Jane Eyre

JANE came round from a dead faint, to find herself in the care of two sisters and their brother, St John Rivers.*

St John’s burning ambition was to go to India as a missionary, and it was not long before he asked Jane to accompany him as his wife.

Though Jane knew it was a marriage of convenience only, it seemed a noble sacrifice. Yet even as she resolved to accept, she was startled by what sounded like Edward’s voice, distant, ghost-like, calling her name in pain.

Jane raced back over the miles to Thornfield Hall, only to find it a blackened, burned-out shell.

In a final act of insane malice, Bertha had torched the house, and in trying without success to rescue her, Edward had been blinded and disfigured.

But Jane did not care. Her Aunt Reed, as she lay dying, had confessed hiding a handsome legacy from her, and Edward was free to marry. And Jane married him.

Based on ‘Jane Eyre’ by Charlotte Brontë.

When it is a Christian name, St John is pronounced sin-jun.

Précis
After finding at the altar that Mr Rochester was already married, Jane was ready to accept a loveless marriage in the cause of the Gospel. But a mysterious voice called to her in grief, and she fled back to her Edward. Now he was free to marry, but helpless – and Jane had found her Gospel calling.
Sevens

Suggest answers to this question. See if you can limit one answer to exactly seven words.

How did Jane respond to St John’s proposal?

Jigsaws

Express the ideas below in a single sentence, using different words as much as possible. Do not be satisfied with the first answer you think of; think of several, and choose the best.

St John asked her to marry him. He did not love Jane. She knew.

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