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<>1. Jane Eyre is an orphan girl who has been fostered by her aunt since she was a child, and has been discriminated against and abused. After Jane rebelled against her aunt's bullying, her aunt sent Jane to the Loward orphanage.
2. Jane is educated in an orphanage and at the same time meets her best friend Helen, who dies of tuberculosis due to poor living conditions. After completing her studies, Jane Eyre taught in this orphanage. Due to the departure of her mentor, she eventually chose to leave the orphanage and work as a tutor at Thornfield Manor.
3. Thornfield Manor is gloomy and empty, and sometimes strange laughs can be heard that are creepy. Jane's student is a girl around 10 years old, Adele Valen, and Rochester, the owner of the estate, is the girl's guardian. One evening, Jane Eyre went out for a walk and met Mr. Rochester, who had just returned from abroad.
4. Rochester is a melancholy and moody person, and his attitude towards her is sometimes good and bad. One day, Jane Eyre is awakened in her sleep by the sound of eerie laughter and finds Rochester's room on fire, and Jane Eyre wakes him up and helps him extinguish the fire.
5. Rochester often holds banquets, just to pretend to be courteous to Miss Blanche and test Jane's feelings for him, but Jane is given a cold shoulder by Blanche's mother and daughter. At this time, Jane was already in love with Rochester, and she was about to quit and leave in her excitement to retain her dignity, but she was proposed by Rochester, and out of love, Jane agreed to him.
6. On the eve of the wedding, Jane Eyre sees a terrible woman in the haze, putting on her wedding dress in front of the mirror. The next day, when the wedding was taking place in the church, someone suddenly testified: Rochester was married.
His wife was the madwoman who was locked up in a secret room on the third floor, and often let out horrible laughter. The law hinders their love and plunges the two into deep pain.
7. On a bleak and rainy night, Jane Eyre left Rochester. On the way, Jane Eyre slept in the open, endured many hardships, and was eventually taken in by the family of the reverend St. John, where she taught at a local elementary school. Soon after, Jane Eyre learned of her uncle's death and left her an inheritance, and discovered that St. John was her cousin, and Jane Eyre decided to divide the property equally.
8. St. John intended to go on a mission to India. He asked Jane Eyre to marry him and go with him to India, but Jane Eyre rejected him and decided to go back to visit Rochester. She returns to Thornfield Manor, which is in ruins, where the madwoman has set fire and falls to her death, and Rochester is wounded and disabled.
But she chose to stay with Rochester, marry him, and live the life she wanted.
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1. Jane. Jane Eyre, the heroine of Jane Eyre, written by Charlotte Brontë, published in 1847.
2. "Jane Eyre" tells the story of an English woman who has been orphaned since she was a child, constantly pursuing freedom and dignity in various tribulations, insisting on herself, and finally achieving happiness. ** Fascinating display of the male and female protagonists' ups and downs of love experience, singing the praises of getting rid of all old customs and prejudices, and successfully creating a female figure who dares to resist and dare to fight for freedom and equal status.
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1. Charlotte Brontë, the author of Jane Eyre, is an English female writer. She and her two younger sisters, Emily Brontë and Anne Brontë, are known as the "Three Brontë Sisters" in the history of British literature.
2. Charlotte was born in 1816 in a family of country pastors in Howworth, Yorkshire, in the north of England. Her mother died young, and eight-year-old Charlotte was sent to the Cowenbridge Girls' Boarding School, a charity for orphaned daughters of clergy. At the age of 15 she enrolled in Miss Woller's school, where she became a teacher a few years later.
3. Later, she worked as a tutor, and eventually she devoted herself to the path of literary creation. In 1847, Charlotte Brontë published Jane Eyre, a long acre of chopping chapters, which caused a sensation in the literary world.
In the autumn of 1849, her younger brother and two younger sisters died. In the shadow of death and confusion, she persevered in completing the book "Shelly", which expressed her mourning for her sister Emily and described the early spontaneous labor movement in Britain. She also wrote Villette (1853) and The Teacher (1857), both of which were based on her own life experiences.
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