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"Jane ▪ Eyre" is two-page pass

author:Slip around with a punka

"Jane ▪ Eyre" two-page through LBX editing

(1) A miserable childhood

Location: Gateshead House

Characters: Mrs. Reed (aunt) Eliza Georgiana (cousin) John ▪ Reed Betsy (maid)

Synopsis: Jane ▪ Eyre died soon after her parents, and her uncle adopted her, but soon her uncle also died. My aunt has always regarded Jane ▪ Ai as a heavy burden for the family and hates her every move. So, during her childhood at her aunt's house, Jane ▪ Eyre suffered greatly. Finally, at the age of ten, she was sent to Lowood Charity School (charity school) -

(2) Growing up through hardship

Location: Lowood School (Boarding School, Charity School)

Characters: Mr. Blokhurst (School Treasurer, Superintendent) Miss Tem Boer (Superintendent)

Helen ▪ Burns (classmate, friend) Miss Smith Miss Skychu Mrs. Piero (teacher)

Synopsis: Lowood College, a place where the canons are strict and the conditions are extremely difficult. Jane Eyre's first year here caught up with a sudden plague, and seeing classmates fall here, especially the departure of her friend Helen ▪ Burns, made Jane ▪ Eyre's young heart experience the cruelty of life. Here, although Jane Eyre has endured hardships, she has survived strongly. After the first year, the school improved the students' living and eating conditions. Jane Ai has been a student and teacher here for six years and a teacher for two years. For eight years, Miss Tembol became Jane Eyre's beloved teacher and lifelong friend, because "some of the most valuable knowledge I have gained is due to her guidance." "She acted as my mother and tutor, and later my partner." Her friendship and association with her has always been a comfort to me." Therefore, when Miss Turnbull was about to leave Lowood School, Jane ▪ Eyre lost her spiritual support and, after some reflection, decided to "take on a new position and live a new life in a strange environment".

(3) Experience love

Location: Thornfield House

Characters: Mr. Rochester, Mrs. Phil Falls (butler), Adele Mason, Bertha ▪ Mason (Rochester's wife, madman), Miss Ingram, Sophie, Greyspool ▪, Mr. and Mrs. John.

"Jane ▪ Eyre" is two-page pass

Outline of the famous chapter:

¤: When I first arrived at Thornfield House, I got acquainted with the characters in the house.

Master: Rochester; Mrs. Phil Fox was a faithful housekeeper; Adele, the child in Mr. Rochester's custody, is from France, and her mother, Valen, may have been a dancer, as was later confirmed from Rochester.

Later revealed character relationships: Sophie is Adele's servant; Grace and John were both servants; Bertha ▪ Mason is the wife of the owner, Mr. Rochester; Mr. Mason is Bertha ▪ Mason's older brother; Miss Ingram had a relationship with Mr. Rochester.

¤: Feel the peace of life and meet Rochester.

¤: The first conversation with the owner, who found him "moody and blunt".

¤: The second meeting, another sharp confrontation.

¤: Listening to the master's story of his past with the French dancer Seline Navalen ▪, his attitude towards me gradually softened. The feelings of the owner gradually influenced my feelings, and I also saved him in an unexplained fire.

¤: Doubts about the fire incident; Mr. Rochester goes out; Talking to Mrs. Phil Faith about Miss Ingram stirred waves of feelings in my heart again.

¤: The delay in returning to the master seems to be a loss, and reason keeps telling itself: You have nothing to do with Thornfield House. At the lively banquet, my inner feelings, which were calm and calm on the surface, were complicated.

¤: In the rich and dazzling activities, I was tormented to see the glorious and smug Miss Ingram; Mason visits.

¤: Mr. Rochester tested me in fortune-telling and hinted to me; I was surprised to learn of Mason's visit—his rapid breathing made him gasp, and his face turned as pale as death.

¤: Helping my master deal with a completely puzzling contingency—Mr. Mason's night's near misses, Mr. Rochester trying to cover it up in front of everyone, and my eyes were foggy.

¤: Upon learning that Mrs. Reed was critically ill and that her son had died, I resolutely returned to Gateshead House, which had abandoned me eight years ago, and on her deathbed she confessed her injustice to me on two occasions. (One is that I did not take good care of me according to my husband's will, and even hoped that I would die when there was a plague; Second, my uncle wrote to my aunt, asking me to accept the inheritance, but my aunt said that I was dead. )

¤: Returning to Thornfield House, my experience was impressive, and the signs led me to "begin to have hopes that I should not have" – the marriage between the master and Ingram fell through. "I love him more deeply than ever."

¤: The diaphragm is eliminated, and after some twists and turns, the two hearts gradually come together.

¤: Doing all the necessary preparations for marriage, the fiery emotional conversation shows that Jane Eyre has no shortage of reasonable, strong and independent personality at all times. It is also her unique personality charm that deeply attracts Rochester.

¤: On a terrible and ominous night before the wedding, the precious scarf used as a hijab was torn apart by a demonic woman, and Thornfield House was reduced to ruins in a dream.

¤: A church lawyer and Mason shocked the inside story of the master's life, my heart suddenly fell from the peak to the bottom, and I had no choice but to leave.

¤: Rochester told me about his "love" experience, but I decided to sneak out of Thornfield House before dawn.

(4) Farewell

Location: Moorhouse – Moorton – Moorland House (Swamp Hills)

Characters: Mr. St. John ▪ Rivers, Diana, Marie, Hannah, Miss Rosamund ▪ Oliver

Synopsis: While leaving Thornfield, Jane ▪ Eyre's life is once again in trouble. After several days of wandering and begging, Jane ▪ Eyre was taken in by the St. John's family when her life was in danger. She then spent a year here in a turbulent but relatively quiet life, first getting along with the Rivers siblings at the Moorhouse, then teaching at the school founded by St. John of Moulton, and returning to the Moorhouse after the holidays. During this period, a fortuitous incident reveals the close relationship between Jane Eyre and the Rivers family, and Jane ▪ ▪ Eyre is actually Mr. Rivers' cousin. During this time, she also received an inheritance from her uncle (£20,000, three-quarters of which went to the Rivers siblings). Just as she was so distressed by St. John's efforts to marry him as a missionary's wife and had to pray for divine help, she heard three calls in the underworld. She finally made up her mind and returned to Thornfield.

(5) Gathering

Location: Thornfield – Fending Manor

Synopsis: When Jane Eyre returned to Thornfield House, where she had been away for a year, full of passion and hope, she never expected that all she saw in front of her was a pile ▪ of ruins that had long collapsed. She inquired about Mr. Rochester's whereabouts and eventually found him at Fentin Manor, a bleak place. But at this time, Mr. Rochester was blind by burning his eyes in a fire shortly after his departure. The sudden and surprising change did not stop Jane ▪ Eyre and Rochester from falling in love, and they held a quiet wedding.

"Jane ▪ Eyre" is two-page pass

▪ 4. Analyze the character image according to the relevant plot.

Format: I think _____ is an image of _____ because ______.

For example, I think Jane Eyre is an image, because she has lived in her aunt's house since her parents died when she was a child, and she has no wealth, no appearance and no status, but for her dignity and independence, she dares to resist her rough cousin, break with her cold aunt, abandon the "iron rice bowl" to find "new hard labor", insist on herself in front of the powerful, and dare to pursue the consummation of love and marriage. (This can be combined with page 225 of the classic textbook, what Jane Eyre said to Rochester.) Appreciate Jane Eyre's charisma and understand why she is loved. Guide students' life pursuits)

I think Rochester is a rebellious aristocratic figure who is outwardly gloomy, cold, and arrogant, but in fact kind, persistent, and tolerant, because he himself is a victim of money and marriage, but under his cold exterior there is a generous heart. He could not bear to send his wife to an insane asylum for fear that she would suffer there, and although he was hurt by her many times, he always protected her and saved her. He does not take people by appearance, dares to defy the concept of hierarchy, and pursues the ideal love marriage. (His travels in the book are his search for true love.) )

I think St. John is a kind and cold missionary figure. Because he was kind and charitable, he refused true love, and he "loved God" wholeheartedly, and asked Jane Eyre, who did not love each other, to go to India with him as a wife.

5 ▪. Emphasize the characteristics of writing.

1The▪ work is narrated in the first person, full of rich and sincere, rich and delicate emotions.

2▪. An inner monologue that comes from a delicate story.

3▪. Colorful scene description.

4▪. Clever suspense design.

6. ▪ Comprehensive test question training. (for the middle school entrance examination)

★1▪ Jane Eyre, the heroine of "Jane Eyre", is an orphan from a poor background, she was fostered in her aunt's house since she was a child, she was abused, and was later sent to the boarding school run by the charity - Revard School. After graduation, he was hired to come to Thornfield Manor as a tutor, and fell in love with his master Rochester, and after twists and turns, he finally married him.

★2What▪ did we learn from Jane Eyre? (A small person, relying on his integrity and ingenuity, as well as the spirit of perseverance and hard work and courage, eventually broke through many obstacles and reached his destination.) )

3▪. The thirst for freedom and happiness on earth and the pursuit of a higher spiritual realm are the two basic motives of the heroine.

4▪ The novel features Rochester's first marriage and association with ( ), satirizing love and marriage based on ( ). (Miss Ingram, Money)

5▪ Jane Eyre's status in the house of her aunt, Mrs. Reed, was inferior even to a handmaid, and she was bullied by her cousins and cousins. But she is not willing to be bullied, which thing best shows her defiant spirit?

(One day her cousin beat her again, she resisted, but was locked up in the red house by her aunt, frightened and sick.) )

★6What▪ kind of women are the most beautiful? Please combine the novel "Jane ▪ Eyre" to share your opinion. (omitted )

7▪ Why doesn't Jane Eyre's aunt's family like Jane Eyre?

(The aunt looked down on Jane's mother, who lowered her status to marry; The aunt was dissatisfied with her uncle's acceptance of Jane Eyre; My aunt's family didn't like Jane Eyre's personality. )

8▪ Why Jane left the orphanage, from here you can see what her personality is

(She can't stand the loneliness and indifference there, she pursues freedom, happiness, and the courage to resist)

9▪ Why did Jane Eyre leave her beloved Mr. Rochester?

(Jane Eyre learns that Rochester has a wife, and the power of morality and self-esteem makes Jane make painful decisions.) )