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34 Further Cont. 2 Jane Eyre Read By Stephanie Poppins

by Stephanie Poppins - The Female Stoic

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Jane Eyre is a woman with a difficult past. Her childhood was at Gateshead Hall, where she was emotionally and physically abused by her aunt and cousins. Her education was at Lowood School, where she gained few friends and role models and suffered privations and oppression. Then she arrives at Thornfield and meets the inimitable Mr Rochester... In this episode, Jane finds it hard to resist St John's persuasive endeavours. Sleep Bedtime story Folklore Relaxation Literature Historical context Emotional healing Grief Social dynamics Domestic life Nostalgia Reunion Emotional reunion Grief management Storytelling Imagination Fantasy Characters Classic literature Culture Adventures Moral lessons

LiteratureRelaxationEmotional HealingSocial DynamicsPersonal IdentityMoral LessonsNostalgiaImaginationSelf SacrificeMoral DilemmasEmotional ConflictDuty Vs DesireRelationship BoundariesLife PurposeInner Strength

Transcript

This is S.

D.

Hudson Magic Jane Eyre Chapter 34 Further Continued I have an answer for you,

Jane.

Hear it,

Said St.

John.

I have watched you ever since we first met.

I have made you my study for ten months.

I have proved you,

In that time,

By sundry tests.

And what have I seen,

Elicited?

In the village school I found you could perform well.

Punctually,

Uprightly,

Labour uncongenial to your habits and inclinations.

I saw you could perform it with capacity and tact.

You could win while you controlled.

In the calm with which you have become suddenly rich,

I read a mind clear of vice.

In resolute readiness with which you cut your wealth into four shares,

Keeping but one to yourself and relinquishing the three others to the claim of abstract justice,

I recognised a soul that revelled in the flame and excitement of sacrifice.

In the tractability with which,

At my wish,

You forsook a study in which you were interested and adopted another because it interested me.

In the untiring assiduity in which you have persevered in it,

In the unflagging energy and unshaken temper with which you have met its difficulties,

I acknowledge the complement of the qualities I seek.

Jane,

You are docile,

Diligent,

Disinterested,

Faithful,

Constant and courageous,

Very gentle and heroic.

Cease to mistrust yourself.

I can trust you unreservedly.

As a conductress of Indian schools and a helper amongst Indian women,

Your assistance will be to me invaluable.

My iron shroud contracted round me.

Persuasion advanced with slow sure step.

Shut my eyes as I would,

These last words of his succeeded in making the way which had seemed blocked up comparatively clear.

My work which had appeared so vague,

So hopelessly diffuse,

Condensed itself as he proceeded and assumed a definite form under his shaping hand.

He waited for an answer.

I demanded a quarter of an hour to think before I again hazarded a reply.

Very willingly,

He rejoined,

And rising,

He strode a little distance up the past,

Threw himself down on a swell of heath,

And there he lay still.

I can do what he wants me to do.

I am forced to see and acknowledge that.

I meditated.

That is,

If life bespared me.

But I feel mine is not the existence to be long protracted under an Indian son.

What then?

He does not care for that.

When my time came to die,

He would resign me,

In all serenity and sanctity,

To the God who gave me.

The case is very plain before.

In leaving England I should leave a loved but empty land.

Mr.

Rochester is not there,

And if he were,

What is,

What can that ever be to me?

My business is to live without him now.

Nothing so absurd,

So weak as to drag on from day to day,

As if I were awaiting some impossible change in circumstances which might reunite me to him.

Of course,

As Sir John once said,

I must seek another interest in life to replace the one lost.

Is not the occupation he now offers me truly the most glorious man can adopt or goddess I?

It is not,

By its noble cares and sublime results,

The one best calculated to fill the void left by upturned affections and demolished hopes.

I believe I must say yes,

And yet I shan't.

Alas,

If I join Sir John,

I abandon half myself.

If I go to India,

I go to premature death.

And how will the interval between leaving England for India and India for the grave be filled?

Oh,

I know that well.

That too is very clear to my vision.

By straining to satisfy Sir John until my sinews ache,

I shall satisfy him to the finest central point and furthest outward circle of his expectations.

If I do go with him,

If I do make the sacrifice he urges,

I will make it absolutely.

I will throw all on the altar,

Heart,

Vitals,

The entire victim.

He will never love me,

But he shall approve me.

I will show him energies he has not yet seen,

Resources he has never suspected.

Yes,

I can work as hard as he can,

And with as little grudging.

Consent then to his demand is possible,

But for one item,

One dreadful item.

It is that he asks me to be his wife.

He has no more of a husband's heart for me than that frowning giant of a rock down which the stream is foaming in yonder gorge.

He prizes me as a soldier with a good weapon,

And that is all.

Unmarried to him,

This would never grieve me,

But can I let him complete his calculations,

Coolly put into practice his plans,

Go through the wedding ceremony?

Can I receive from him the bridal ring,

Endure all the forms of love,

Which I doubt not he would scrupulously observe,

And know that the spirit was quite absent?

Can I bear the consciousness that every endearment he bestows is a sacrifice made on principle?

No,

Such a martyrdom would be monstrous.

I will never undergo it.

As his sister,

I might accompany him,

Not as his wife.

I will tell him so.

I looked towards the knoll.

There he lay,

Still as a prostrate column,

His face turned to me,

His eye beaming watchful and keen.

He started to his feet and approached me.

I am ready to go to India,

If I may go free.

Your answer requires a commentary,

He said.

It is not clear.

You have hitherto been my adopted brother,

I your adopted sister.

Let us continue as such.

You and I had better not marry.

He shook his head.

Adopted fraternity will not do it.

If you were my real sister,

It would be different.

I should take you and seek no wife.

But as it is,

Either our union must be consecrated and sealed by marriage,

Or it cannot exist.

Practical obstacles oppose themselves to any other plan.

Do you not see that,

Jane?

Consider a moment.

Your strong sense will guide you.

I did consider,

And still my sense,

Such as it was,

Directed me only to the fact that we did not love each other as man and wife should,

And therefore it inferred we ought not to marry.

I said so.

St John,

I returned,

I regard you as a brother,

You me as a sister.

So let us continue.

We cannot,

We cannot,

He answered with short,

Sharp determination.

It would not do.

You have said you will go with me to India.

Remember,

You have said that.

Conditionally.

Well,

Well,

To the main point,

The departure with me from England,

The cooperation with me in my future labours,

You do not object.

You have already as good as put your hand to the plough.

You are too consistent to withdraw it.

You have but one end to keep in view,

How the work you have undertaken can best be done.

Simplify your complicated interests,

Feelings,

Thoughts,

Wishes,

And aims.

Merge all considerations in one purpose,

That of fulfilling me with effect,

With power,

The mission of your great master.

To do so,

You must have a coadjutor,

Not a brother.

That is a loose tie.

But a husband?

I,

Too,

Do not want a sister.

A sister might any day be taken from me.

I want a wife.

The sole helpmate I can influence efficiently in life and retain absolutely till death.

I shuddered as he spoke.

I felt his influence in my marrow,

His hold on my limbs.

Seek one elsewhere than in me,

St John.

Seek one fitted to you.

One fitted to my purpose,

You mean.

Fitted to my vocation.

Again,

I tell you,

It is not the insignificant private individual,

The mere man with a man's selfish senses,

I wish to mate.

It is the missionary.

And I will give the missionary my energies.

It is all he wants.

But not myself.

That would only be adding the husk and shell to the kernel.

For them,

God has no use.

I will retain them.

And with that answer he left me.

I would much rather he had knocked me down.

Meet your Teacher

Stephanie Poppins - The Female StoicLeeds, UK

5.0 (9)

Recent Reviews

Becka

February 19, 2025

Stay strong, Jane! Ugh, what a terrible existence that would be… Well read, as always!❤️🙏🏼

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