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did not mask her opinions at all. She wanted an understanding feedback from Mr. Rochester. She thirsted for his prehension and acceptance. She could not bear their love without the basis of dignity and equality. The bad news came here and she was shocked by it—he had a wife. Now, if she married him, she was just like a mistress. She was not his legal wife and their love was not equal! Jane understood how Mr. Rochester loved her and he could not think his life without Jane. If Jane would like to say “I do”, she would be a rich woman right now. High position and rich wealth could not bond her because the only thing she caring about was Mr. Rochester’s love. But she couldn’t persuade herself to be subject to rich life at the cost of losing her equality. She was utterly sad for the reality. But she could not bear herself to be an attachment of love so she left her Mr. Rochester. At the end of the story, she still deeply loved Mr. Rochester and came back to Thronfield. After the fire disaster, Mr. Rochester lost home and all the estates and he had bee a blind, old and poor man. Jane took good care of him, her beloved man. She did not look down upon him but love him more than before. She actively mentioned: “I’d like to marry you.” Trough uncountable setbacks, they finally had a happy ending. Jane bravely decided her marriage. She was the new woman in Victoria Age. Never stop pursuing her true love made her bee a wonderful woman. In the years of Thronfield, she gradually became more mature, brave and independent. Love made her plete. Part Two Passive Characters of Jane Eyre Inferiority of Jane Eyre’s inner heartJane Eyre’s mon and unmon life experience attract a large number of readers and the spirit glowing in it strikes us deeply. She was independent, rebel and tough. She struggle for her dignity, equality and love for life. But every coin has two sides. She has inferiority plex just like a mon woman. The feeling of inferiority had haunted her whole life and it had been a part of her personality. Although she tried her utmost to get rid of it, she was still puzzled. At Gateshead, she was selfabased because her plain appearance and her stout shape. It’s the nature that hero loves beauty in the story. She envied sisters’ good looking in her inner heart. Plain girl always lacked others’ pliment and suffered mock and ridicule for no reason. She fought for equality but she was hard to get away from sense of inferiority from beginning to ending. Lacking of confidence to her appearance made her hesitate so many times on her way to go for love. She worried that Mr. Rochester would look down upon her because of her looking. She worried that she was not a couple of his tea. She worried that others would suspected her behavior just for money and laughed at her overconfidently. She would rather huff and puff than be laughed at others. Her selfdignity was so important to her that no one could hurt it a little. Just her meticulous protection reflected her sense of inferiority. She was too sensitive to escape it. The more she protected her dignity, the more she was wrapped by inferiority. But she is a brilliant girl who knows how to cover it and express it in an ingenious way. At Lowood School, Jane’s inferiority gained day by day. The school master told everyone that she was a liar and asked everyone to exclude her. She hoped that a new environment could let her begin a new life and forgot what all the miserable life in Gateshead, but in fact, school was another hell for her. Everyone excluded her, hate her and abused her. The tender heart was not strong enough to bear these and counterattack these. She did fought for it, but a little girl had no the ability to turn the table. No one really walked into her heart except Helen and on one regards her as a good girl except Helen. The excluding environment fomented her inferiority to be deeper rooted. She thought no one liked her so that she wanted to end her life. These ideas were just caused by inferiority plex. At Thronfield, she was deeply attracted by the master, Mr. Rochester. But the great differences between them made her hard to choose. Jane had no elegant parentage, no outstanding status and no noble friends. She was helpless, lonely and lowly. Living in the society which people was judged and decided by money, Jane knew how poor a man without money. All kinds of bitter experience in her childhood made her recognize that money was of significant importance. However Mr. Rochester had noble parentage, outstanding status and honorable friends. He was wellinformed, welleducated and wellknown. The rich manor obviously showed his wealth. Jane knew the differences that would stop her step to pursue her love. When she knew the existence of Mr. Rochester’s wife, she decisively left him without any money. She gave up the handsdown love just for her poor dignity and equality. To leave not only showed her will of dignity, but also presented her inferiority. She just used a positive way to masterly cover it. It did exist no matter how she masked. The sense of inferiority was reflecting Jane’s weakness and the mon women’s weakness. Jane Eyre’s surrender to traditional marriage conceptThe Victorian Age was men centered and men controlled times. Women were discriminated against by men at that time. Men’s authority was everything. In the 19th century, women did not have any status. They were conceived of as people inferior to men. Although women’s colleges were established at Cambridge in 1869 and at Oxford in 1879, women could not take degrees at the university until 19201921. At that time, almost the only occupation open to women of good families was serving as governess in a private family. Now we see that Jane is a lucky girl who found a good job. The Victorian moral code for women was that they should remain ignorant and uneducated. The society b