Difficult Words
- Insuperable – impossible to overcome
- Capricious – prone to major mood swings
- Parterre - garden
- Usury – lending money and charge ridiculous amounts of interest
- Poltroon - coward
- Sotto voce – very softly
Audra’s Slang Summary
Let me just preface by saying I love this chapter.
Months pass, and nothing is said about Jane going to
school. Nothing really changes for Jane,
except that John Reed is afraid of her now (Hah!), so he tends to leave her
alone. Everyone does. And Jane gets brave. When she overhears Mrs. Reed telling John
that he is to avoid Jane because she is not fit to associate with them, Jane
yells over the banister that they are
not fit to associate with her.
Mrs. Reed runs up the stairs in a fury, and Jane, lovely
creature, pulls out the dead uncle card.
That’s right – the What-would-Mr. Reed-do-if-he-saw-how-you-treated-me
card. That knocks the wind out of Mrs. Reed for once…but then she boxes
Jane’s ears anyway.
Moving on.
When Jane sees a carriage pull up to Gateshead, she thinks
nothing of it – but then she is called down to Mrs. Reed’s presence. That hasn’t happened for 4 months…so Jane is
kinda nervous. Upon entering the drawing room, the looming figure of a man
named Mr. Brocklehurst blocks her view. This man is a clergyman who rules a school
called Lowood with a crazy-fundamentalist iron fist, and Lowood is the school
Mrs. Reed has chosen to send Jane off to forever.
Frankly, Mr. Brocklehurst is about as awesome as Mrs. Reed. He tries to strike the fear of God into Jane by
questioning her closely about hell, believing her to be a troublesome child.
Remember how I told you Jane is catty? Well, get this: When asked how to avoid going
to hell, Jane says that she has to make sure she doesn’t die anytime soon. Bahaha!
Then Mrs. Reed tells Mr. Brocklehurst that Jane is a liar.
And that, of course, turns the already crazy Mr. Brocklehurst
against Jane, and he promises to tell all the teachers and students at Lowood
to handle Jane with contempt, so that she can be broken of her evil ways. Exit Mr. Brocklehurst.
At this point, Jane is fuming inside. She thought she was going to get a new start
at school, but Mrs. Reed has poisoned that, just like everything else. So, when Mrs. Reed tells Jane to go back to
the nursery, she hesitates.
Then, Jane tells Mrs. Reed just what she thinks of her. Finally.
Mrs. Reed is speechless.
Then Mrs. Reed is
the one who leaves the room.
Jane is the winner of her first battle.
There is a sort of friendly bond formed between Bessie and
Jane that evening, since Jane is not afraid of Bessie after standing up to the
much scarier Mrs. Reed. Jane is to leave
Gateshead in a couple of days, and is sad to leave Bessie, and sad that Mr.
Brocklehurst is going to ruin everything thanks to Mrs. Reed - but at least
Jane will be away from Gateshead.
Fin for now.
Interesting Stuff, Inspired by the Book
Child’s Guide
The pamphlet that Mr. Brocklehurst presents to Jane – called
the “Child’s Guide” – was meant to strike fear into her heart by giving her
very detailed examples of how unexpectedly she could die.
Surprise, this was based on a real book – a magazine –
called The Children’s Friend. This
magazine, the contents of which are pretty terrifying, was written by the Rev.
W. Carus Wilson. Here is a link to the issue
of 1824, if you’d like a taste of the nasty stories he liked to scare kids
with.
A couple of things strike me as interesting here.
- The fact the Mr. Brocklehurst carries this book with him to Jane’s house is funny. He assumes she is a bad child before he even meets her – probably due to the letter Mrs. Reed sent him about her, but still. Funny.
- The very negative light in which Charlotte Bronte presents this view of God, and how clearly she introduces hypocrisy into the story with the very characters that are supposed to be so pious…this is interesting. Charlotte was a woman in the 1820s. Seriously, being so forward with her opinions – even through the veil of fiction – is pretty bold. Clever, clever woman.
This all makes me wonder: How new are our problems with
religion, really?



