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Fan Wenyi:

Jane Eyre is a literary work with many years of history. It has a history of 152 years. Its success lies in its detailed content and wonderful fragments. In the preface, it also introduces some background stories of the author of Jane Eyre in detail.

I learned a lot about the author Charlotte Bronte from it. She was born in a family with financial difficulties and disasters. Living in a backcountry far from the dust collector; Living in an era when the revolutionary momentum is healthy, the country is transitioning from a peasant to an industrial country, and the emerging bourgeoisie is growing day by day, all of which have marked her novel creation.

Unfortunately, God seems to have created these geniuses without stint. There seems to be an eager hand of destruction. These talented children, without exception, left the world before the golden time of their father's second life. Sorry, Bronte sisters!

The novel Jane Eyre, mainly through the twists and turns of the love story between Jane Eyre and Rochester, created a strong woman with a humble birth and a tortuous life path, but always insisted on maintaining independent personality, pursuing individual freedom, advocating equality in life and not bowing to life.

Jane loves to live in an environment where her parents are dead and she is dependent on others. Since childhood, she has been treated differently from her peers: menstruation's dislike, her cousin's contempt, her cousin's insults and beatings ... However, she didn't despair, she didn't destroy herself, and she didn't sink in the insults. On the contrary, all the misfortunes she brought were exchanged for Jane's infinite confidence in love, but her indomitable spirit of love, an invincible inner personality strength. < P > Unfortunately. Jane Eyre is still suffering from physical punishment and mental disability. The benefactor of the school, Rockhurst, not only slandered her in front of all the teachers and students, but also put her on the stage of shame, which made her lose face in front of all the teachers and students. However, Jane Eyre remained strong and unyielding, and turned grief into strength, which not only made rapid progress in her studies, but also gained the understanding of the teachers and students. < P > Soon, Jane Eyre has fallen into the vortex of love again. With her strong personality, she also maintains her noble dignity, and looks like a good family in front of her rival in love. She calmly faces Miss Ingram's aggression.

Similarly, in front of Rochester, she never feels inferior because she is a humble tutor, and she thinks they are equal. She should not be respected by others because she is a servant. Rochester felt ashamed of himself, at the same time, he respected her and fell in love with her deeply. His sincerity moved her, and she accepted him. Later, Jane Eyre found out that Rochester had a wife, and her self-esteem reappeared, and she left him without hesitation. Her single-mindedness in love made me admire.

Finally, Jane Eyre learned that Rochester was unfortunately blind, severely disabled and completely lost the ability to live in order to save his living wife. At the same time, his wife died and his wealth was destroyed. Jane Eyre devoted herself to his arms again ... < P > From this book, we can see that it has created a female image that embodies some requirements of the emerging class and portrayed the spirit of the times during the industrial revolution.

Jane Eyre's thoughts on reading Fan Wen II:

In the history of literature, there are many classic works that will be immortal, but they can enter people's souls as deeply as Jane Eyre. It attracts thousands of readers with an irresistible aesthetic feeling and affects people's spiritual world. Even for some people, there are not many works that have influenced their lives.

Jane Eyre is a novel with rotation color, which explains such a theme: human value = dignity+love.

Charlotte Bronte, the author of Jane Eyre, and Emily, the author of Wuthering Heights, are sisters. Although they live in the same society and family environment, their personalities are quite different. Charlotte Bronte is more gentle, more pure and more fond of pursuing some beautiful things. Although her family is poor, she has lost her maternal love since she was a child, and her father's love is rare. In addition, she is short and unattractive, but perhaps it is such a deep inferiority complex in her soul, which is reflected in her character as a very sensitive self-esteem. The Jane she described. Love is also an unattractive and short woman, but she has extremely strong self-esteem. She is determined to pursue a bright, holy and beautiful life.

Jane loves to live in an environment where her parents are dead and she is dependent on others. Since she was a child, she has been treated differently from her peers. menstruation's dislike, cousin's contempt, cousin's insult and beating ... This is a ruthless trampling on a child's dignity, but perhaps it is because of all this that Jane loves her infinite confidence and unyielding spirit, a kind of invincible inner personality strength.

She never felt inferior because she was a lowly governess, but thought that they were equal. She should not be respected by others because she was a servant. It was precisely because of her integrity, nobility and purity that Rochester was shocked by the fact that her mind was not polluted by secular society, and she regarded her as a person who could talk with herself on an equal footing in spirit, and gradually fell in love with her deeply. His sincerity moved her, and she accepted him. On the day of their wedding, when Jane Eyre learned that Rochester had a wife, she felt that she had to leave. She said, "I will abide by the laws recognized by the world by God, and I will stick to the principles I accepted when I was sober, not as crazy as I am now" and "I will firmly hold this position". This is the reason why Jane Eyre told Rochester that she had to leave, but from the heart, the deeper thing is that Jane Eyre realized that she had been cheated, and her self-esteem was teased, because she loved Rochester deeply. How can a woman stand being cheated by her most trusted and intimate person? Jane Eyre has withstood it and made a very rational decision. Surrounded by such a very powerful love force and lured by a beautiful and rich life, she still insists on her dignity as an individual, which is the most spiritual charm of Jane Eyre.

The novel has a bright ending-although Rochester's manor was destroyed and he himself became a cripple, we can see that it is such a condition that Jane Eyre is no longer in contradiction between dignity and love, but at the same time satisfied-she was dignified and loving when she married Rochester.

The novel tells us that the best life of human beings is human dignity and love, and the ending of the novel arranges such a life for the heroine. Although I think this ending is too perfect, even this perfection itself marks superficiality, I still respect the author's ideal of this beautiful life-dignity plus love. After all, in today's society, it is often inseparable from the help of money to realize the formula of human value = dignity+love. People seem to be madly drowning in love for money and status. Choose rich between poor and rich, and choose not to love between love and not to love. Few people will abandon everything for love and personality like Jane, and they will never turn back. What Jane Eyre shows us is a kind of simplification, a return to simplicity, a feeling of pursuing wholehearted devotion, and a simplified feeling regardless of gains and losses. It is like a glass of ice water, which purifies every reader's mind and arouses readers, especially female readers.

Jane Eyre's thoughts on reading Fan Wensan:

I've been twisting some messy words recently, and I'm beginning to find that I lose my sense of language when I speak in my life. As a result, I became lazy, unwilling to stay in the difficult and dark questions, and turned around to read something I saw when I was a child. The first book I read was Jane Eyre.

Jane Eyre is such a book. My English level, I can read the original, but I often flinch when I look at the dazzling long sentences with three or four lines. The version at hand was translated by Huang Yuanshen. It feels good. Read it and flip it. With the help of the afternoon sunshine and a cup of oolong tea, I succeeded in daydreaming, escaping from reality and returning to the memory of reading this book for the first time in Grade One.

Before I was in Grade One, I mostly read ancient books or vernacular Chinese. So now I can write and seduce MM in modern language. The enlightener is the pile of western literature I read in the summer vacation of the first year of junior high school. On this point, I agree with what Wang Xiaobo said: The real modern Chinese is left by a group of great translators. In this sense, they are my language teachers.

As for Jane Eyre, I was completely knocked down by its language earlier. Crazy, haunted by dreams, I have been learning that English elegant tone for a while. When I was a child, I did not understand the plot specifically. In my mind, this is a perfect and gorgeous poem. It is the last secret in the memory garden. But after reading it again, the language is still beautiful, but I found something else in the plot and conception.

I have heard a saying that when Jane Eyre was published, some people thought that it was written by the same person as Wuthering Heights. If we look at it now, I have to admit that the level of Wuthering is even higher than that of Jane Eyre. I'm not qualified to haggle over every ounce in language-English is not up to this level-just talk about structure and flow, that's all.

I found something disturbing when I reread Jane Eyre. Those things are attached to the cracks in the novel. My anxiety is that I have a vague dissatisfaction with it, and I don't want to disobey the classics I once loved. Anyway, I found something unpleasant in my writing.

What people love about Jane Eyre is the author's self-esteem and ordinary-or Charlotte's self-esteem and ordinary. That is a woman with a hot soul and a simple appearance. This image is undoubtedly an immortal classic. However, like her husband Rochester, this image has always spoken in a tone similar to pride-their contempt for others, more or less, once made me happy, but now it makes me uneasy. Charlotte is devoted to Jane Eyre,

that's all I know. But what I feel is that her contempt for high-ranking nobles and an almost hostile attitude are somewhat deliberate. On the other hand, I read the feeling of inferiority.

Jane Eyre is a sensitive and easily injured woman. At the beginning, it took too long to describe her childhood. But what I feel is that when describing Jane Eyre, Charlotte never left this body, so she didn't describe it from an omniscient angle. In this way, what she described can almost be regarded as her opinion. Then, in Jane Eyre, what I see is some kind of emotional inferiority, followed by love that is close to legend-only its legend shows some unreality and fantasy-and the last ending that is almost a bit hard. She met JOHN RIVERS. Although there is a pen in front, it is not so natural. Charlotte's handling of Jane Eyre is very real at the beginning, wonderful in the middle, but full of anxiety. At the end, it is almost a cliche-a cliche I expected. In the end, there is no doubt that everyone is happy and a little sad. Her bedding and connection are perfect, and almost no flaws are felt. But what I vaguely feel is that this is a story made up by an earthly woman. It already lacks the novel structure that makes me shudder-more often, I read that Jane Eyre left the villa and didn't read any more. If I were Charlotte, maybe I would end up there. Because everything after that, in my opinion, is very clumsy compared with before.

Compared with the storm and rain in Wuthering, the quietness in Jane Eyre is actually fake. Charlotte, like Emily, is actually a TOUGH person at heart. Their hearts must fly in the high wind because they are too easy to get hurt. Emily soared into the sky and wrote really mighty words. Jane Eyre, on the other hand, wrote a story of her constant struggle under some internal emotional contradiction. In this respect, there are some self-struggling "93" like Hugo.