JANE EYRE
BY
CHARLOTTE BRONTЁ
To W. M. THACKERAY, Esq.,
This Work
is respectfully inscribed
is respectfully inscribed
by
THE AUTHOR
THE AUTHOR
PREFACE
A preface
to the first edition of “Jane Eyre” being unnecessary, I gave none: this second
edition demands a few words both of acknowledgment and miscellaneous remark.
My thanks
are due in three quarters.
To the
Public, for the indulgent ear it has inclined to a plain tale with few
pretensions.
To the
Press, for the fair field its honest suffrage has opened to an obscure
aspirant.
To my
Publishers, for the aid their tact, their energy, their practical sense and
frank liberality have afforded an unknown and unrecommended Author.
The Press
and the Public are but vague personifications for me, and I must thank them in
vague terms; but my Publishers are definite: so are certain generous critics
who have encouraged me as only large-hearted and high-minded men know how to
encourage a struggling stranger; to them, i.e., to my Publishers and the
select Reviewers, I say cordially, Gentlemen, I thank you from my heart.
Having
thus acknowledged what I owe those who have aided and approved me, I turn to
another class; a small one, so far as I know, but not, therefore, to be
overlooked. I mean the timorous or carping few who doubt the tendency of
such books as “Jane Eyre:” in whose eyes whatever is unusual is wrong; whose
ears detect in each protest against bigotry—that parent of crime—an insult to
piety, that regent of God on earth. I would suggest to such doubters
certain obvious distinctions; I would remind them of certain simple truths.
Conventionality
is not morality. Self-righteousness is not religion. To attack the
first is not to assail the last. To pluck the mask from the face of the
Pharisee, is not to lift an impious hand to the Crown of Thorns.
These
things and deeds are diametrically opposed: they are as distinct as is vice
from virtue. Men too often confound them: they should not be confounded:
appearance should not be mistaken for truth; narrow human doctrines, that only
tend to elate and magnify a few, should not be substituted for the
world-redeeming creed of Christ. There is—I repeat it—a difference; and
it is a good, and not a bad action to mark broadly and clearly the line of
separation between them.
The world
may not like to see these ideas dissevered, for it has been accustomed to blend
them; finding it convenient to make external show pass for sterling worth—to
let white-washed walls vouch for clean shrines. It may hate him who dares
to scrutinise and expose—to rase the gilding, and show base metal under it—to
penetrate the sepulchre, and reveal charnel relics: but hate as it will, it is
indebted to him.
Ahab did
not like Micaiah, because he never prophesied good concerning him, but evil;
probably he liked the sycophant son of Chenaannah better; yet might Ahab have
escaped a bloody death, had he but stopped his ears to flattery, and opened
them to faithful counsel.
There is a
man in our own days whose words are not framed to tickle delicate ears: who, to
my thinking, comes before the great ones of society, much as the son of Imlah
came before the throned Kings of Judah and Israel; and who speaks truth as
deep, with a power as prophet-like and as vital—a mien as dauntless and as
daring. Is the satirist of “Vanity Fair” admired in high places? I
cannot tell; but I think if some of those amongst whom he hurls the Greek fire
of his sarcasm, and over whom he flashes the levin-brand of his denunciation,
were to take his warnings in time—they or their seed might yet escape a fatal
Rimoth-Gilead.
Why have I
alluded to this man? I have alluded to him, Reader, because I think I see
in him an intellect profounder and more unique than his contemporaries have yet
recognised; because I regard him as the first social regenerator of the day—as
the very master of that working corps who would restore to rectitude the warped
system of things; because I think no commentator on his writings has yet found
the comparison that suits him, the terms which rightly characterise his
talent. They say he is like Fielding: they talk of his wit, humour, comic
powers. He resembles Fielding as an eagle does a vulture: Fielding could
stoop on carrion, but Thackeray never does. His wit is bright, his humour
attractive, but both bear the same relation to his serious genius that the mere
lambent sheet-lightning playing under the edge of the summer-cloud does to the
electric death-spark hid in its womb. Finally, I have alluded to Mr.
Thackeray, because to him—if he will accept the tribute of a total stranger—I
have dedicated this second edition of “Jane Eyre.”
CURRER
BELL.
December 21st, 1847.
NOTE TO THE THIRD EDITION
I avail
myself of the opportunity which a third edition of “Jane Eyre” affords me, of
again addressing a word to the Public, to explain that my claim to the title of
novelist rests on this one work alone. If, therefore, the authorship of
other works of fiction has been attributed to me, an honour is awarded where it
is not merited; and consequently, denied where it is justly due.
This
explanation will serve to rectify mistakes which may already have been made,
and to prevent future errors.
CURRER
BELL.
April 13th, 1848.
JANE EYRE
PART 1
CHAPTER I
There was
no possibility of taking a walk that day. We had been wandering, indeed,
in the leafless shrubbery an hour in the morning; but since dinner (Mrs. Reed,
when there was no company, dined early) the cold winter wind had brought with
it clouds so sombre, and a rain so penetrating, that further out-door exercise
was now out of the question.
I was glad
of it: I never liked long walks, especially on chilly afternoons: dreadful to
me was the coming home in the raw twilight, with nipped fingers and toes, and a
heart saddened by the chidings of Bessie, the nurse, and humbled by the
consciousness of my physical inferiority to Eliza, John, and Georgiana Reed.
The said
Eliza, John, and Georgiana were now clustered round their mama in the
drawing-room: she lay reclined on a sofa by the fireside, and with her darlings
about her (for the time neither quarrelling nor crying) looked perfectly
happy. Me, she had dispensed from joining the group; saying, “She
regretted to be under the necessity of keeping me at a distance; but that until
she heard from Bessie, and could discover by her own observation, that I was
endeavouring in good earnest to acquire a more sociable and childlike
disposition, a more attractive and sprightly manner—something lighter, franker,
more natural, as it were—she really must exclude me from privileges intended
only for contented, happy, little children.”
“What does
Bessie say I have done?” I asked.
“Jane, I
don’t like cavillers or questioners; besides, there is something truly forbidding
in a child taking up her elders in that manner. Be seated somewhere; and
until you can speak pleasantly, remain silent.”
A
breakfast-room adjoined the drawing-room, I slipped in there. It
contained a bookcase: I soon possessed myself of a volume, taking care that it
should be one stored with pictures. I mounted into the window-seat:
gathering up my feet, I sat cross-legged, like a Turk; and, having drawn the
red moreen curtain nearly close, I was shrined in double retirement.
Folds of
scarlet drapery shut in my view to the right hand; to the left were the clear
panes of glass, protecting, but not separating me from the drear November
day. At intervals, while turning over the leaves of my book, I studied
the aspect of that winter afternoon. Afar, it offered a pale blank of
mist and cloud; near a scene of wet lawn and storm-beat shrub, with ceaseless
rain sweeping away wildly before a long and lamentable blast.
I returned
to my book—Bewick’s History of British Birds: the letterpress thereof I cared little
for, generally speaking; and yet there were certain introductory pages that,
child as I was, I could not pass quite as a blank. They were those which
treat of the haunts of sea-fowl; of “the solitary rocks and promontories” by
them only inhabited; of the coast of Norway, studded with isles from its
southern extremity, the Lindeness, or Naze, to the North Cape—
“Where the
Northern Ocean, in vast whirls,
Boils round the naked, melancholy isles
Of farthest Thule; and the Atlantic surge
Pours in among the stormy Hebrides.”
Boils round the naked, melancholy isles
Of farthest Thule; and the Atlantic surge
Pours in among the stormy Hebrides.”
Nor could
I pass unnoticed the suggestion of the bleak shores of Lapland, Siberia,
Spitzbergen, Nova Zembla, Iceland, Greenland, with “the vast sweep of the
Arctic Zone, and those forlorn regions of dreary space,—that reservoir of frost
and snow, where firm fields of ice, the accumulation of centuries of winters,
glazed in Alpine heights above heights, surround the pole, and concentre the
multiplied rigours of extreme cold.” Of these death-white realms I formed
an idea of my own: shadowy, like all the half-comprehended notions that float
dim through children’s brains, but strangely impressive. The words in
these introductory pages connected themselves with the succeeding vignettes,
and gave significance to the rock standing up alone in a sea of billow and
spray; to the broken boat stranded on a desolate coast; to the cold and ghastly
moon glancing through bars of cloud at a wreck just sinking.
I cannot
tell what sentiment haunted the quite solitary churchyard, with its inscribed
headstone; its gate, its two trees, its low horizon, girdled by a broken wall,
and its newly-risen crescent, attesting the hour of eventide.
The two
ships becalmed on a torpid sea, I believed to be marine phantoms.
The fiend
pinning down the thief’s pack behind him, I passed over quickly: it was an
object of terror.
So was the
black horned thing seated aloof on a rock, surveying a distant crowd
surrounding a gallows.
Each
picture told a story; mysterious often to my undeveloped understanding and
imperfect feelings, yet ever profoundly interesting: as interesting as the
tales Bessie sometimes narrated on winter evenings, when she chanced to be in
good humour; and when, having brought her ironing-table to the nursery hearth,
she allowed us to sit about it, and while she got up Mrs. Reed’s lace frills,
and crimped her nightcap borders, fed our eager attention with passages of love
and adventure taken from old fairy tales and other ballads; or (as at a later
period I discovered) from the pages of Pamela, and Henry, Earl of Moreland.
With
Bewick on my knee, I was then happy: happy at least in my way. I feared
nothing but interruption, and that came too soon. The breakfast-room door
opened.
“Boh!
Madam Mope!” cried the voice of John Reed; then he paused: he found the room
apparently empty.
“Where the
dickens is she!” he continued. “Lizzy! Georgy! (calling to his
sisters) Joan is not here: tell mama she is run out into the rain—bad animal!”
“It is
well I drew the curtain,” thought I; and I wished fervently he might not discover
my hiding-place: nor would John Reed have found it out himself; he was not
quick either of vision or conception; but Eliza just put her head in at the
door, and said at once—
“She is in
the window-seat, to be sure, Jack.”
And I came
out immediately, for I trembled at the idea of being dragged forth by the said
Jack.
“What do
you want?” I asked, with awkward diffidence.
“Say,
‘What do you want, Master Reed?’” was the answer. “I want you to come
here;” and seating himself in an arm-chair, he intimated by a gesture that I
was to approach and stand before him.
John Reed
was a schoolboy of fourteen years old; four years older than I, for I was but
ten: large and stout for his age, with a dingy and unwholesome skin; thick
lineaments in a spacious visage, heavy limbs and large extremities. He
gorged himself habitually at table, which made him bilious, and gave him a dim
and bleared eye and flabby cheeks. He ought now to have been at school;
but his mama had taken him home for a month or two, “on account of his delicate
health.” Mr. Miles, the master, affirmed that he would do very well if he
had fewer cakes and sweetmeats sent him from home; but the mother’s heart
turned from an opinion so harsh, and inclined rather to the more refined idea
that John’s sallowness was owing to over-application and, perhaps, to pining
after home.
John had
not much affection for his mother and sisters, and an antipathy to me. He
bullied and punished me; not two or three times in the week, nor once or twice
in the day, but continually: every nerve I had feared him, and every morsel of
flesh in my bones shrank when he came near. There were moments when I was
bewildered by the terror he inspired, because I had no appeal whatever against
either his menaces or his inflictions; the servants did not like to offend
their young master by taking my part against him, and Mrs. Reed was blind and
deaf on the subject: she never saw him strike or heard him abuse me, though he
did both now and then in her very presence, more frequently, however, behind
her back.
Habitually
obedient to John, I came up to his chair: he spent some three minutes in
thrusting out his tongue at me as far as he could without damaging the roots: I
knew he would soon strike, and while dreading the blow, I mused on the
disgusting and ugly appearance of him who would presently deal it. I
wonder if he read that notion in my face; for, all at once, without speaking,
he struck suddenly and strongly. I tottered, and on regaining my
equilibrium retired back a step or two from his chair.
“That is
for your impudence in answering mama awhile since,” said he, “and for your
sneaking way of getting behind curtains, and for the look you had in your eyes
two minutes since, you rat!”
Accustomed
to John Reed’s abuse, I never had an idea of replying to it; my care was how to
endure the blow which would certainly follow the insult.
“What were
you doing behind the curtain?” he asked.
“I was
reading.”
“Show the
book.”
I returned
to the window and fetched it thence.
“You have
no business to take our books; you are a dependent, mama says; you have no
money; your father left you none; you ought to beg, and not to live here with
gentlemen’s children like us, and eat the same meals we do, and wear clothes at
our mama’s expense. Now, I’ll teach you to rummage my bookshelves: for
they are mine; all the house belongs to me, or will do in a few
years. Go and stand by the door, out of the way of the mirror and the
windows.”
I did so,
not at first aware what was his intention; but when I saw him lift and poise
the book and stand in act to hurl it, I instinctively started aside with a cry
of alarm: not soon enough, however; the volume was flung, it hit me, and I
fell, striking my head against the door and cutting it. The cut bled, the
pain was sharp: my terror had passed its climax; other feelings succeeded.
“Wicked
and cruel boy!” I said. “You are like a murderer—you are like a
slave-driver—you are like the Roman emperors!”
I had read
Goldsmith’s History of Rome, and had formed my opinion of Nero, Caligula,
etc. Also I had drawn parallels in silence, which I never thought thus to
have declared aloud.
“What!
what!” he cried. “Did she say that to me? Did you hear her, Eliza
and Georgiana? Won’t I tell mama? but first—”
He ran
headlong at me: I felt him grasp my hair and my shoulder: he had closed with a
desperate thing. I really saw in him a tyrant, a murderer. I felt a
drop or two of blood from my head trickle down my neck, and was sensible of
somewhat pungent suffering: these sensations for the time predominated over
fear, and I received him in frantic sort. I don’t very well know what I
did with my hands, but he called me “Rat! Rat!” and bellowed out
aloud. Aid was near him: Eliza and Georgiana had run for Mrs. Reed, who was
gone upstairs: she now came upon the scene, followed by Bessie and her maid
Abbot. We were parted: I heard the words—
“Dear!
dear! What a fury to fly at Master John!”
“Did ever
anybody see such a picture of passion!”
Then Mrs.
Reed subjoined—
“Take her
away to the red-room, and lock her in there.” Four hands were immediately
laid upon me, and I was borne upstairs.
CHAPTER II
I resisted
all the way: a new thing for me, and a circumstance which greatly strengthened
the bad opinion Bessie and Miss Abbot were disposed to entertain of me.
The fact is, I was a trifle beside myself; or rather out of myself, as
the French would say: I was conscious that a moment’s mutiny had already
rendered me liable to strange penalties, and, like any other rebel slave, I
felt resolved, in my desperation, to go all lengths.
“Hold her
arms, Miss Abbot: she’s like a mad cat.”
“For
shame! for shame!” cried the lady’s-maid. “What shocking conduct, Miss
Eyre, to strike a young gentleman, your benefactress’s son! Your young
master.”
“Master!
How is he my master? Am I a servant?”
“No; you
are less than a servant, for you do nothing for your keep. There, sit
down, and think over your wickedness.”
They had
got me by this time into the apartment indicated by Mrs. Reed, and had thrust
me upon a stool: my impulse was to rise from it like a spring; their two pair
of hands arrested me instantly.
“If you
don’t sit still, you must be tied down,” said Bessie. “Miss Abbot, lend
me your garters; she would break mine directly.”
Miss Abbot
turned to divest a stout leg of the necessary ligature. This preparation
for bonds, and the additional ignominy it inferred, took a little of the
excitement out of me.
“Don’t
take them off,” I cried; “I will not stir.”
In
guarantee whereof, I attached myself to my seat by my hands.
“Mind you
don’t,” said Bessie; and when she had ascertained that I was really subsiding,
she loosened her hold of me; then she and Miss Abbot stood with folded arms,
looking darkly and doubtfully on my face, as incredulous of my sanity.
“She never
did so before,” at last said Bessie, turning to the Abigail.
“But it
was always in her,” was the reply. “I’ve told Missis often my opinion
about the child, and Missis agreed with me. She’s an underhand little
thing: I never saw a girl of her age with so much cover.”
Bessie
answered not; but ere long, addressing me, she said—“You ought to be aware,
Miss, that you are under obligations to Mrs. Reed: she keeps you: if she were
to turn you off, you would have to go to the poorhouse.”
I had
nothing to say to these words: they were not new to me: my very first
recollections of existence included hints of the same kind. This reproach
of my dependence had become a vague sing-song in my ear: very painful and
crushing, but only half intelligible. Miss Abbot joined in—
“And you
ought not to think yourself on an equality with the Misses Reed and Master
Reed, because Missis kindly allows you to be brought up with them. They
will have a great deal of money, and you will have none: it is your place to be
humble, and to try to make yourself agreeable to them.”
“What we
tell you is for your good,” added Bessie, in no harsh voice, “you should try to
be useful and pleasant, then, perhaps, you would have a home here; but if you
become passionate and rude, Missis will send you away, I am sure.”
“Besides,”
said Miss Abbot, “God will punish her: He might strike her dead in the midst of
her tantrums, and then where would she go? Come, Bessie, we will leave
her: I wouldn’t have her heart for anything. Say your prayers, Miss Eyre,
when you are by yourself; for if you don’t repent, something bad might be
permitted to come down the chimney and fetch you away.”
They went,
shutting the door, and locking it behind them.
The
red-room was a square chamber, very seldom slept in, I might say never, indeed,
unless when a chance influx of visitors at Gateshead Hall rendered it necessary
to turn to account all the accommodation it contained: yet it was one of the
largest and stateliest chambers in the mansion. A bed supported on
massive pillars of mahogany, hung with curtains of deep red damask, stood out like
a tabernacle in the centre; the two large windows, with their blinds always
drawn down, were half shrouded in festoons and falls of similar drapery; the
carpet was red; the table at the foot of the bed was covered with a crimson
cloth; the walls were a soft fawn colour with a blush of pink in it; the
wardrobe, the toilet-table, the chairs were of darkly polished old
mahogany. Out of these deep surrounding shades rose high, and glared
white, the piled-up mattresses and pillows of the bed, spread with a snowy Marseilles
counterpane. Scarcely less prominent was an ample cushioned easy-chair
near the head of the bed, also white, with a footstool before it; and looking,
as I thought, like a pale throne.
This room
was chill, because it seldom had a fire; it was silent, because remote from the
nursery and kitchen; solemn, because it was known to be so seldom
entered. The house-maid alone came here on Saturdays, to wipe from the
mirrors and the furniture a week’s quiet dust: and Mrs. Reed herself, at far
intervals, visited it to review the contents of a certain secret drawer in the
wardrobe, where were stored divers parchments, her jewel-casket, and a
miniature of her deceased husband; and in those last words lies the secret of
the red-room—the spell which kept it so lonely in spite of its grandeur.
Mr. Reed
had been dead nine years: it was in this chamber he breathed his last; here he
lay in state; hence his coffin was borne by the undertaker’s men; and, since
that day, a sense of dreary consecration had guarded it from frequent
intrusion.
My seat,
to which Bessie and the bitter Miss Abbot had left me riveted, was a low
ottoman near the marble chimney-piece; the bed rose before me; to my right hand
there was the high, dark wardrobe, with subdued, broken reflections varying the
gloss of its panels; to my left were the muffled windows; a great looking-glass
between them repeated the vacant majesty of the bed and room. I was not
quite sure whether they had locked the door; and when I dared move, I got up
and went to see. Alas! yes: no jail was ever more secure.
Returning, I had to cross before the looking-glass; my fascinated glance
involuntarily explored the depth it revealed. All looked colder and
darker in that visionary hollow than in reality: and the strange little figure
there gazing at me, with a white face and arms specking the gloom, and
glittering eyes of fear moving where all else was still, had the effect of a
real spirit: I thought it like one of the tiny phantoms, half fairy, half imp,
Bessie’s evening stories represented as coming out of lone, ferny dells in
moors, and appearing before the eyes of belated travellers. I returned to
my stool.
Superstition
was with me at that moment; but it was not yet her hour for complete victory:
my blood was still warm; the mood of the revolted slave was still bracing me
with its bitter vigour; I had to stem a rapid rush of retrospective thought
before I quailed to the dismal present.
All John
Reed’s violent tyrannies, all his sisters’ proud indifference, all his mother’s
aversion, all the servants’ partiality, turned up in my disturbed mind like a
dark deposit in a turbid well. Why was I always suffering, always
browbeaten, always accused, for ever condemned? Why could I never
please? Why was it useless to try to win any one’s favour? Eliza,
who was headstrong and selfish, was respected. Georgiana, who had a
spoiled temper, a very acrid spite, a captious and insolent carriage, was
universally indulged. Her beauty, her pink cheeks and golden curls, seemed
to give delight to all who looked at her, and to purchase indemnity for every
fault. John no one thwarted, much less punished; though he twisted the
necks of the pigeons, killed the little pea-chicks, set the dogs at the sheep,
stripped the hothouse vines of their fruit, and broke the buds off the choicest
plants in the conservatory: he called his mother “old girl,” too; sometimes
reviled her for her dark skin, similar to his own; bluntly disregarded her
wishes; not unfrequently tore and spoiled her silk attire; and he was still
“her own darling.” I dared commit no fault: I strove to fulfil every
duty; and I was termed naughty and tiresome, sullen and sneaking, from morning
to noon, and from noon to night.
My head
still ached and bled with the blow and fall I had received: no one had reproved
John for wantonly striking me; and because I had turned against him to avert
farther irrational violence, I was loaded with general opprobrium.
“Unjust!—unjust!”
said my reason, forced by the agonising stimulus into precocious though
transitory power: and Resolve, equally wrought up, instigated some strange
expedient to achieve escape from insupportable oppression—as running away, or,
if that could not be effected, never eating or drinking more, and letting
myself die.
What a consternation
of soul was mine that dreary afternoon! How all my brain was in tumult,
and all my heart in insurrection! Yet in what darkness, what dense
ignorance, was the mental battle fought! I could not answer the ceaseless
inward question—why I thus suffered; now, at the distance of—I will not
say how many years, I see it clearly.
I was a
discord in Gateshead Hall: I was like nobody there; I had nothing in harmony
with Mrs. Reed or her children, or her chosen vassalage. If they did not
love me, in fact, as little did I love them. They were not bound to
regard with affection a thing that could not sympathise with one amongst them;
a heterogeneous thing, opposed to them in temperament, in capacity, in
propensities; a useless thing, incapable of serving their interest, or adding
to their pleasure; a noxious thing, cherishing the germs of indignation at
their treatment, of contempt of their judgment. I know that had I been a
sanguine, brilliant, careless, exacting, handsome, romping child—though equally
dependent and friendless—Mrs. Reed would have endured my presence more
complacently; her children would have entertained for me more of the cordiality
of fellow-feeling; the servants would have been less prone to make me the
scapegoat of the nursery.
Daylight
began to forsake the red-room; it was past four o’clock, and the beclouded
afternoon was tending to drear twilight. I heard the rain still beating
continuously on the staircase window, and the wind howling in the grove behind
the hall; I grew by degrees cold as a stone, and then my courage sank. My
habitual mood of humiliation, self-doubt, forlorn depression, fell damp on the
embers of my decaying ire. All said I was wicked, and perhaps I might be
so; what thought had I been but just conceiving of starving myself to
death? That certainly was a crime: and was I fit to die? Or was the
vault under the chancel of Gateshead Church an inviting bourne? In such
vault I had been told did Mr. Reed lie buried; and led by this thought to
recall his idea, I dwelt on it with gathering dread. I could not remember
him; but I knew that he was my own uncle—my mother’s brother—that he had taken
me when a parentless infant to his house; and that in his last moments he had
required a promise of Mrs. Reed that she would rear and maintain me as one of
her own children. Mrs. Reed probably considered she had kept this
promise; and so she had, I dare say, as well as her nature would permit her;
but how could she really like an interloper not of her race, and unconnected
with her, after her husband’s death, by any tie? It must have been most
irksome to find herself bound by a hard-wrung pledge to stand in the stead of a
parent to a strange child she could not love, and to see an uncongenial alien
permanently intruded on her own family group.
A singular
notion dawned upon me. I doubted not—never doubted—that if Mr. Reed had
been alive he would have treated me kindly; and now, as I sat looking at the
white bed and overshadowed walls—occasionally also turning a fascinated eye towards
the dimly gleaning mirror—I began to recall what I had heard of dead men,
troubled in their graves by the violation of their last wishes, revisiting the
earth to punish the perjured and avenge the oppressed; and I thought Mr. Reed’s
spirit, harassed by the wrongs of his sister’s child, might quit its
abode—whether in the church vault or in the unknown world of the departed—and
rise before me in this chamber. I wiped my tears and hushed my sobs,
fearful lest any sign of violent grief might waken a preternatural voice to
comfort me, or elicit from the gloom some haloed face, bending over me with
strange pity. This idea, consolatory in theory, I felt would be terrible
if realised: with all my might I endeavoured to stifle it—I endeavoured to be firm.
Shaking my hair from my eyes, I lifted my head and tried to look boldly round
the dark room; at this moment a light gleamed on the wall. Was it, I
asked myself, a ray from the moon penetrating some aperture in the blind?
No; moonlight was still, and this stirred; while I gazed, it glided up to the
ceiling and quivered over my head. I can now conjecture readily that this
streak of light was, in all likelihood, a gleam from a lantern carried by some
one across the lawn: but then, prepared as my mind was for horror, shaken as my
nerves were by agitation, I thought the swift darting beam was a herald of some
coming vision from another world. My heart beat thick, my head grew hot;
a sound filled my ears, which I deemed the rushing of wings; something seemed
near me; I was oppressed, suffocated: endurance broke down; I rushed to the
door and shook the lock in desperate effort. Steps came running along the
outer passage; the key turned, Bessie and Abbot entered.
“Miss
Eyre, are you ill?” said Bessie.
“What a
dreadful noise! it went quite through me!” exclaimed Abbot.
“Take me
out! Let me go into the nursery!” was my cry.
“What
for? Are you hurt? Have you seen something?” again demanded Bessie.
“Oh!
I saw a light, and I thought a ghost would come.” I had now got hold of
Bessie’s hand, and she did not snatch it from me.
“She has
screamed out on purpose,” declared Abbot, in some disgust. “And what a
scream! If she had been in great pain one would have excused it, but she
only wanted to bring us all here: I know her naughty tricks.”
“What is
all this?” demanded another voice peremptorily; and Mrs. Reed came along the
corridor, her cap flying wide, her gown rustling stormily. “Abbot and
Bessie, I believe I gave orders that Jane Eyre should be left in the red-room
till I came to her myself.”
“Miss Jane
screamed so loud, ma’am,” pleaded Bessie.
“Let her
go,” was the only answer. “Loose Bessie’s hand, child: you cannot succeed
in getting out by these means, be assured. I abhor artifice, particularly
in children; it is my duty to show you that tricks will not answer: you will
now stay here an hour longer, and it is only on condition of perfect submission
and stillness that I shall liberate you then.”
“O aunt!
have pity! Forgive me! I cannot endure it—let me be punished some
other way! I shall be killed if—”
“Silence!
This violence is all most repulsive:” and so, no doubt, she felt it. I
was a precocious actress in her eyes; she sincerely looked on me as a compound
of virulent passions, mean spirit, and dangerous duplicity.
Bessie and
Abbot having retreated, Mrs. Reed, impatient of my now frantic anguish and wild
sobs, abruptly thrust me back and locked me in, without farther parley. I
heard her sweeping away; and soon after she was gone, I suppose I had a species
of fit: unconsciousness closed the scene.
CHAPTER III
The next
thing I remember is, waking up with a feeling as if I had had a frightful
nightmare, and seeing before me a terrible red glare, crossed with thick black
bars. I heard voices, too, speaking with a hollow sound, and as if
muffled by a rush of wind or water: agitation, uncertainty, and an
all-predominating sense of terror confused my faculties. Ere long, I
became aware that some one was handling me; lifting me up and supporting me in
a sitting posture, and that more tenderly than I had ever been raised or upheld
before. I rested my head against a pillow or an arm, and felt easy.
In five
minutes more the cloud of bewilderment dissolved: I knew quite well that I was
in my own bed, and that the red glare was the nursery fire. It was night:
a candle burnt on the table; Bessie stood at the bed-foot with a basin in her
hand, and a gentleman sat in a chair near my pillow, leaning over me.
I felt an
inexpressible relief, a soothing conviction of protection and security, when I
knew that there was a stranger in the room, an individual not belonging to
Gateshead, and not related to Mrs. Reed. Turning from Bessie (though her
presence was far less obnoxious to me than that of Abbot, for instance, would
have been), I scrutinised the face of the gentleman: I knew him; it was Mr.
Lloyd, an apothecary, sometimes called in by Mrs. Reed when the servants were
ailing: for herself and the children she employed a physician.
“Well, who
am I?” he asked.
I
pronounced his name, offering him at the same time my hand: he took it, smiling
and saying, “We shall do very well by-and-by.” Then he laid me down, and
addressing Bessie, charged her to be very careful that I was not disturbed
during the night. Having given some further directions, and intimates
that he should call again the next day, he departed; to my grief: I felt so
sheltered and befriended while he sat in the chair near my pillow; and as he
closed the door after him, all the room darkened and my heart again sank:
inexpressible sadness weighed it down.
“Do you
feel as if you should sleep, Miss?” asked Bessie, rather softly.
Scarcely
dared I answer her; for I feared the next sentence might be rough. “I
will try.”
“Would you
like to drink, or could you eat anything?”
“No, thank
you, Bessie.”
“Then I
think I shall go to bed, for it is past twelve o’clock; but you may call me if
you want anything in the night.”
Wonderful
civility this! It emboldened me to ask a question.
“Bessie,
what is the matter with me? Am I ill?”
“You fell
sick, I suppose, in the red-room with crying; you’ll be better soon, no doubt.”
Bessie
went into the housemaid’s apartment, which was near. I heard her say—
“Sarah,
come and sleep with me in the nursery; I daren’t for my life be alone with that
poor child to-night: she might die; it’s such a strange thing she should have
that fit: I wonder if she saw anything. Missis was rather too hard.”
Sarah came
back with her; they both went to bed; they were whispering together for
half-an-hour before they fell asleep. I caught scraps of their
conversation, from which I was able only too distinctly to infer the main
subject discussed.
“Something
passed her, all dressed in white, and vanished”—“A great black dog behind
him”—“Three loud raps on the chamber door”—“A light in the churchyard just over
his grave,” etc., etc.
At last
both slept: the fire and the candle went out. For me, the watches of that
long night passed in ghastly wakefulness; strained by dread: such dread as
children only can feel.
No severe
or prolonged bodily illness followed this incident of the red-room; it only
gave my nerves a shock of which I feel the reverberation to this day.
Yes, Mrs. Reed, to you I owe some fearful pangs of mental suffering, but I
ought to forgive you, for you knew not what you did: while rending my heart-strings,
you thought you were only uprooting my bad propensities.
Next day,
by noon, I was up and dressed, and sat wrapped in a shawl by the nursery
hearth. I felt physically weak and broken down: but my worse ailment was
an unutterable wretchedness of mind: a wretchedness which kept drawing from me
silent tears; no sooner had I wiped one salt drop from my cheek than another
followed. Yet, I thought, I ought to have been happy, for none of the
Reeds were there, they were all gone out in the carriage with their mama.
Abbot, too, was sewing in another room, and Bessie, as she moved hither and
thither, putting away toys and arranging drawers, addressed to me every now and
then a word of unwonted kindness. This state of things should have been
to me a paradise of peace, accustomed as I was to a life of ceaseless reprimand
and thankless fagging; but, in fact, my racked nerves were now in such a state
that no calm could soothe, and no pleasure excite them agreeably.
Bessie had
been down into the kitchen, and she brought up with her a tart on a certain
brightly painted china plate, whose bird of paradise, nestling in a wreath of
convolvuli and rosebuds, had been wont to stir in me a most enthusiastic sense
of admiration; and which plate I had often petitioned to be allowed to take in
my hand in order to examine it more closely, but had always hitherto been
deemed unworthy of such a privilege. This precious vessel was now placed
on my knee, and I was cordially invited to eat the circlet of delicate pastry
upon it. Vain favour! coming, like most other favours long deferred and
often wished for, too late! I could not eat the tart; and the plumage of
the bird, the tints of the flowers, seemed strangely faded: I put both plate
and tart away. Bessie asked if I would have a book: the word book
acted as a transient stimulus, and I begged her to fetch Gulliver’s Travels
from the library. This book I had again and again perused with
delight. I considered it a narrative of facts, and discovered in it a
vein of interest deeper than what I found in fairy tales: for as to the elves,
having sought them in vain among foxglove leaves and bells, under mushrooms and
beneath the ground-ivy mantling old wall-nooks, I had at length made up my mind
to the sad truth, that they were all gone out of England to some savage country
where the woods were wilder and thicker, and the population more scant;
whereas, Lilliput and Brobdignag being, in my creed, solid parts of the earth’s
surface, I doubted not that I might one day, by taking a long voyage, see with
my own eyes the little fields, houses, and trees, the diminutive people, the
tiny cows, sheep, and birds of the one realm; and the corn-fields forest-high,
the mighty mastiffs, the monster cats, the tower-like men and women, of the
other. Yet, when this cherished volume was now placed in my hand—when I
turned over its leaves, and sought in its marvellous pictures the charm I had,
till now, never failed to find—all was eerie and dreary; the giants were gaunt
goblins, the pigmies malevolent and fearful imps, Gulliver a most desolate
wanderer in most dread and dangerous regions. I closed the book, which I
dared no longer peruse, and put it on the table, beside the untasted tart.
Bessie had
now finished dusting and tidying the room, and having washed her hands, she opened
a certain little drawer, full of splendid shreds of silk and satin, and began
making a new bonnet for Georgiana’s doll. Meantime she sang: her song
was—
“In the
days when we went gipsying,
A long time ago.”
A long time ago.”
I had
often heard the song before, and always with lively delight; for Bessie had a
sweet voice,—at least, I thought so. But now, though her voice was still
sweet, I found in its melody an indescribable sadness. Sometimes,
preoccupied with her work, she sang the refrain very low, very lingeringly; “A
long time ago” came out like the saddest cadence of a funeral hymn. She
passed into another ballad, this time a really doleful one.
“My feet
they are sore, and my limbs they are weary;
Long is the way, and the mountains are wild;
Soon will the twilight close moonless and dreary
Over the path of the poor orphan child.
Long is the way, and the mountains are wild;
Soon will the twilight close moonless and dreary
Over the path of the poor orphan child.
Why did
they send me so far and so lonely,
Up where the moors spread and grey rocks are piled?
Men are hard-hearted, and kind angels only
Watch o’er the steps of a poor orphan child.
Up where the moors spread and grey rocks are piled?
Men are hard-hearted, and kind angels only
Watch o’er the steps of a poor orphan child.
Yet
distant and soft the night breeze is blowing,
Clouds there are none, and clear stars beam mild,
God, in His mercy, protection is showing,
Comfort and hope to the poor orphan child.
Clouds there are none, and clear stars beam mild,
God, in His mercy, protection is showing,
Comfort and hope to the poor orphan child.
Ev’n
should I fall o’er the broken bridge passing,
Or stray in the marshes, by false lights beguiled,
Still will my Father, with promise and blessing,
Take to His bosom the poor orphan child.
Or stray in the marshes, by false lights beguiled,
Still will my Father, with promise and blessing,
Take to His bosom the poor orphan child.
There is a
thought that for strength should avail me,
Though both of shelter and kindred despoiled;
Heaven is a home, and a rest will not fail me;
God is a friend to the poor orphan child.”
Though both of shelter and kindred despoiled;
Heaven is a home, and a rest will not fail me;
God is a friend to the poor orphan child.”
“Come,
Miss Jane, don’t cry,” said Bessie as she finished. She might as well
have said to the fire, “don’t burn!” but how could she divine the morbid
suffering to which I was a prey? In the course of the morning Mr. Lloyd
came again.
“What,
already up!” said he, as he entered the nursery. “Well, nurse, how is
she?”
Bessie
answered that I was doing very well.
“Then she
ought to look more cheerful. Come here, Miss Jane: your name is Jane, is
it not?”
“Yes, sir,
Jane Eyre.”
“Well, you
have been crying, Miss Jane Eyre; can you tell me what about? Have you
any pain?”
“No, sir.”
“Oh!
I daresay she is crying because she could not go out with Missis in the
carriage,” interposed Bessie.
“Surely
not! why, she is too old for such pettishness.”
I thought
so too; and my self-esteem being wounded by the false charge, I answered
promptly, “I never cried for such a thing in my life: I hate going out in the
carriage. I cry because I am miserable.”
“Oh fie,
Miss!” said Bessie.
The good
apothecary appeared a little puzzled. I was standing before him; he fixed
his eyes on me very steadily: his eyes were small and grey; not very bright,
but I dare say I should think them shrewd now: he had a hard-featured yet
good-natured looking face. Having considered me at leisure, he said—
“What made
you ill yesterday?”
“She had a
fall,” said Bessie, again putting in her word.
“Fall!
why, that is like a baby again! Can’t she manage to walk at her age?
She must be eight or nine years old.”
“I was
knocked down,” was the blunt explanation, jerked out of me by another pang of
mortified pride; “but that did not make me ill,” I added; while Mr. Lloyd
helped himself to a pinch of snuff.
As he was
returning the box to his waistcoat pocket, a loud bell rang for the servants’
dinner; he knew what it was. “That’s for you, nurse,” said he; “you can
go down; I’ll give Miss Jane a lecture till you come back.”
Bessie
would rather have stayed, but she was obliged to go, because punctuality at
meals was rigidly enforced at Gateshead Hall.
“The fall
did not make you ill; what did, then?” pursued Mr. Lloyd when Bessie was gone.
“I was
shut up in a room where there is a ghost till after dark.”
I saw Mr.
Lloyd smile and frown at the same time.
“Ghost!
What, you are a baby after all! You are afraid of ghosts?”
“Of Mr.
Reed’s ghost I am: he died in that room, and was laid out there. Neither
Bessie nor any one else will go into it at night, if they can help it; and it
was cruel to shut me up alone without a candle,—so cruel that I think I shall
never forget it.”
“Nonsense!
And is it that makes you so miserable? Are you afraid now in daylight?”
“No: but
night will come again before long: and besides,—I am unhappy,—very unhappy, for
other things.”
“What
other things? Can you tell me some of them?”
How much I
wished to reply fully to this question! How difficult it was to frame any
answer! Children can feel, but they cannot analyse their feelings; and if
the analysis is partially effected in thought, they know not how to express the
result of the process in words. Fearful, however, of losing this first
and only opportunity of relieving my grief by imparting it, I, after a
disturbed pause, contrived to frame a meagre, though, as far as it went, true
response.
“For one
thing, I have no father or mother, brothers or sisters.”
“You have
a kind aunt and cousins.”
Again I
paused; then bunglingly enounced—
“But John
Reed knocked me down, and my aunt shut me up in the red-room.”
Mr. Lloyd
a second time produced his snuff-box.
“Don’t you
think Gateshead Hall a very beautiful house?” asked he. “Are you not very
thankful to have such a fine place to live at?”
“It is not
my house, sir; and Abbot says I have less right to be here than a servant.”
“Pooh! you
can’t be silly enough to wish to leave such a splendid place?”
“If I had
anywhere else to go, I should be glad to leave it; but I can never get away
from Gateshead till I am a woman.”
“Perhaps
you may—who knows? Have you any relations besides Mrs. Reed?”
“I think
not, sir.”
“None
belonging to your father?”
“I don’t
know. I asked Aunt Reed once, and she said possibly I might have some
poor, low relations called Eyre, but she knew nothing about them.”
“If you
had such, would you like to go to them?”
I
reflected. Poverty looks grim to grown people; still more so to children:
they have not much idea of industrious, working, respectable poverty; they
think of the word only as connected with ragged clothes, scanty food, fireless
grates, rude manners, and debasing vices: poverty for me was synonymous with
degradation.
“No; I
should not like to belong to poor people,” was my reply.
“Not even
if they were kind to you?”
I shook my
head: I could not see how poor people had the means of being kind; and then to
learn to speak like them, to adopt their manners, to be uneducated, to grow up
like one of the poor women I saw sometimes nursing their children or washing
their clothes at the cottage doors of the village of Gateshead: no, I was not
heroic enough to purchase liberty at the price of caste.
“But are
your relatives so very poor? Are they working people?”
“I cannot
tell; Aunt Reed says if I have any, they must be a beggarly set: I should not
like to go a begging.”
“Would you
like to go to school?”
Again I
reflected: I scarcely knew what school was: Bessie sometimes spoke of it as a
place where young ladies sat in the stocks, wore backboards, and were expected
to be exceedingly genteel and precise: John Reed hated his school, and abused
his master; but John Reed’s tastes were no rule for mine, and if Bessie’s
accounts of school-discipline (gathered from the young ladies of a family where
she had lived before coming to Gateshead) were somewhat appalling, her details
of certain accomplishments attained by these same young ladies were, I thought,
equally attractive. She boasted of beautiful paintings of landscapes and
flowers by them executed; of songs they could sing and pieces they could play,
of purses they could net, of French books they could translate; till my spirit
was moved to emulation as I listened. Besides, school would be a complete
change: it implied a long journey, an entire separation from Gateshead, an
entrance into a new life.
“I should
indeed like to go to school,” was the audible conclusion of my musings.
“Well,
well! who knows what may happen?” said Mr. Lloyd, as he got up. “The
child ought to have change of air and scene,” he added, speaking to himself;
“nerves not in a good state.”
Bessie now
returned; at the same moment the carriage was heard rolling up the gravel-walk.
“Is that
your mistress, nurse?” asked Mr. Lloyd. “I should like to speak to her
before I go.”
Bessie
invited him to walk into the breakfast-room, and led the way out. In the
interview which followed between him and Mrs. Reed, I presume, from
after-occurrences, that the apothecary ventured to recommend my being sent to
school; and the recommendation was no doubt readily enough adopted; for as
Abbot said, in discussing the subject with Bessie when both sat sewing in the
nursery one night, after I was in bed, and, as they thought, asleep, “Missis
was, she dared say, glad enough to get rid of such a tiresome, ill-conditioned
child, who always looked as if she were watching everybody, and scheming plots
underhand.” Abbot, I think, gave me credit for being a sort of infantine
Guy Fawkes.
On that
same occasion I learned, for the first time, from Miss Abbot’s communications
to Bessie, that my father had been a poor clergyman; that my mother had married
him against the wishes of her friends, who considered the match beneath her;
that my grandfather Reed was so irritated at her disobedience, he cut her off
without a shilling; that after my mother and father had been married a year,
the latter caught the typhus fever while visiting among the poor of a large
manufacturing town where his curacy was situated, and where that disease was
then prevalent: that my mother took the infection from him, and both died
within a month of each other.
Bessie,
when she heard this narrative, sighed and said, “Poor Miss Jane is to be
pitied, too, Abbot.”
“Yes,” responded
Abbot; “if she were a nice, pretty child, one might compassionate her
forlornness; but one really cannot care for such a little toad as that.”
“Not a
great deal, to be sure,” agreed Bessie: “at any rate, a beauty like Miss
Georgiana would be more moving in the same condition.”
“Yes, I
doat on Miss Georgiana!” cried the fervent Abbot. “Little darling!—with
her long curls and her blue eyes, and such a sweet colour as she has; just as
if she were painted!—Bessie, I could fancy a Welsh rabbit for supper.”
“So could
I—with a roast onion. Come, we’ll go down.” They went.
To be continued