Jane Eyre The Sound Of Music Comparison

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One is faced with endless possibilities when they can compare two things the reality is that almost everything in this world is comparable. Even so, how does a classic romantic novel from the 1800s compare with a cheery musical about a singing Austrian family. Jane Eyre, one of the worlds most famous books, was published in 1847, and although it is a romance novel, it is serious and somewhat slow-paced. The Sound of Music is possibly the happiest musical of all time. Written in the fifties and becoming one of the worlds most famous movies in 1965, the songs are about goat-herds falling in love and whiskers on kittens. Jane Eyre and the Sound of Music have several differences in their moods, settings, and endings, yet they share similarities …show more content…

There can be no doubt that The Sound of Music and Jane Eyre have countless differences in many areas, including their moods, settings, and endings. The Sound of Music has a warm, lighthearted tone, with happy little tunes about goats in love and female deer sung every ten minutes and characters that always have the biggest smiles on their faces. The only moment of suspense ends with some misbehaving nuns! Jane Eyre has a much darker tone. She has many eerie and frightening experiences. She describes the most suspenseful by saying, “Here then I was on the third story, fastened into one of its mystic cells; night around me; a pale and bloody spectacle under my eyes and hands; a murderess hardly separated from me by a single door,” (Brontë 212). Jane Eyre and The Sound of Music also differ in their settings. The Sound of Music is set near Salzburg in 1938, the year Nazi Germany annexed Austria (“Germany”). Jane Eyre takes place in the early …show more content…

In Jane Eyre, Jane lives at a poor school for girl orphans for 8 years and has only a trunk of possessions (Brontë 92). Maria von Trapp is a novice at a Salzburg abbey and has even fewer possessions, all of them fitting in one bag. The Mother Superior is “unsure whether Maria wants to become a nun,” (“The Sound of Music”). Neither had never fallen in love and both are somewhat scared to admit their feelings of love. The love interests of Maria von Trapp and Jane Eyre are also similar. Captain von Trapp and Mr. Rochester, the love interests of the main characters are also similar. They both have children: Captain von Trapp has 7, and Mr. Rochester had one ward (the mother claimed young Adele was his, but it is never assured whether she is his child). Both the Captain and Rochester are horrible at raising their children, as Mr. Rochester is never around and hates his ward/child, and the Captain give his children uniforms and calls them with whistle commands, much like he trained his soldiers in the army (The Sound of Music). Mr. Rochester is wealthy and part of high society, and Ann Sears describes the Captain as aristocratic. Clearly, the main characters in both the Sound of Music and Jane Eyre are very similar, and the plot is equally similar. Near the beginning of the story, the simple, religious young woman (Maria and Jane) goes

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