Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte

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The greatest desire of all is to be important among others, for most children they do not receive this feeling enough. George F. Will once wrote “Childhood is frequently a solemn business for those inside it”. This quote may be interpreted to mean adults see only the bliss of their childhoods, but forget how lugubrious a child’s life can really be, and the hardships of succeeding in life. This quote is proven valid by Jane Eyre in Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë, how she has a somber child hood and adults overlook her struggles. It is also proven true by the conceit, Reading the Obituary Page by Linda Pastan how the adults do not acknowledge the vile treatment of the kids. Dispute the expectations childhood is hard and older generations do not support today’s kids, but only the character that persists through all impediments will adhere to happiness.

In Pastan’s poem the children are confined to controlled, ominous, and discrete life’s, which ensures little opportunity to follow their pursuits and desires in life. Pastan describes why they had dressed the kids; it was to look like the picture the adults were seeing. She uses symbolism to describe how the kids were dressed to symbolize the picture the adults were seeing. She outlines them “In starched dresses/with ribbons” to show the parents’ perspective. Pastan uses very clever diction, to identify the real meanings. Pastan tells of how the kids should have a routine or to “circle the chairs” which describes how it is hard for the kids to break the practices set in place by older generations. The kids lack the will to try again as is demonstrated when they first attempt “lunged/to be seated”. The kids are trying to break out of the routine but the word lunged describes...

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.... When she finally finds him, she is in shock but still accepts her “blind, but beloved master” (473). Even till the end of the book, she does not let obstacles deter her, for him being blind does not interfere with the love between them. Jane continued through life when all seemed lost and was rewarded with a husband that could see again and a child.

Jane Eyre was stopped at every turn in her life but persevered through everything, and because of her will to continue forward she was rewarded at the very end. Jane did not need any Fairies or Godmothers to help her, because she was an independent woman that ever gave up. The children in the poem faced despair and forfeited because they thought that getting back up would be futile. All Jane ever wanted in her life was to be important in someone’s eyes, and until that day finally came she never stopped trying.

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