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Bertha Mason In Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre

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The life of Bertha Mason Rochester consisted of cruelty, inhumane captivity, and suffering. Her husband, Edward Rochester, thought her to be mentally unstable, and decided to lock her away in his castle. In Jane Eyre, Bertha Mason Rochester was locked away by her husband, because he thought of her to be insane and violent. He found mental asylums to be far too “cruel” and “punishing”, therefore he kept his wife locked away upon secrecy, and told everyone that she was dead. Whether he did this for love, this involuntarily imprisoned Bertha for the rest of her life. Although in this time era they were unsafe, I think that Edward Rochester should have put his wife in a mental asylum. I think this, because it would have been the right thing to …show more content…

The majority of the book portrayed her to be of the resemblance to a beast.Upon the aftermath of the the hidden room, Jane overheard a ruckus within the room nearest to hers. That noise was Bertha frolicking amongst herself. She lurked within the darkness, and could not see anything, yet certain sounds could be heard. Bertha, once again, was described as the devil, magnituding her element of evil. No words had been used to make us see anything good about Bertha, because those reading this book are supposed to hate her. When Richard Mason was talking to Mr Rochester, Bertha was presented as a wild animal. "She worried me like a tigress" This quote describes the attack of Richard Mason to be the attack of a wild animal on its prey. Bertha’s attack method seemed to what a bolistic animal would have approached. Bertha’s voice often was not described to be human; it was said that her voice was warped to sound like a sqealing animal. However, the first and only time she spoke is during the attack on her brother "She said she'd drain my blood" This quote drives the reader to the assumption that she is a vampire., since draining her brother’s blood seems like the task a vampire would surely fulfill. This representation of Bertha would show the reader hints of her true

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