Jane Eyre
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If you've read both Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights - Rochester or Heathcliff?
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Breea
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May 21, 2013 10:02PM

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if you're a romantic nature - Rochester for sure

Jane and him were needy for affection..
But emotional dependency is not love !
I don't like Heathcliff he has Narcissistic personality disorder ..he is the typical obsessed lover..
those sociopaths.. ( folks thinks they are just killers.. ) no no most are obsessed Narcissistic people
and that is not love ..
Cathy was another obsessed person too..
they did not love each other...to me that was not love!
it was a sick obsession..



Rochester all the freaking way.

Heathcliff was an abusive jerk. To Catherine, Isabella, Hindley, Hareton, Linton... Everyone! I feel bad for him, for the childhood he had--but it doesn't excuse his terrible behavior. And Rochester, though sometimes mean-spirited, treated Jane as an equal and truly loved her for allowing her to choose her life.

Why do I even bother keeping up with this discussion? It's all just Rochester, Rochester, Rochester!








Totally agree with you, Heathcliff's revenge was brutal and had reached innocent people. Many people feel sorry for what'd happened to him, I do sometimes but only a bit, but that can never be an execuse for his horrible deeds.
Rochester on the other hand had just lied, but only because he loved Jane, though it's still a lie and a betrayal to the trust she gave him.
If their love to their beloved ones were compared, we can't say that one's love was more intimate than the other.
If they were compared as persons I'd go for Rochester.


Heathcliff for me every time - there's something about his darkness, complexity and passion that sets him apart from most male protagonists. However, Rochester isn't exactly what I would class as a 'boring' option...there's a lot to be said for his rationality and the love between him and Jane is far more stable and healthy. Catherine and Heathcliff are volatile, and even though I think I enjoyed the experience of reading about them more, I certainly wouldn't want my own relationship to be like theirs!





Here, here!!
Megha wrote: "Rochester but then if Heathcliff loved as mush as he loved Catherine then i would choose Heathcliff. He never tortured or abused Catherine. Did he????"
Nope, never did.
Nope, never did.



Mind wrote: "Ahem,as a Heathcliff person, I am chiming back in, as this overwhelming approval of Rochester is unwarranted. Wasn't Rochester busy flirting with, and leading on, a nasty woman who wanted to marry ..."
I love this. I really love it. Sooooooo true. I am speechless.
I love this. I really love it. Sooooooo true. I am speechless.



I believe that he become so hardhearted because all what he suffered.


"Jane Eyre" is one of my very favorites.......

Mr. Rochester had many flaws, yet he still remained redeemable
because he lied out of true love for Jane. On top of that, he eventually admits that it was wrong of him to try and force Jane to be his mistress and deceive her into a dishonest union.
Heathcliff, on the other hand, is merciless and cruel. I think that he is more obsessed with Catherine than in love with her. After all, he selfishly goes to see her to fulfill his own desires when Nellie tells him that the very sight of him in Catherine's condition could kill her (which it does). Heathcliff doesn't seem to truly empathize with any character, and he selfishly tries to make Cathy's decisions for her from the very beginning. He's also an abusive, manipulative mean-spirited, and sociopathic man. Heathcliff could be redeemable if he just let go of his past injustices, but he can't. Heathcliff's grudging nature is perhaps his fatal flaw.
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