Summary Later that afternoon, Jane awakes, wondering what she should do: Leave Thornfield at once is the answer. At first, she doesn’t think she can leave Rochester, but an inner voice tells her she both can and should. Jane leaves her room, tripping over Rochester, who sits in a chair […]
Read more Summary and Analysis Chapter 27Summary and Analysis Chapter 26
Summary At seven o’clock on Jane’s wedding day, Sophie arrives to help her dress. Jane wears the plain blond veil she has made herself, rather than the fancy veil that was destroyed by Bertha. In her wedding dress, Jane looks so different from her usual self that she seems a […]
Read more Summary and Analysis Chapter 26Summary and Analysis Chapters 24-25
Summary The next morning, Jane wakes, wondering if the previous night was just a dream. She feels transformed; even her face looks different, no longer plain. Believing Jane has taken an immoral turn, Mrs. Fairfax is cool and quiet at breakfast, but Jane feels she must let Rochester give explanations. […]
Read more Summary and Analysis Chapters 24-25Summary and Analysis Chapter 23
Summary It is a beautiful midsummer’s night. As the sun sets, Jane walks around the gardens of Thornfield, enjoying the solemn purple that colors the sky. Smelling Rochester’s cigar from a window, Jane moves into the more secluded space of the orchard. But Rochester is now in the garden. Jane […]
Read more Summary and Analysis Chapter 23Summary and Analysis Chapter 22
Summary Jane remains at Gateshead for a month, helping Georgiana and Eliza prepare for their departures: Georgiana to her uncle in London, and Eliza to a nunnery in Lisle, France. Eliza compliments Jane on her independence and hard work. The older Jane interrupts the narrative, telling Eliza’s and Georgiana’s futures: […]
Read more Summary and Analysis Chapter 22Summary and Analysis Chapter 21
Summary Jane remembers Bessie Leaven saying that dreams of children are a sign of trouble, either to oneself or one’s kin. Jane is worried because she has been dreaming of infants for the past seven successive nights, including the night she was roused by Mason’s cry. It also happens on […]
Read more Summary and Analysis Chapter 21Summary and Analysis Chapter 20
Summary Later that evening, Jane lies in bed, gazing at the moonlight coming in her window. Suddenly, she hears a heart-stopping cry for help. Jane hurriedly puts on some clothes, horror shaking her body. All members of the party have gathered in the hallway, wondering if the house is on […]
Read more Summary and Analysis Chapter 20Summary and Analysis Chapters 18-19
Summary With guests at Thornfield, life is cheerful. One night, they are preparing for a game of charades. Rochester’s group goes first, pantomiming a marriage ceremony with Rochester and Blanche as the happy couple. They then enact the story of Eliezer and Rebecca, and end with Rochester as a prisoner […]
Read more Summary and Analysis Chapters 18-19Summary and Analysis Chapter 17
Summary Jane is sickeningly disappointed when Rochester hasn’t returned in a week, and Mrs. Fairfax suggests that he might go directly to Europe, not returning to Thornfield for a year or more. After two weeks, Rochester sends a letter telling Mrs. Fairfax that he will arrive in three days, along […]
Read more Summary and Analysis Chapter 17Summary and Analysis Chapter 16
Summary On the morning following the fire, Jane dreads seeing Rochester, but his behavior hasn’t changed. Watching the servants cleaning Rochester’s room, Jane is amazed to find Grace Poole sewing new curtain rings. Grace seems calm for a woman who tried to commit murder the previous night. Like the other […]
Read more Summary and Analysis Chapter 16