Rivers Jane Eyre

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Throughout Jane Eyre, Jane struggles with maintaining personal relationships. The Reeds never allow to see her as more than a pain, and Mr. Rochester only tries to use her to get out a previous marriage. However, hope of having a relationship with a loving family comes along in this section. The Rivers come into Jane’s life and choose to treat Jane with the utmost respect. In Jane Eyre, the Rivers symbolize the family that Jane has always desired and wanted. The Reeds make it clear that Jane is an outcast among the family, and that she is not welcome in their home. When living with the Reeds, Jane was barely able to read books from the living room without being reprimanded. She was constantly teased from her cousins, who tried to get her in trouble with their mother. They …show more content…

They took Jane from their front door and nursed her back to health, more care that Jane has seen in her life before. The Rivers show Jane compassion regardless of if she is family or if she is a stranger. “The more I knew of the inmates of Moor House, the better I like them… I liked to read what they liked to read: what they enjoyed delighted me; what they approved I reverenced (Bronte 402).” Within being acquainted with the family, Jane feels more comfortable with inhabitants of the home than she did with her own family. She is able to get along with people she barely knows than with her actual family. While feeling comfortable with the Rivers, St. John even helps Jane find a job. He trusts Jane enough to give her the responsibility of opening up a school, which is more than the Reeds ever did for Jane the ten years she lived with them. The main differences between the families are that the Rivers care for Jane without prejudice; like the Reeds had for Jane. The Reed see Jane as an individual, rather a nuisance and a reminder of their passed

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