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Eileenwww
1. Life is too short to hold grudges. We all make mistakes in life, but we die soon. Our SINS will disappear with our bodies, leaving only the spark of the spirit. That's why I never want revenge and never think life is unfair. My quiet life, waiting for the end to come.
Helen Burns is such a person, the teacher to corporal punishment her, she will be obedient to help the teacher to get the implementation tools. Many people would think she was too weak. But no one could have imagined that her little head contained such a great and loving set of thoughts. She believed that if you were destined to suffer humiliation, it was your duty to do so. She could still Revere and love miss Scatcherd, her bully, with all her heart; she said she could distinguish clearly between a criminal and his crime, that a criminal was worthy of sympathy and forgiveness, and that it was his crime that she hated.2. Women are supposed to be extremely quiet, but they feel the same way as men do. They, like their brothers, need to exercise their faculties, need a field for endeavor; They are too rigidly bound, too absolutely held back, and suffer as men do; And it is very narrow-minded of their more privileged kind to say that they ought to confine themselves to weaving cloth, to knitting hosiery, to playing the piano, to embroidering pockets.In her opinion, bread is the need of life, and dignity is the need of personality. Her philosophy of life is not difficult to understand: to talk about bread and other things on the basis of equality.3.Do you think, because I am poor, obscure, little and plain, I am soulless and heartless? You think wrong. - I have as much soul as you, and as much heart as you. Although I am poor and plain, we are equal in spirit, and as we pass through the grave, we will also stand before God in the end - because we are equal. Jane Eyre is an unwilling to endure social oppression, the courage to pursue personal happiness of women. No matter her poor and low social status, or her wandering life is a true portrayal of the life of the lower class people in Britain at that time. The author was able to place an awakened new female * from the lower class of society as the protagonist of the novel, and to sing the praises of the protagonist's stubborn struggle against oppression and social prejudice, striving for independent personality and dignity, and pursuing a happy life, which was rare in the literary works of that time.4. Am I soulless and heartless because I am poor, obscure, plain, and little? Don't you have the wrong idea? - I have as much soul as you, and as much heart as you! If god give me a little feminine beauty and plenty of wealth, I will make you as inseparable as I am now, I'm not according to custom, convention, even not flesh and blood to talk with you, but my soul with your soul in the dialogue, as if the two of us through the grave, stand at god's feet, equal to each other - was so!"
Why are you telling me this? What have you and she (Miss Ingram) to do with me? Do you think that because I am poor and plain, I have no feelings? I promise you, if God had gifted me with wealth and beauty, I would make it as hard for you to leave me now as it is for me to leave you. But my spirit can address yours, as if we had passed through the grave and stood before Him equal.
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Eileenwww
1. Life is too short to hold grudges. We all make mistakes in life, but we die soon. Our SINS will disappear with our bodies, leaving only the spark of the spirit. That's why I never want revenge and never think life is unfair. My quiet life, waiting for the end to come.
Helen Burns is such a person, the teacher to corporal punishment her, she will be obedient to help the teacher to get the implementation tools. Many people would think she was too weak. But no one could have imagined that her little head contained such a great and loving set of thoughts. She believed that if you were destined to suffer humiliation, it was your duty to do so. She could still Revere and love miss Scatcherd, her bully, with all her heart; she said she could distinguish clearly between a criminal and his crime, that a criminal was worthy of sympathy and forgiveness, and that it was his crime that she hated.
2. Women are supposed to be extremely quiet, but they feel the same way as men do. They, like their brothers, need to exercise their faculties, need a field for endeavor; They are too rigidly bound, too absolutely held back, and suffer as men do; And it is very narrow-minded of their more privileged kind to say that they ought to confine themselves to weaving cloth, to knitting hosiery, to playing the piano, to embroidering pockets.
In her opinion, bread is the need of life, and dignity is the need of personality. Her philosophy of life is not difficult to understand: to talk about bread and other things on the basis of equality.
3.Do you think, because I am poor, obscure, little and plain, I am soulless and heartless? You think wrong. - I have as much soul as you, and as much heart as you. Although I am poor and plain, we are equal in spirit, and as we pass through the grave, we will also stand before God in the end - because we are equal.
Jane Eyre is an unwilling to endure social oppression, the courage to pursue personal happiness of women. No matter her poor and low social status, or her wandering life is a true portrayal of the life of the lower class people in Britain at that time. The author was able to place an awakened new female * from the lower class of society as the protagonist of the novel, and to sing the praises of the protagonist's stubborn struggle against oppression and social prejudice, striving for independent personality and dignity, and pursuing a happy life, which was rare in the literary works of that time.
4. Am I soulless and heartless because I am poor, obscure, plain, and little? Don't you have the wrong idea? - I have as much soul as you, and as much heart as you! If god give me a little feminine beauty and plenty of wealth, I will make you as inseparable as I am now, I'm not according to custom, convention, even not flesh and blood to talk with you, but my soul with your soul in the dialogue, as if the two of us through the grave, stand at god's feet, equal to each other - was so!"
Why are you telling me this? What have you and she (Miss Ingram) to do with me? Do you think that because I am poor and plain, I have no feelings? I promise you, if God had gifted me with wealth and beauty, I would make it as hard for you to leave me now as it is for me to leave you. But my spirit can address yours, as if we had passed through the grave and stood before Him equal.