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- Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre
- Nature in Jane Eyre
-
- Charlotte Bronte makes use of nature imagery throughout "Jane
- Eyre," and comments on both the human relationship with the outdoors and
- human nature. The Oxford Reference Dictionary defines "nature" as "1. the
- phenomena of the physical world as a whole . . . 2. a thing's essential
- qualities; a person's or animal's innate character . . . 4. vital force,
- functions, or needs." We will see how "Jane Eyre" comments on all of
- these.
- Several natural themes run through the novel, one of which is the
- image of a stormy sea. After Jane saves Rochester's life, she gives us the
- following metaphor of their relationship: "Till morning dawned I was tossed
- on a buoyant but unquiet sea . . . I thought sometimes I saw beyond its
- wild waters a shore . . . now and then a freshening gale, wakened by hope,
- bore my spirit triumphantly towards the bourne: but . . . a counteracting
- breeze blew off land, and continually drove me back." The gale is all the
- forces that prevent Jane's union with Rochester. Later, Brontδ, whether it
- be intentional or not, conjures up the image of a buoyant sea when
- Rochester says of Jane: "Your habitual expression in those days, Jane, was
- . . . not buoyant." In fact, it is this buoyancy of Jane's relationship
- with Rochester that keeps Jane afloat at her time of crisis in the heath:
- "Why do I struggle to
- retain a valueless life? Because I know, or believe, Mr. Rochester
- is living."
- Another recurrent image is Brontδ's treatment of Birds. We first
- witness Jane's fascination when she reads Bewick's History of British Birds
- as a child. She reads of "death-white realms" and "'the solitary rocks and
- promontories'" of sea-fowl. We quickly see how Jane identifies with the
- bird. For her it is a form of escape, the idea of flying above the toils
- of every day life. Several times the narrator talks of feeding birds
- crumbs. Perhaps Brontδ is telling us that this idea of escape is no more
- than a fantasy -- one cannot escape when one must return for basic
- sustenance. The link between Jane and birds is strengthened by the way
- Brontδ adumbrates poor nutrition at Lowood through a bird who is described
- as "a little hungry robin."
- Brontδ brings the buoyant sea theme and the bird theme together in
- the passage describing the first painting of Jane's that Rochester
- examines. This painting depicts a turbulent sea with a sunken ship, and on
- the mast perches a cormorant with a gold bracelet in its mouth, apparently
- taken from a drowning body. While the imagery is perhaps too imprecise to
- afford an exact interpretation, a possible explanation can be derived from
- the context of previous treatments of these themes. The sea is surely a
- metaphor for Rochester and Jane's relationship, as we have already seen.
- Rochester is often described as a "dark" and dangerous man, which fits the
- likeness of a cormorant; it is therefore likely that Brontδ sees him as the
- sea bird. As we shall see later, Jane goes through a sort of symbolic
- death, so it makes sense for her to represent the drowned corpse. The gold
- bracelet can be the purity and innocence of the old Jane that Rochester
- managed to capture before she left him.
- Having established some of the nature themes in "Jane Eyre," we can
- now look at the natural cornerstone of the novel: the passage between her
- flight from Thornfield and her acceptance into Morton.
- In leaving Thornfield, Jane has severed all her connections; she
- has cut through any umbilical cord. She narrates: "Not a tie holds me to
- human society at this moment." After only taking a small parcel with her
- from Thornfield, she leaves even that in the coach she rents. Gone are all
- references to Rochester, or even her past life. A "sensible" heroine might
- have gone to find her uncle, but Jane needed to leave her old life behind.
- Jane is seeking a return to the womb of mother nature: "I have no
- relative but the universal mother, Nature: I will seek her breast and ask
- repose." We see how she seeks protection as she searches for a resting
- place: "I struck straight into the heath; I held on to a hollow I saw
- deeply furrowing the brown moorside; I waded knee-deep in its dark growth;
- I turned with its turnings, and finding a moss-blackened granite crag in a
- hidden angle, I sat down under it. High banks of moor were about me; the
- crag protected my head: the sky was over that." In fact, the entire
- countryside around Whitecross is a sort of encompassing womb: "a
- north-midland shire . . . ridged with mountain: this I see. There are
- great moors behind and on each hand of me; there are waves of mountains far
- beyond that deep valley at my feet."
- It is the moon, part of nature, that sends Jane away from Thornfield.
- Jane narrates: "birds were faithful to their mates." Seeing
- herself as unfaithful, Jane is seeking an existence in nature where
- everything is simpler. Brontδ was surely not aware of the large number of
- species of bird that practice polygamy. While this fact is intrinsically
- wholly irrelevant to the novel, it makes one ponder whether nature is
- really so simple and perfect.
- The concept of nature in "Jane Eyre" is reminiscent of Hegel's view
- of the world: the instantiation of God. "The Lord is My Rock" is a popular
- Christian saying. A rock implies a sense of strength, of support. Yet a
- rock is also cold, inflexible, and unfeeling. The second definition listed
- above for "nature" mentions a thing's "essential qualities," and this very
- definition implies a sense of inflexibility. Jane's granite crag protects
- her without caring; the wild cattle that she fears are also part of nature.
- The hard strength of a rock is the very thing that makes it inflexible.
- Similarly, the precipitation that makes Jane happy as she leaves
- Thornfield, and the rain that is the life-force of everything in the heath,
- is the same precipitation that led her to narrate this passage: "But my
- night was wretched, my rest broken: the ground was damp . . . towards
- morning it rained; the whole of the following day was wet." Just like a
- benevolent God, nature will accept Jane no matter what: "Nature seemed to
- me benign and good; I thought she loved me, outcast as I was." Praying in
- the heather on her knees, Jane realizes that God is great: "Sure was I of
- His efficiency to save what He had made: convinced I grew that neither
- earth should perish, nor one of the souls it treasured."
- Unsurprisingly, given Brontδ's strongly anti-Church of England
- stance, Jane realizes at some level that this reliance on God is
- unsubstantiated: "But next day, Want came to me, pale and bare." Nature
- and God have protected her from harm, providing meager shelter, warding off
- bulls and hunters, and giving her enough sustenance in the form of wild
- berries to keep her alive. It is Jane's "nature," defined above as "vital
- force, functions, or needs," that drives her out of the heath. In the end,
- it is towards humanity that she must turn.
- Nature is an unsatisfactory solution to Jane's travails. It is
- neither kind nor unkind, just nor unjust. Nature does not care about Jane.
- She was attracted to the heath because it would not turn her away; it was
- strong enough to keep her without needing anything in return. But this
- isn't enough, and Jane is forced to seek sustenance in the town. Here she
- encounters a different sort of nature: human nature. As the shopkeeper and
- others coldly turn her away, we discover that human nature is weaker than
- nature. However, there is one crucial advantage in human nature: it is
- flexible. It is St. John and his sisters that finally provide the charity
- Jane so desperately needs. They have bent what is established as human
- nature to help her.
- Making this claim raises the issue of the nature of St. John -- has
- he a human nature, or is he so close to God that his nature is God-like?
- The answer is a bit of both. St. John is filled with the same
- dispassionate caring that God's nature provided Jane in the heath: he will
- provide, a little, but he doesn't really care for her. We get the feeling
- on the heath, as Jane stares into the vastness of space, that she is just
- one small part of nature, and that God will not pay attention to that level
- of detail. Similarly, she says of St. John: "he forgets, pitilessly, the
- feelings and claims of little people, in pursuing his own large views." On
- the other hand, St. John exhibits definitely human characteristics, most
- obvious being the way he treats Jane after she refuses to marry him. He
- claims not to be treating her badly, but he's lying to himself: "That
- night, after he had kissed his sisters, he thought proper to forget even to
- shake hands with me, but left the room in silence." What is important here
- is that St. John is more human than God, and thus he and his sisters are
- able to help Jane.
- From the womb, Jane is reborn. She sees the future as an "awful
- blank: something like the world when the deluge was gone by." She takes a
- new name, Jane Elliott. With a new family, new friends, and a new job, she
- is a new person. And the changes go deeper than that. The time she spent
- in the heath and the moors purged her, both physically and mentally. Jane
- needed to purge, to destroy the old foundations before she could build
- anew.
- It is necessary to examine these scenes of nature in the context of
- the early to mid nineteenth-century. This was of course the time of the
- Industrial Revolution, when as Robert Ferneaux Jordan put it, there was "a
- shift from the oolite, the lias and the sand to the coal measures. What had
- been the wooded hills of Yorkshire or Wales became, almost overnight, a
- land of squalid villages and black, roaring, crowded cities. Villages and
- small country markets became the Birminghams and Glasgows that we know."
- They were draining the fens and the flats. For Brontδ, this posits the
- heath in "Jane Eyre" as something dated, the past more than the future.
- Jane therefore must leave it in order to remake herself.
- Another aspect of nineteenth-century England relevant to nature in
- "Jane Eyre" was the debate over evolution versus Creationism. Though
- Darwin didn't release "On the Origin of Species" until 1859, the seeds were
- already being sown; indeed, there's speculation that Charles Darwin's
- grandfather adumbrated some of Charles' theories. Lamark was the principle
- predecessor of Darwin in terms of evolutionary theory. Though he turned
- out to be completely wrong, he and others provided opposition for the
- Creationists of the first half of the nineteenth century. One of
- evolution's principles is "survival of the fittest," and this is exactly
- what happens to Jane in the heath. Her old self is not strong enough, and
- must die. The new Jane she is forging is a product of natural selection.
- In fact, Jane is echoing the victory of evolution over Creation by the fact
- that it is humans who save her, and not God.
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