Thursday, February 7, 2019
Minor Characters in Charlotte Brontes Jane Eyre :: Jane Eyre Essays
The Minor Characters of Jane Eyre           All the minor characters who appear in the novel, Jane Eyre be only sketched in, so to speak. They argon flat not true in the way that the central three characters are developed. All of them are conventional behave and speak conventionally, and do not develop at all. They are set merely as foils for the central characters, and they tend to be extremes or stereo signs, behaving very predictably and not surprising us with some(prenominal) unexpected reaction.   Some of the minor characters who parallel aspects of Janes character, like Maria tabernacle and Helen Burns, are idealised - made to seem saint-like. others, who contrast with Jane, like Georgiana reed instrument and Blanche Ingram, are grotesque in order to emphasise the difference amidst them and her.They become, in effect, symbolic and their excesses or virtues sharpen the contrast with Jane.   Georgiana and Eliza Reed are described b y JE as spot without judgement(Georgiana) and Judgement without feeling (Eliza) - both are drawn by CB to show the results of each type of excessive behaviour. JE herself has to fight to preserve the balance in HER character mingled with Judgement and feeling - the Reed sisters therefore provide an indicator as to what happens if the balance goes wrong.   Blanche Ingram is a woman without scruples or morality - supreme and proud - very beautiful and priveleged - she is nevertheless shallow and  intellectually inferior. She is a warning shadow to JE, who is soon to be faced with the temptation to bring back in to her passions and embrace the  shallow life of a courtesan, when Rochester pleads with her to go to the  virtuous with him after the wedding. The more virtuous minor characters serve the said(prenominal) function, standing as  moral or spiritual beacons to which Jane may aspire, entirely may not ever  reach.   Maria Temple - the charitable schoolteacher is both an example  and a warning. She can and does serve as a role-model for Jane, but she  is also a powerless female - having to answer for her independence to a  wrathful Mr Brocklehurst, and having no real authority when he is on the  premises. Her position is servile and inferior and she submits to it. JE  later will break this mannequin at Thornfield, in her dealings with her  employer, but ironically her habit of submissiveness is gained as a  direct result of association with Maria Temple.
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