jane eyre 读后感
As an orphan, Jane Eyre lived a life of subservience until the age of ten. To escape her aunt's mental abuse, she chose to go to a remote boarding school, where Jane Eyre lived another eight years of poverty but inner freedom. She is sensitive and delicate, emotionally rich but extremely restrained.
When she finally grew to adulthood and had the right to make independent choices, fate brought her to Thornfield. There she met the vital person in her life - Rochester, although as a rich family, but was deceived by his father and brother, married a lunatic, because of the strong sense of responsibility and can not start a new life, since then a devastated, no open heart.
Until he meets Jane Eyre, although their status is different, but after getting along, they find that their souls are very compatible, so the two hearts are getting closer and closer.
However, the church can not be held in the wedding and the truth, so the first taste of the sweet love of Jane Eyre very painful. Although she does not want to let go of Rochester's true love, she still resolutely leaves Thornfield to find a new life. But finally called by love, she still returned there, and at this time, Thornfield has been things are not the same, a fire destroyed everything. Crazy wife arson fell to her death, Rochester in order to rescue injured and disabled, not the same as before. But Jane Eyre resolutely stay, two lovers finally become a couple.
Many people think his story is too Mary Sue, but in the 19th century, he is unique in many literary works, unique, circulation is extremely wide, storytelling in addition, people more see, this book hidden, women's independent, self-respecting view of love, and the concept of equality between men and women.
Love should be sober and sensible, even if you love someone again, you should maintain the right to think and choose independently, have the determination to love deeply, but also the courage to leave, and never be a humble dependent.
If I look at such a work through the eyes of the present, I think it is ordinary, but when I put it in the context of the time, I can easily understand why it can become a masterpiece of realist women's literature. Most of the works at that time portrayed women who were more or less suppressed and bound by social reality.
They were the ones who were restrained and could not resist. When she felt she was misunderstood, she wanted to explain herself clearly and be understood; when faced with love, she was not blind, but retained her true feelings and looked at it rationally; when she knew the truth, she resolutely chose to leave; but knowing what happened to Rochester later, she chose to stay and take care of him. things, she chose to stay and take care of him, equally righteous. She is never ashamed of who she is, and never loses herself because of the windfall she receives. She is the image of a woman who dares to break through the shackles of age, gentry, and convention to pursue true love. There is a classic dialogue between her and Rochester in which she says: "My heart is as rich as yours, my mind is as full as yours! If God had given me a little beauty and plenty of wealth, I would have made you as inseparable as I am now, and I would not have spoken to you according to custom, or convention, or even flesh and blood, but my soul would have spoken to yours, as if we had both passed through the grave and stood at the feet of God, equal to each other, as it were!
I have a lot of respect for Jane Eyre. Her parents were dead, she was living in a house, facing the bullying of her cousins and the contempt of her aunt and uncle, she did not compromise, but argued her case, even if the result was not satisfactory, but always did not bow down; under the torture of the devilishly cold Mr. Brockhurst, she did not show any fear, but carried on calmly, and survived independently and strongly. This is all for the sake of the indelible dignity of the human being.
I also share Rochester's admiration for Jane Eyre. Like her in front of the so-called high society than her status to show the kind of unassuming attitude, like her in the face of love to show the spirit of self-respect and self-improvement. In front of Rochester, she never felt inferior because she was a low status governess, but considered them to be equal. With the understanding and respect of her lover, Jane is happy at this time. Love is happy. However, at their wedding, Mr. Mason reveals the secret that Mr. Rochester is a married man, Jane Eyre is completely disappointed, she painfully but resolutely withdrew from the wedding, silent away.
I really like that line: "...... two people stand together before God, equal to each other, - just as we were meant to be!"
In the story she lives out the maxim that women should be self-respecting and self-reliant. Jane Eyre as a classic representative of independent women, as depicted in the "Love Lotus" as the same as Dunyi: out of the mud and immaculate, wash the ripples and not demon.
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