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Issues of Social Class in Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë Essay

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He walks into the corporation building, and is greeted by a few of his colleagues, also heading to their cubicle. The man groans at his workload then glances around, seeing his supervisor frowning at him. “Oh boy, this isn’t good.” He thinks to himself as the supervisor walks into his boss’ office for the third time this week. His boss walks out a couple minutes later, and heads straight to the man’s cubicle. “Kevin, this is the third time in just this week that you haven’t been following the company’s procedures. Why won’t you just accept your job and do it like everyone else? I once had your job, and look at me! I’m now one of the head honchos of this place. So please stop disobeying, and you might get somewhere, and not fired.” …show more content…

Upon meeting Mrs. Fairfax, Jane couldn’t believe that she would be talking to her as an equal. “‘She treats me like a visitor,’ thought I. ‘I little expected such a reception; I anticipated only coldness and stiffness: this is not like what I have heard of the treatment of governesses: but I must not exult too soon.’” (pg. 97-98) Jane later learns that the master of Thornfield is a Mr. Rochester. Throughout her entire stay, she tries to repress the feelings for Rochester, reminding herself that he is a nobleman and she is a servant. While at Moor House and at Morton, Jane finds herself among people of relatively the same social class as her, not to mention that they are her cousins on her father’s side. While in Morton, she is proposed to by her cousin, but not for good reasons. “’St. John!’ I exclaimed when I had got so far in my meditation. ‘Well?’ he answered, icily. ‘I repeat: I freely consent to go with you as your fellow-missionary; but not as your wife; I cannot marry you and become a part of you.’” (pg. 415) Jane earns a great fortune and shares it with her cousins, but leaves in search of her love. Jane also experiences a different type of social class, when she goes back to Rochester. She is now considered of wealth, and she marries Rochester. Upon marrying him, she has become his equal, in normal status, and in the fact that he is blind.
Jane Eyre has dealt with social problems during her childhood, her first employment, her time at

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