Jane Eyre
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If you've read both Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights - Rochester or Heathcliff?
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Jan 15, 2013 04:52PM

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Good point, Rosanna. I don't especially like Rochester, but I hadn't thought about how he could have treated his wife, locking her in the attic seems pretty bad, but the asylum would have been worlds worse.


Hmm... Interesting. Why do I like Heathcliff?
He loved Catherine so much he went..."
He was so cruel in the end that I hated him and I had already hated Catherine so I hated that book. Rochester was just a good man who made a mistake and paid the price but still existed as a good man.


(I guess I should add, though, that Jane Eyre is my favorite book ever and I can't stand Wuthering Heights, but I can't say which is the chicken and which is the egg when it comes to the hero/antihero of each.)

Have you read North and South by Elizabeth Gaskel? Mr. Thornton is my favorite male lead.

Rochester was selfish, too, and I can't really say that it came of a great love, because he didn't even think about what Jane would feel if she married him and later found out the truth (which was inevitable) and the consequences for her if the truth became widely known. But he wasn't ever deliberately cruel, as Heathcliff was, though he could wound with indifference.
So there is no contest for me; I would choose Rochester. However, on an everyday basis, I think a brooding hero would be rather wearing to have around.

Wide Sargasso Sea was a different author's take on Rochester. I don't think you see abuse reading Jane Eyre. Like others have said before, he tried to have Bertha cared for instead of being abused and neglected in an insane asylum.



How can you actually even apply that to the interpretation of Jane Eyre? This was a modern author's take on what happened and can in no way be taken as "evidence" of Rochester's alleged "abuse" of Bertha. In those times, no one would have thought poorly of him dumping his crazy wife in an asylum. Instead, he didn't want her to be mistreated there and hired a nurse to care for her. That's more evidence of kindness than abuse.

How can you actually even apply that to the interpretation of Jane Eyre? This was a modern author's ta..."
You are right . This is an imaginative rescuing of Bertha from being a stereotype. But the fact remains that he lied to Jane about Bertha. I think that's a clear indication of what type of a man he is.

How can you actually even apply that to the interpretation of Jane Eyre? This was a modern..."
He should have told her, but I can certainly see why he did not. He loved Jane and wanted to marry her but was forbidden to divorce Bertha. In his heart, he was divorced from Bertha and to him, that was enough to move forward with Jane. I think he knew before proposing to Jane that she would never agree to just be his mistress and not being with Jane would be unthinkable to him.

How can you actually even apply that to the interpretation of Jane Eyre? This..."
He was selfish and deceptive. He only thought of himself.



Exactly! I could accept deceit over physical and emotional abuse any day. To discredit Rochester for lying but not discrediting physical and emotional abuse (and torturing and killing an animal) is sort of troublesome.

To say I prefer Heathcliff to Rochester because Rochester was deceitful instead of being cruel is putting words in my mouth. I realize that Heathcliff turned into a monster toward the middle of the story, but he still has my sympathy. The scene where he dies and Hareton sobs uncontrollably is one of the most heartbreaking scenes in literature (in my opinion)
I do not judge literature with my mind. If I were to do that, then both Rochester and Heathcliff are damned characters. I read literature with my heart and I just sympathize with Heathcliff more than I do with Rochester, maybe because I know where he comes from and how his childhood shaped the man he became.
It is actually very hard to judge both Heathcliff and Rochester because they are after all Byronic heros who are by definition sympathetic despite having flawed characters.
But still we all root for one or the other. And this is testimony to the greatness of the Brontes who have created two of the greatest characters in English lit.

Heathcliff hands down. This is fantasy - I like passion in my fantasy. Raw, unadulterated, the-Hell-with-everything-else PASSION. Heathcliff delivers that in spades.
Now for real life - I suppose I choose Rochester every time.
Now for real life - I suppose I choose Rochester every time.

Read Sargasso Sea too, loved it. I'm with you. Neither of them. They're both rather poor specimens, emotionally, morally, psychologically speaking. And sooo needy.


Yes, Fitzwilliam Darcy remains the standard by which literature men are measured.


But as long as we're offering other options, may I suggest Captain Wentworth or Gilbert Markham from The Tenant of Wildfell Hall?



Agreed."
It's a well-used trope in literature that the character who's outwardly..."
Yes, I agree. The reader feels sympathy for Heathcliff at this point. Catherine sometimes annoyed me with her selfishness.

Heathcliff, the devil incarnate, had reason for his anger and obsessions. I felt for him.
Yet Rochester is just as much a brooding Byronic hero with just as much passion for his woman...just not as violent.
I'm probably the only guy who will post on this page, but my wife and I have been following it with interest. We came to sort of a compromise.
So long as you are alive, you want Rochester as a husband, to love you and be devoted. But when you die, you want Heathcliff to contrive a merciless vengeance upon those who wronged your love in life. Fair balance?
However bad one may think of Heathcliff, it must be known that he and Catherine deserved each other, for they were more alike than even they knew. That can be interpreted either way, good or bad. She deserved someone that complemented her personality, and her depravity.
Also, Heathcliff never violated any of Catherine's (admittedly screwed-up) principles. Rochester GOT CAUGHT, and that's why Jane left. "And you would thrust a wife upon me?" is like Homer Simpson telling Marge "I swear! I thought you'd never find out!"
And while we are engaging in fantasy, I think Heathcliff, if he had been in Rocherster's position, would have bilked St John's family out of every last dime, owned their property, and then sold and shipped off St John as a slave to wherever it is he was going as a missionary.
So long as you are alive, you want Rochester as a husband, to love you and be devoted. But when you die, you want Heathcliff to contrive a merciless vengeance upon those who wronged your love in life. Fair balance?
However bad one may think of Heathcliff, it must be known that he and Catherine deserved each other, for they were more alike than even they knew. That can be interpreted either way, good or bad. She deserved someone that complemented her personality, and her depravity.
Also, Heathcliff never violated any of Catherine's (admittedly screwed-up) principles. Rochester GOT CAUGHT, and that's why Jane left. "And you would thrust a wife upon me?" is like Homer Simpson telling Marge "I swear! I thought you'd never find out!"
And while we are engaging in fantasy, I think Heathcliff, if he had been in Rocherster's position, would have bilked St John's family out of every last dime, owned their property, and then sold and shipped off St John as a slave to wherever it is he was going as a missionary.

Jane thought that Adele didn't particularly look like Rochester, but she wasn't exactly a disinterested observer. There was actually no way to tell if he was Adele's father or not. As we all know from occasional glimpses of the Maury Povich show, one or two people saying "that baby looks nothing like him" in no way influences DNA test results (which, of course, did not exist in the early 1800s).



"I sometimes have a queer feeling with regard to you--especially when you are near me, as now: it is as if I had a string somewhere under my left ribs, tightly and inextricably knotted to a similar string situated in the corresponding quarter of your little frame. And if that boisterous Channel, and two hundred miles or so of land come broad between us, I am afraid that cord of communion will be snapt; and then I've a nervous notion I should take to bleeding inwardly. As for you,--you'd forget me."
I mean, come one <3
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