Jane Eyre and father love

04.12.05 (9:50 pm)   [edit]

Aside from the tight schedule for the school matter, I have been at this reading on Jane Eyre and Father Love. I had not read the work from the persepective to consider the relationship of Jane and Rochester as a daughtrer/father one, which naturally examines the author's idea about what a father figure and paternal love could be, which was reprived of as a child and a young woman in the authore's own life. The father seemed to be an interesting, if not a safe, figure, though; a clergy with a lousy temper who fired occasionally when he was moping or angry. How about that? Can't be more troubling to deal with for the eldest daughter, who wanted to fill in her mother's role that died on the family earlier and all the kids who were to be the rally legend later on grew up to cling together. This became a major cause of their missing out on social development that worked negative and positive to each of them; for a borother, he grew up tp be an ultimate trouble maker of the family. For those writers, though,  this gave a tremendous opportuni ty to develop thier talent and focus on thier creative works.

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