Comparing Jane Eyre´s Charcter to Other Charcter in Charlotte Bronte´s Novel Jane Eyre

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Jane Eyre, one of Charlotte Brontë’s most well-known novels, displays the main character, Jane Eyre’s difficult life from the beginning of her childhood to her adult years, and shows how the characters from the novel develop and reveal Jane’s personality. Brontë uses a variety of characters to contrast with and reveal Jane Eyre’s characteristics and personality. She contrasts Jane’s personality with the characters of Blanch Ingram and Georgiana Reed. She also reveals Jane’s behavior with others through the character foil between St. John and Mr. Rochester. Brontë’s usage of character foils between Jane Eyre and the characters, Georgiana Reed, Blanche Ingram, as well as the contrast between St. John Rivers and Mr. Rochester, reveal different aspects of Jane Eyre’s true personality and characteristics from the beginning of the novel to the end of the novel.
The first character foil is the lovely Georgiana Reed, who contrasts with different aspects of Jane’s true characteristics and personality. Jane Eyre describes her cousin as a very beautiful girl and says that her beauty can hide all her faults, such as her being spoiled. Jane describes Georgiana’s beauty and faults by saying, “Her beauty, her pink cheeks, and golden curls, seemed to delight to all who looked at her, and to purchase indemnity for every fault” (10). Georgiana’s beauty and her being spoiled contrasts with Jane being very plain and generous to everyone. Georgiana hates her cousin and she will do anything to make Jane’s life miserable. Jane describes Georgiana’s hatred towards her by saying that it is “a noxious thing” (11). Georgiana’s hatred towards Jane contradicts with Jane showing kindness towards her and Jane trying to make amends with her. Georgiana acts very...

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In Jane Eyre, Charlotte Brontë uses character foils to display the different aspects of Jane Eyre’s true characteristics and personality through the characters of Georgiana Reed, Blanche Ingram, and the contrast between St. John Rivers and Mr. Rochester. Each character from the novel reveals different aspects of Jane’s personality and characteristics. Georgiana Reed shows how plain and simple Jane looks, but she also shows how caring Jane is to everyone, even people who were mean to her in the past. Blanche Ingram shows how modest and kind Jane is and how Jane sees the beauty in everyone, but herself. St. John Rivers contrasting Mr. Rochester reveals how independent Jane is and how she speaks her mind without caring about others opinions. Jane’s difficulty growing up as a child and her life as an adult shows how Jane is not afraid of what the world offers to her.

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