Reed replies: "'Jane, I don't like cavillers or
questioners [here she sounds remarkably like the Quarterly
Review!]: besides, there is something truly forbidding in a
child taking up her elders in that manner. Be seated some-
where; and until you can speak pleasantly, remain silent'"
(Chapter 1, I, 1-2).
One of the things Charlotte Bronte is protesting against
most in this opening section of the novel is prejudging, im-
posing an identity on someone, so that his individuality is
lost. Thus, when Jane cries out in her desperation, after she
has been left alone in the red-room, Mrs. Reed does not see
a terrified child, but a "precocious actress": "She sincerely
looked on me as a compound of virulent passions, mean spirit,
and dangerous duplicity" (Chapter 2, I, 16). Jane feels re-
lieved when Mr. Lloyd, the apothecary, comes to attend to
her because he is a "stranger," "an individual not belonging
to Gateshead, and related to Mrs. Reed," thus someone who
has not already made up his mind about her (Chapter 3, I, 17).
For even to the servants she is "a tiresome, ill-conditioned
child," "a sort of infantile Guy Fawkes." Abbot could have
pity on her if she were a "nice, pretty child" but she is "a
little toad" (Chapter 3, I, 26-27). In a house full of people,
therefore, Jane is totally alone. Her only companion is her

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686 JANE EYRE

doll: ". . . human beings must love something, and in the


dearth of worthier objects of affection, I contrived to find a
pleasure in loving and cherishing a faded graven image,
shabby as a miniature scarecrow" (Chapter 4, I, 30-31).
Why Jane has to "worship" a graven image soon becomes
apparent. Organized religion, in the form of Mr. B1rocklehurst,
offers no help for the lonely, terrified individual; in fact, it
is in league with the rest of the world against her.6 Thus
not only does Mrs. Reed interpose, cast a shadow on Jane's
future, by telling Mr. Brocklehurst that Jane is a liar and
deceitful, but he himself is impervious to human feelings,
closed to human appeal. In Jane's eyes he is a "black pillar"-
a "stony stranger"; his "grim face at the top was like a
carved mask, placed above the shaft by way of capital" (Chap-
ter 4, I, 34). His religion is completely hypocritical. When
Jane tells him that the psalms are not interesting to her, he
accuses her of having a "heart of stone" and holds up as an
example of proper piety his young son who wishes "to be a
little angel here below" and gets gingerbread nuts for saying
so (Chapter 4, I, 36-37). He and Mrs. Reed agree that the
central doctrine of Christianity should be "humility" (of
others) and "consistency" rather than love or charity: " 'con-
sistency, madam, is the first of Christian duties; and it has
been observed in every arrangement connected with the es-
tablishment of Lowood [Brocklehurst's school]: plain fare,
simple attire, unsophisticated accommodations, hardy and ac-
tive habits; such is the order of the day in the house and its
inhabitants'" (Chapter 4, I, 38-39). Against such a regimen,
what chance has the merely human?
Certainly it has no chance at Lowood, the institutionalized
extension of Gateshead Hall, which is dealt with in the second
section of Jane Eyre. Here the individual is reduced to the

6While it is possible that Charlotte Bronte's attack here is exaggerated,


many commentators have justified what she says. Mrs. Gaskell, for
instance, thinks that Charlotte was pretty accurate in capturing the
qualities of William Carus Wilson, presumably the original of Brockle-
hurst-"his disagreeable qualities, his spiritual pride, his love of power,
his ignorance of human nature and consequent want of tenderness."
The Life of Charlotte Bronte, ed. Temple Scott and B. W. Willett
(Edinburgh, 1924), p. 61. A recent writer goes along with this view.
Ford K. Brown notes that "Miss Bronte was probably accurate about
Carus Wilson's Evangelical contempt on behalf of his young pupils for
food, clothing and sanitation." Fathers of the Victorians: The Age of
Wilberforce (Cambridge, Eng., 1961), p. 453.

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A RN O LD SH A P 1 R O 6879

most common denominator; the girls at the school are


by being called by their last names. Mr. Brocklehurst's hard-
ness predominates, and is, in fact, contagious: "Miss Temple
[the usually pleasant supervisor] had looked down when he
first began to speak to her; but she now gazed straight be-
fore her, and her face, naturally pale as marble, appeared to
be assuming also the coldness and fixity of that material;
especially her mouth, closed as if it would have required a
sculptor's chisel to open it, and her brow settled gradually
into petrified severity" (Chapter 7, I, 77). Brocklehurst's in-
human religion prevails. When Miss Temple protests against
his order that the girls' hair be cut, and says that it curls
naturally, he replies: "'Naturally! Yes, but we are not to
conform to nature: I wish these girls to be the children of
Grace . . .'" (Chapter 7, I, 77). The girls are to forego their
identities. Brocklehurst's mission is " 'to mortify in these girls
the lusts of the flesh; to teach them to clothe themselves with
shame-facedness and sobriety, not with braided hair and cost-
ly apparel . . .' " (Chapter 7, I, 78). And Jane Eyre tries
unsuccessfully to elude the headmaster's gaze. When he finds
her, he makes her the center of all eyes, as Mrs. Reed had
done; he accuses her of being "an interloper and an alien"
and tells all the school to shun her.
What has not often been pointed out in discussions of these
earlier sections of Jane Eyre is that Jane not only castigates
Brocklehurst's false religion, but she also turns away from
Helen Burns's other-worldliness, realizes that it is not for
her. Helen Burns is chiefly used in the novel as a foil. Though
she is saintly, though she befriends Jane, the latter quite
specifically rejects her advice and her example. When she
first sees Helen undergoing some punishment, for example,
Jane perceives that her new acquaintance does not live in the
same world that she inhabits: "I have heard of day-dreams-
is she in a day-dream now? Her eyes are fixed on the floor,
but I am sure they do not see it-her sight seems turned in,
gone down into her heart: she is looking at what she can
remember, I believe; not at what is really present" (Chapter
5, I, 62). Jane cannot accept Helen's doctrine of turning the
other cheek. She says she must resist anyone who attacks her,
would strike back: if a teacher " 'struck me with that rod,
I should get it from her hand; I should break it under her
nose'" (Chapter 6, I, 67). Helen, perhaps, embodies a saintly

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688 JANE EYRE

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."

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A R N O L D SH A P I R O 689

the early relationship between Jane and Rochester. Jane des-


perately needs love and affection, but Rochester at first can
give them to her only in a limited way. His past-the secret
he is hiding-keeps him from being a whole man. Suffering
from remorse, he is, as he characterizes himself, "hard and
tough as an India-rubber ball; pervious, though, through a
chink or two still, and with one sentient point in the middle
of the lump" (Chapter 14, I, 168-169). Since he feels that he
cannot be open with Jane, their relationship can never be
one of equality. At times, in his behavior toward her, he even
takes on some of the coloring of Brocklehurst and Mrs. Reed.
This is made very evident in what happens immediately
after Rochester's proposal of marriage. In proposing to Jane,
Rochester said that he would defy the world's opinion, wash
his hands of the world's judgment, but one feels that he
would only impose a new burden on her. He has a false view
of what she is. For instance, though she protests that she is
a "plain, Quakerish governess," he insists that he is going to
cover her with jewels: "'I will make the world acknowledge
you a beauty,'" he says, and she replies that then he will
no longer know her; she will no longer be Jane Eyre (Chap-
ter 24, II, 25-26). He tells Addle that Jane is a "fairy," that
he is going to take her to the moon, and Jane continually has
to interrupt to bring him back to reality. Rochester here is
trying to use Jane to expiate his own sins. He tells her they
will travel throughout Europe: "'. . . all the ground I have
wandered over shall be retrodden by you: wherever I stamped
my hoof, your sylph's foot shall step also. Ten years since, I
flew through Europe half mad; with disgust, hate, and rage,
as my companions: now I shall revisit it healed and cleansed,
with a very angel as my comforter."' Jane refuses to be used
this way; she tries to bring Rochester back to earth, to make
him realize that he is marrying a real woman, and that he
cannot solve his problems through her. " 'I am not an angel
. . . and I will not be one till the day I die: I will be myself
Mr. Rochester, you must neither expect nor exact anything
celestial of me-for you will not get it, any more than I shall
get it of you: which I do not at all anticipate' " (Chapter 24,
II, 26).
Miss Ratchford has pointed out that Rochester has in him
some of the traits of Zamorna-the hero of Charlotte Bronte's
juvenilia-some of the "god-like Majesty of Angria under the

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690 JANE EYRE

unheroic mould and less handsome features of an English


squire."8 And at this point in the relationship between Jane
and Rochester, we can see the Zamorna resemblance. Roches-
ter tells Jane that he means to claim her, her "thoughts, con-
versation, and company-for ever" (Chapter 24, II, 34). And
even beyond-he sings a song to her about his "love" who
has "sworn, with sealing kiss, with me to live,-to die"
(Chapter 24, II, 43). In pure self-defense Jane has to assert
loudly that she has no intention of dying with him-"he might
depend on that."
What is worse, he still has not told her everything about
himself. His past is still a mystery to her. He tells her: " 'You
are welcome to all my confidence that is worth having Jane:
but for God's sake, don't desire a useless burden! Don't long
for poison-don't turn out a downright Eve on my hands!' "
(Chapter 24, II, 29). For her part, Jane is caught in the
dilemma of anyone who is in love. She wants to maintain
her distance, her individuality. She will not be another Celine
Varens, she tells Rochester-" 'I only want an easy mind, sir;
not crushed by crowded obligations'" (Chapter 24, II, 39).
Yet she realizes that he is everything to her: "My future hus-
band was becoming to me my whole world; and more than
my world: almost my hope of heaven" (Chapter 24, II, 45).
As if to sympolize Jane's predicament, on their wedding-
day Rochester becomes completely peremptory again-he is
the iron man who carries her along in his wake: ". . . I was
hurried along by a stride I could hardly follow; and to look
at Mr. Rochester's face was to feel that not a second of delay
would be tolerated for any purpose." She is cut off both from
the world around her, and from what is going on inside him:
"I know not whether the day was fair or foul; in descending
the drive, I gazed neither on sky nor earth: my heart was
with my eyes; and both seemed migrated into Mr. Rochester's
frame. I wanted to see the invisible thing on which, as we
went along, he appeared to fasten a glance fierce and fell. I
wanted to feel the thoughts whose force he seemed breasting
and resisting" (Chapter 26, II, 63). When the wedding is in-
terrupted, and the revelation that Rochester is already mar-
ried is finally made, he is the completely petrified man, the
counterpart of Mrs. Reed and Brocklehurst, those who have

8The Brontes' Web of Childhood (New York, 1941), p. 204.

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ARNOLD SHAPIRO 691

cut themselves off from humanity: "I looked at Mr. Roches-


ter: I made him look at me. His whole face was colourless
rock: his eye was both spark and flint. He disavowed noth-
ing, without smiling; without seeming to recognize in me a
human being, he only twined my waist with his arm, and
riveted me to his side" (Chapter 26, II, 66).
We must keep Rochester's behavior at this point in mind
when we try to understand Jane's actions after the wedding
has been interrupted and she finds that her husband-to-be is
already married. Jane may be accused of not having enough
faith or trust in Rochester (for example, when suddenly re-
versing her previous beliefs, she says that she "will keep the
law given by God" and leaves Rochester) but in a sense he
has caused this reaction himself. It was he who did not have
enough faith in Jane in the first place to tell her his story
openly. It was he who would have betrayed her into a false
marriage.
But more is involved than this simple logical justification.
How could Jane stay at Thornfield? How could she become
Rochester's mistress? It is not a question of the "free compan-
ionship of man and woman" (to go back to Chase's criticism).
Jane has been longing for that sort of relationship all through
the novel. As Chase himself points out Jane could never be-
come another Bertha Mason, given over solely to passion.9
And she is not one of the Angrian heroines, like Mina Laury
or Caroline Vernon, who can simply submit to her lover's
importunities. She has to live in the world, the world of men
and women, where no one can be a completely free agent,
however much he might desire it. When Rochester goes over
his past with her, tells her how much he hates the memory
of his string of mistresses, she heeds the warning. Jane fears
becoming a mistress, an impossible role for her to play in
the world as she knows it.
What is truly remarkable in this section is that Jane takes
so long to make her decision, and undergoes so much agony in
doing so. As R. B. Heilman notes: "The intensity of the pres-
sure which he [Rochester] puts upon her is matched, not by
the fear and revulsion of the popular heroine, but by a re-
sponsiveness which she barely masters. . . ."10 Charlotte
Bronte, in fact, loads the dice against Jane. For she who has

9"The Brontes: Or Myth Domesticated,'" pp. 107-108.


""Charlotte Bronte's 'New' Gothic," in From Jane Austen to Joseph

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692 JANE EYRE

been so aware of the horrors committed in the name of so-


ciety, certainly can realize that Rochester is not fully to blame
for his terrible marriage. It was a marriage of convenience,
arranged by his father and older brother to get him out of
the way, and now he is still bound to his mad wife because
of society's dictates. Leaving Rochester, Jane seems to be
playing society's game, condoning the evils that have taken
place.
Jane perceives this, and is almost torn apart by her con-
flicting feelings: her "reason," which tells her to leave; her
pity and love for Rochester, which want her to stay. This
crisis in her life returns her almost to where she was at the
beginning. When she first feels the force of Rochester's
revelation, she feels like the little girl at the start of the
novel, looking at the bleak world from her window-seat. She
"was a cold, solitary girl again: her life was pale, her pros-
pects were desolate. A Christmas frost had come at mid-sum-
mer; a white December had whirled over June; ice glazed
the ripe apples, drifts crushed the blowing roses . . ." (Chap-
ter 26, I, 74). At the end, when she leaves, Jane certainly
takes no comfort from her adherence to "principle," to the
world's ways. She is not smug. Once more, as at the start of
her story, she is alone, and feels guilty. But this time her
guilt is justified; it is not just the "reproach of dependence"
hurled at her by the Reeds and the servants at Gateshead.
She has hurt someone else: "What was I? In the midst of
my pain of heart, and frantic effort of principle, I abhorred
myself. I had no solace from self-approbation: none even from
self-respect. I had injured-wounded-left my master. I was
hateful in my own eyes" (Chapter 27, II, 108). Paradoxically
this is at least an advance over her former state. Her feelings
here are not imposed on her from without as at Gateshead,
and she has at least been involved with someone, someone who
cares for her and loves her, and whom she loves in return.
In the last section of the novel describing Jane's life with
the Rivers family, Jane is once again confronted with a chal-
lenge to human-heartedness. The challenge this time is em-
bodied in her cousin, St. John Rivers, the man who subsumes
within himself many of the traits that we have already seen

Conrad: Essays Collected in Memory of James T. Hillhouse, ed. Robert


C. Rathburn and Martin Steinmann, Jr. (Minneapolis, 1958), p. 122.

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ARNOLD SHAP1 RO 693

in other characters in the novel.1 Rejecting St. John, Jane


finally rejects the enemies of all that she believes in, and
shows herself ready to respond to Rochester when he calls
to her.
St. John Rivers is a man who has stifled all humanity
within himself. He is another Eliza Reed attempting to curb
his own nature, as well as others'. Thus (in language remi-
niscent of Brocklehurst's) he tells Jane: "'It is hard work to
control the workings of inclination, and turn the bent of na-
ture: but it may be done, I know from experience' " (Chapter
31, II, 161). He has specifically rejected the easy life offered
him by marriage to Rosamond Oliver-there is of course ob-
vious symbolism here; Rosamond equals "Rose of the world."
Whereas throughout the novel Jane has been the person who
desires expansion of the self, who wants liberty, St. John has
deliberately constricted his own bounds. He restrains himself
until there is constant pressure, until he becomes almost like
a machine. When he speaks to Rosamond Oliver, he is like
an "automation" (Chapter 31, II, 167).
Moreover, though St. John's religion is other-worldly, like
Helen Burns's, he is closer to Brocklehurst in that he makes
no attempt to humanize it, to offer it as a comfort to suffer-
ing humanity. In a sermon of his, ". . . there was a strange
bitterness; an absence of consolatory gentleness, stern al-
lusions to Calvinistic doctrines-election, predestination, re-
probation-were frequent; and each reference to these points
sounded like a sentence pronounced for doom" (Chapter 30,
II, 149). In a sense, he is worse than Brocklehurst. As his
sister, Diana, tells Jane, he "looks quiet . . . but he hides a
fever in his vitals. You would think him gentle, yet in some
things he is inexorable as death . . ." (Chapter 30, II, 155).
Like Brocklehurst again, St. John would extend his icy force
to subdue others. He is the worst sort of teacher, since he
would make his pupil his slave, instead of helping her achieve
her own individuality. With him, Jane feels that she is losing
all her freedom. In a grotesque parody of Rochester's attempt
to make her "Jane Rochester," a creature bedecked with
jewels and fine clothes, St. John attempts to transform her

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.

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694 JANE E YRE

completely: ". .. I daily wished more to please him: but to


do so, I felt daily more and more that I must disown half my
nature, stifle half my faculties, wrest my tastes from their
original bent, force myself to the adoption of pursuits for
which I had no natural vocation" (Chapter 34, II, 211-212).
This man, who looks on his fellow men as "fellow worms"
(Chapter 34, II, 215), would subject Jane to an experience
she has felt before in the novel. He says that he recognizes
in her "the flame and excitement of sacrifice" (Chapter 34,
II, 218). But she feels that his love would be an "iron
shroud"; as his wife, her inward flame once again would
turn against her and destroy her. She could be his companion,
but not his wife: ".. . at his side always, and always restrain-
ed, and always checked-forced to keep the fire of my nature
continually low, to compel it to burn inwardly and never
utter a cry, though the imprisoned flame consumed vital after
vital-this would be unendurable" (Chapter 34, II, 224).
St. John, therefore, would put her back where she was when
she was a little girl, confronting Mrs. Reed. But she will not
be put back there. As she has proved with the Riverses, she is
an individual, someone who has a right to be heard. She has
felt the healing influence of the Rivers sisters. In the school
she has run for St. John, she has shown her capacity to act
independently of others. Her inheritance has increased her
ability to stand alone and, at long last, she has found a family;
she is no longer isolated. Most important of all, she has grown
in awareness. She knows that what St. John offers her is not
love: "Can I receive from him the bridal ring, endure all the
forms of love (which I doubt not he would scrupulously ob-
serve) and know that the spirit was quite absent? Can I bear
the consciousness that every endearment he bestows is a sacri-
fice made on principle? No: such a martyrdom would be
monstrous. I will never undergo it. As his sister I might ac-
company him-not as his wife . . ." (Chapter 34, II, 220).
She sees his weakness. Unlike the women in Charlotte Bronte's
juvenilia, Jane rejects a man who would place himself above
other men, who would make himself a hero on a level with
God. When St. John says that allegiance to him is the same
as allegiance to God, she scorns him. Perhaps most signifi-
cantly she realizes that there is a human claim on her that
she must answer: as she tells St. John: " 'God did not give
me my life to throw away; and to do as you wish me would

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ARNOLD SHAPIRO 695

. . be almost equivalent to committing suicide. Moreover,


before I definitely resolve on quitting England, I will know
for certain, whether I cannot be of greater use by remaining
in it than by leaving it' " (Chapter 35, II, 232-233).
Thus Jane is ready when she hears the mysterious voice
calling her back to Rochester. As she points out, the voice
"seemed in me-not in the external world" (Chapter 36, II,
243).12 Charlotte Bronte is realistic here. She shows us Jane
almost giving in to the pressure St. John brings to bear on
her. But surely the intent is to indicate Jane's rejection of
the false love, the false god of St. John Rivers. She has her
own way of praying; her God does not abjure humanity, but
aids it, refreshes the human spirit, instead of stifling it. The
important thing to note about Jane's return to Thornfield
is that she is now completely open, receptive to Rochester's
pleas for aid. As Charlotte Bronte emphasizes and underlines,
Jane goes back without knowing what has happened to
Rochester. She answers his appeal even though she thinks he
may still be a desperate creature. To emphasize Jane's lack
of knowledge about what she is returning to, Charlotte Bronte
uses a lengthy simile. Jane's first sight of Thornfield was like
that of a lover who

finds his mistress asleep on a mossy bank; he wishes to


catch a glimpse of her fair face without waking her.
He steals softly over the grass, careful to make no
sound; he pauses-fancying she has stirred: he with-
draws; not for worlds would he be seen. All is still:
he again advances: he bends over her; a light veil
rests on her features: he lifts it, bends lower; now his
eyes anticipate the vision of beauty-warm, and bloom-
ing, and lovely, in rest. How hurried was their first
glance! But how thev fix! How he starts! How he sud-
denly and vehemently clasps in both arms the form he
dared not, a moment since, touch with his finger! How
he calls aloud a name, and drops his burden, and gazes
on it wildly! He thus gasps and cries, and gazes, be-
cause he no longer fears to waken by any sound he can
utter-by any movement he can make. He thought his

"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.

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696 JANE EYRE

love slept sweetly: he finds she is stone-dead. (Chap-


ter 36, II, 246-247)

Jane has to go to an innkeeper to find out Rochester's fate,


to find out why Thornfield is a ruin. In a sense, she learns
that she has been the cause. When she left him, Rochester
became a recluse; he sent Mrs. Fairfax and Adele off, never
left the premises, wandered the grounds "as if he had lost his
senses" (Chapter 36, II, 251). Jane's return to Thornfield,
therefore, represents her return to human responsibility. One
does not know of course how completely she has escaped the
ties of the world-what she would have done if Bertha Mason
were still alive-but at least she has responded to the human
appeal.
At the end, of course, Rochester is transformed. One may
fault Charlotte Bronte here for not dramatizing this trans-
formation, as one may criticize Jane Austen for not drama-
tizing the change in outlook in Darcy in Pride and Prejudice,
but we can understand what it indicates. Rochester has now
achieved a humanity that he never had before. His feelings
about life are completely different from what they were:
"'Hitherto I have hated to be helped-to be led: henceforth,
I feel, I shall hate it no more. I did not like to put my hand
into a hireling's, but it is pleasant to feel it circled by Jane's
little fingers.'" He admits that he was wrong when he tried
to change Jane: " 'The third day from this must be our wed-
ding-day Jane. Never mind fine clothes and jewels, now: all
that is not worth a fillip.'" He was wrong when he asked
Jane to stay with him after the revelation of his marriage:
" 'I would have sullied my innocent flower-breathed guilt on
its purity: the Omnipotent snatched it from me'" (Chapter
37, II, 275-276). He is certain he has expiated his sin. The
day he called out to her, he accepted the justness of his
punishment: " 'I longed for thee, Jane! Oh, I longed for thee
both with soul and flesh! I asked of God, at once in anguish
and humility, if I had not been long enough desolate, af-
flicted, tormented; and might not soon taste bliss and peace
once more. That I merited all I endured, I acknowledged-that
I could scarcely endure more, I pleaded; and the alpha and
omega of my heart's wishes broke involuntarily from my
lips in the words-"Jane! Jane! Jane!"'" (Chapter 37, II,
276). One may wonder at the religious language here, but
one must also note that it is always connected with Roches-

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ARNOLD SHAPIRO 697

ter's changed feelings toward Jane, his changed view of the


needs of another human being. One should also note in con-
nection with his possible "castration" at this point, that he
tells Jane that he longed for her "both with soul and flesh!"
A recent critic of Jane Eyre, Professor G. Armour Craig,
has charged that there is only one voice in the book, Jane's.
Her story is a success story, showing how she triumphs over
all the other characters, stands superior to them morally and
literally. The novel represents "the triumph of one mind's
version of society. When her story ends Jane has reduced
not only the initially overpowering differences of rank; she
has reduced to the shape of her own vision the power that,
for Charlotte Bronte at least, supports all differences of rank."
Craig goes on to say that everything in the book is sooner or
later reduced to Jane's vision. Paradoxically, when this has
been accomplished, when all differences between people have
been demolished, when all see as if out of Jane's eyes, she is
alone, as isolated as she was at the start of the book:

There can be no doubt . . . that the reduction of the


world to the terms of a single vision, no matter how
moral its content or how sanctified its motives, is at-
tended by the most dreadful violence. The power of
the "I" of this novel is secret, undisclosable, absolute.
. . . The violence with which it simplifies the differ-
ences labeled "inferior," "poorer," "richer," "better,"
or "higher," the killing and maiming and blinding
which are the consequences of its dialectic, tell us as
clearly as fiction can that even fantasy must subdue
a real world. Jane Eyre's vision masters her world,
but the price of her mastery is absolute isolation.
When she knows her world completely she is out of
it by the most rigorous necessity. I know no other
work that so effectively demonstrates the demon of
the absolute.13

This surely is not to do justice to Jane Eyre. One may grant


that, at the end, Jane is smug, as Charlotte Bronte falls into
the conventions of the Victorian novel and gives us a tidy,
and impossible, perfectly happy ending. We learn that Jane
and Rochester had nothing but bliss for years on end, and
suddenly in the last chapter Jane changes her view of St.
John Rivers. Seemingly since she herself is happily married
she can describe St. John without rancor. She now indulges

"See "The Unpoetic Compromise," pp. 39-41.

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698 JANE EYRE

in sentimentality, presenting St. John's sacrifice of himself


as noble-he is almost a saint, ready to sail off to Heaven-
and forgetting that he is the man who would have destroyed
her to serve his own ends. But the "voice" of the novel up
to this point? Surely before condemning it we should note
what it says and hear what it calls for. This "demon of the
absolute," as we have seen, affirms the dignity of the in-
dividual as opposed to social convention;14 it calls for self-
expression, rather than suppression; it is opposed to hypoc-
risy and sanctimoniousness, and affirms true feeling and
naturalness. It calls for individuals to understand each other,
to be open, not closed; it decries prejudging, placing people
in pigeon-holes and forgetting about them. To a limited ex-
tent to be sure, it denies the privileges of caste and class dis-
tinctions. It calls for relationships based on equality, rather
than master-slave relationships. To say that Rochester at the
end has been wiped out by his suffering or injuries is to say
that anyone who learns to care for someone else, who learns
to respect and respond to the rights and needs of others,
has been wiped out. Jane Eyre may have elements of fantasy
in it, may rely on a sort of "magic" as a plot device, but it
is concerned with real problems of a real world, and the
solutions it offers, one hopes, are also real.

THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY

"It is interesting, in this connection, that Raymond Williams places Jane


Eyre in a large group of novels that appeared in the 1840's, which were
concerned with social protest: "The orphan, the exposed child, the lonely
governess, the girl from a poor family: these are the figures which
express the deepest response to the reality of the way of life.... Th
emerge carrying an irresistible authenticity, not merely as exemplars
of the accidents of the social system, but as expressions of a general
judgment of the human quality of the whole way of life. Here, in the
1840's, is the first body of fiction . . . expressing, even through the con-
ventional forms, a radical human dissent. At the level of social char-
acter, the. society might be confident of its assumptions and its future,
but these lonely exposed figures seem to us, at least, the personal and
social reality of the system which in part the social character rational-
ized. Man alone, afraid, a victim: this is the enduring experience. The
magic solutions will be grasped at, in many cases, in the end, but the
intensity of the central experience is on record and survives them."
The Long Revolution (London, 1961), p. 68.

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