Referat Reason And Pasion
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Reason and passion in Jane Eyre
by Charlotte Brontë
In Jane Eyre, Charlotte Brontë uses various characters to embody
aspects of reason and passion, thereby establishing a tension between
the two. In fact, it could be argued that these various characters are
really aspects of her central character, Jane, and in turn, that Jane is
a fictionalised version of Brontë herself. From this it could be argued
that the tension between these two aspects really takes place only
within her own head. Brontë is able to enact this tension through her
characters and thus show dramatically the journey of a woman striving
for balance within her nature.
A novel creates its own internal world through the language that it
uses, and this fictional world may be quite independent from the real
physical world in which we live. Writing in the style of an
autobiography, Brontë distinguishes Jane Eyre, who quite clearly from
the purely fictional worlds of Angria and Glasstown, locates her work
within the world of Victorian England. But although Brontë s world is
undoubtedly based on nineteenth-century society, it should be remembered
that the world conjured in Jane Eyre is not reality: it is but a world
constructed by Brontë in which to tell a story.
A novel based only on the mores and customs of Victorian society would
surely hold limited appeal today, except as a historical document, yet
Jane Eyre retains power and force even in a post-modern world, as shown
by its continued popularity and the many TV and film versions it has
inspired. Perhaps Jane Eyre retains such power and relevance because
Charlotte fabricated the book from the cloth of her own psyche, her own
passionate nature, and so, although our culture has changed drastically
since the book was written, the insights into human nature which Brontë
gave us remain.
Taking this view makes the characters in Jane Eyre seem denizens of
Charlotte s own psyche. Some of them, such as the passionate Bertha and
the cold St John, personify aspects of her character, her emotional and
logical natures. Others, such as Brocklehurst and John Reed, which seem
more two dimensional, could be viewed more as scenery, foils against
which the main characters define themselves. Jane herself is Charlotte s
most highly resolved character. Over the course of the book readers come
to know every aspect of her intimately as she moves through Brontë s
world. Readers also come to know her through her reflections, as she
embodies aspects of the other characters. Charlotte seems to know Jane
intimately, so intimately that it seems likely that Jane is Charlotte s
avatar within her fictional world. If Brontë is Jane, it follows that
the other characters which came from Brontë might also be aspects of
Jane. Through these aspects we see a development of tension within Jane
between emotional and logical natures, and this tension is played out in
the events of the book.
Taking this argument further, if the book is seen as a reflection of
Brontë s own psyche, the source of the various supernatural events
described within the book must be Brontë herself. Thus she not only
plays the main character in her story but also the supporting cast and
the spiritual force which intervenes on Jane s behalf at crucial moments
throughout. In this light Jane s meeting with her cousins, which many
critics have seen as intolerably far-fetched suddenly makes sense. There
are no coincidences in this book. Jane is kept from harm by the
ever-present pen of her creator, just as Charlotte herself presumably
felt protected and guided by her own protestant faith. Jane meets her
cousins because Charlotte felt it was time for her to do so. No other
explanation is required.
Passion and reason, their opposition and eventual reconciliation, serve
as constant themes throughout the book. From Jane s first explosion of
emotion when she rebels against John Reed, Jane is powerfully
passionate. Just as Bertha s passion destroys Thornfield, Jane s
passion, which destroys her ties to Gateshead, leaves the way clear for
her progression to the next chapter of her life at Lowood. However, as
Bertha s passion eventually proves fatal, it becomes clear that Jane
must gain control over her passion or be destroyed.
We see the dangers of nature and passion untempered by reason in the
scene in which Charlotte almost marries Rochester. Jane cannot see God
for his creature of whom she has made an idol. If the God of the
novel is Charlotte, and Jane is Charlotte s creature, we can see that in
losing sight of God through overwhelming passion for Mr Rochester, Jane
runs the risk of loosing herself, of losing sight of Charlotte who she
embodies. In this case, passion nearly gains a victory over reason. Jane
nearly looses her own personality in her overwhelming love. Only
Brontë s intercession through the medium of the supernatural preserves
her character from passionate dissolution in the arms of Rochester.
The opposite is true when Jane is tempted to marry St John. Jane longs
to rush down the torrent of his [St John s] will into the gulf of his
existence, and there to loose my own Again Jane almost looses herself,
however, this time reason is nearly the victor. Jane s passionate nature
is nearly entrapped by St John s icy reason and self control. Once again
Charlotte intercedes on her characters behalf, this time with a
disembodied voice which directs her to return to Rochester, and saves
her passionate nature from destruction. St John s death in India could
be said to show the danger that Charlotte saw in icy reason without
emotion. Conversely, Bertha s death in a conflagration of her own making
shows the danger of the unthinking passion which Jane feels for
Rochester. Thus, these two deaths could be said to represent the more
subtle death of individuality, in which Jane risks loosing herself and
her separate identity.
It is interesting to note that Bertha is portrayed as being ugly, a
vampyre , a clothed hyena whilst St John is uncommonly handsome. This
fits with Brontë s use of fire and ice imagery to symbolise reason and
passion. Ice may be hewn into any form, where it will remain, fixed and
perfect as long as it stays frozen. Fire on the other hand can be hard
to control. It cannot be moulded into exact shapes, it is constantly
changing, and if unchecked will consume the ground on which it burns,
leaving black cinders and ash, just as Bertha is blackened and swollen.
This use of imagery gives us an interesting paradox, since much of the
book seems to concern Jane s attempt to reconcile her passionate and
reasonable natures. When ice and fire are combined the result is warm
slush, hardly a suitable metaphor for a desirable state of being. One or
the other, perhaps both must be destroyed. For how then can there be a
reconciliation between the two?
Throughout the book Charlotte provides Jane with a number of mentors,
each of whom provides her with a piece of the puzzle. The first is
Brocklehurst. His Calvinistic philosophy teaches the mortification of
the flesh as the way to obtain balance. By crushing Jane s physical
body, he hopes to burn excess passion out of her, leaving a balance in
which reason may be the ultimate victor. However, this method, like all
other false or incomplete doctrines presented in Jane Eyre ultimately
ends in death. Typhoid comes to Lowood and Brontë punishes Brocklehurst
with shame and scandal. Interestingly, Brocklehurst s philosophy is
re-enacted for Rochester when his pride and unreasoning passion is burnt
out of him in the fire at Thornfield. Rochester flesh is mortified as he
looses an eye and a hand. Through this somewhat drastic method,
Rochester, who becomes a more suitable match for Jane, perhaps somehow
attains a balance of his own.
Helen Burns seems to offer Jane another method by which tension may be
resolved. She shows Jane that she can release her negative emotions, and
make them less destructive through forgiveness, and that, by loving her
enemies her hatred and anger may fade. We see this philosophy in action
when Jane visits her dying aunt and is able to forgive her. She receives
a just reward for this kindly act, the knowledge of an uncle living in
the East Indies. However, Helens selfless acceptance of all the crimes
perpetrated against her does nothing to change those crimes, or to deter
their repetition. Had Helen been at Gateshead rather than Jane she would
never have escaped. Helen s beliefs prove to be only an incomplete part
of a whole, and so, she too dies.
At the end of many trials Charlotte permits Jane to return at last to
her lover. It is a wiser Jane, and also perhaps a wiser Charlotte who
welcomes this happy event. At this point it seems that the tension
between reason and passion should have been resolved. However, this is
not the case. There is no sense of any realistic resolution of tension
between Jane s reasoning and passionate natures. Perhaps Jane could have
attained logical emotion, or emotional logic, or to extend the Brontë s
fire and ice metaphor, some sort of interplay between the two like
sunlight glinting on the sea or torches focussed through a crystal lens.
Instead, Jane and Rochester live in perfect concord , their happiness
is complete. They feel no passion or intrigue, only a warm
sentimentality that seems wholly out of place in a book which has
traversed such a vast ranges of emotion. Instead of fire and ice,
Charlotte gives us warm slush. Perhaps she never resolved the tension
between reason and passion for herself, and so was unable to write
convincingly about it. Maybe, because of this she simply tacked on the
happiest ending she could contrive, or maybe she wrote what she hoped to
gain for herself, without understanding how she could get it. As an
account of one woman s journey of spiritual growth, whether Jane s or
Charlottes, Jane Eyre succedes admirably. However, in the arrival it
fails. Perhaps this is because at the time she wrote the book, Charlotte
herself hadn t found happiness with a partner. Whatever the reason, the
ending remains profoundly unsatisfying, and the weakest element of the
book.
Jane Eyre may be seen in a postmodernist light as an expression of
Charlotte Brontë s own character. The players she peoples her world
with seem to be aspects of herself, and Jane seems to represent her
totality. Throughout the book a tension is established between the
forces of reason, championed by St John, and those of passion, headed by
Bertha. This tension exists within Jane s head, and also presumably
within Charlotte s, but Brontë uses the medium of the novel to play out
this conflict among all her characters, and so brings it out into the
light. Eventually the champions, Bertha and St John are killed off,
symbolising the danger Brontë saw in taking either of these paths to
the exclusion of the other, and also symbolising the less obvious death
that Jane risks, that of loss of self, either by surrendering to
Rochester, or to St John.
The perveyors of incomplete solutions to this conflict are also killed.
Brocklehurst, dies symbolically when he is removed from his position as
headmaster of Lowood, Helen Burns dies of consumption. At the end of the
story, the tension which Brontë has built up between reason and passion
is not satisfactorily resolved, which weakens the ending somewhat,
however Jane Eyre succeeds because it is taken directly from a young
woman s psyche. It speaks to us today because it takes its inspirations
from an internal reality that has remained constant.
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