Chapter Twenty Eight

Author’s Notes:

Chapter XXVIII – In which Jane Wanders with Her Broken Heart – is this chapter heading too much of a give away? I will change it according to popular vote.

We once again encounter a derelict yard and spend a night in its embrace. The second Jane wanders around a town but can’t bring herself to beg and spend the night afraid and alone. The third she is really beside herself. She stops her eye, she begs for porridge and just about gives up.

Thank the gods she meets the Rivers family. StJohn already suspects something, I don’t know why, but he does. Or maybe he already is looking at her usefulness to him.

But she is saved and safe.

Chapter Twenty Seven

Author’s Notes:

The agony. I cringe at the pain in this chapter but admire the articulation.
Jane steps outside her room and all but faints into his arms. Then notes “There was such deep remorse in his eye, such true pity in his tone, such manly energy in his manner;” – manly energy? What is manly energy?
He picks her up, carries her downstairs and feeds her by hand, yowza.
Then, with all of her pain, Jane is focused and clear about what is needed to be done. He threatens violence and she calms him by bursting into tears.
So he tells her his story. He was young and could not be faulted for some of it, but the path of melancholy lasciviousness was all his own.

It is difficult to read this knowing that he had this choice and it was a selfish one. She may have been mad, but he was the one who locked her in a tower. It was better than an asylum, but was it? It is the bitter taste in the cocktail, it is looking from our perspective and seeing the cruelty of Bertha’s imprisonment.

Bertha is described as an idiot, but she is smart enough to get the key to her cell -twice.

He describes his mistresses and how they were inferiors and Jane, still thinking her self this way, holds on to that thought to help her in her break with him.

When he is desperate, at his fever pitch she holds her ground and it is flipping amazing.

Chapter Twenty Five

Author’s Notes:

I cut out one dream sequence. I know it might have been interesting at the time, but how little our dreams interest other people! I needed her to get to the real fright. 

We finally get a real glimpse of Bertha. She is part machine, she is frightening and she puts the veil on her head, looks at herself in the mirror and then rips it up and throws it way. I wonder if she knew who she was in that moment – remembering once being a bride. Then she does a brilliant, terrifying thing, gets up in Janes face and the blows out the candle. It is perfectly terrifying!

Small note, her wedding dress is red and white to symbolize the Christian tradition of white and the Hindu tradition of red as colors for a wedding. 

Chapter Twenty Four

Author’s Notes:

Ah, the first days of love! Mr Rochester gets quite nervous when she starts to question him, but relaxes as soon as she asks about Miss Ingram. All the signs are there Jane!! I love how he continues to call her names for fairies and magical creature – elven, salamander, sylphs foot, fire-spirit…Then he confesses he was trying to make her jealous – the prat!
Mrs. Fairfax wisely counsels her and thus avoids any impropriety for the time of their engagement. Jane skillfully manages him and goodness it is hard for him…heh.
They take a trip to town and Jane writes a letter in the hopes of reaching her uncle, a letter that will prove fateful.

Chapter Twenty One

Author’s Notes:

There is a jolly bit of banter between Jane and Mr Rochester when she has to leave. Then a quick journey later she is confronting her past. Sweet Bessie with a daughter named Jane.

This chapter underscores why I love Jane. She talks through her change of heart , the pang of sadness when Mrs Reed does not respond kindly and her and the patience that she has with her cousins.

There is a sadness in Mrs Reed never giving up her hate. She could have been at peace, but was not in the habit. She died a cranky old bat with sour children. I researched last rites for hindus and christians with some attempt to add them here.

Chapter Twenty

Author’s Notes:

Ah, the delightful mystery of the chapter. Screams in the night, mysterious injured men, blood and drama! 

She sits all night with an injured man and then the morning with a fickle man who takes her hand, throws it away and then calls her a simpleton and pet lamb.

He tries to tell her his story. He all but tells it.