Jane Eyre
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Why didn't Mr. Rochester send Bertha to an institution?
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Sandy
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Jul 21, 2014 07:11PM

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Think Arkum Asylum . . .



lol.
I mean, if she had been like this at the very beginning or became like this after having been locked for so many years.

Actually, Victorian asylums seemed to make an effort to treat their patients way better than what they considered the stereotype of the lunatic house and to help them carry normal lives. The book may have been written during the transition from the poor conditions "of old", when the asylums were horrific places. Later on, they became horrific again, until they were closed.




Yes, but Scarlett was in perfect conditions, physical and mental. You cannot possibly compare her to Bertha, who had lost her with and judgement at once.

Yes, I also think he could have afforded the best institution.
And why didn't he send Adele to school? Wasn' it too dangerous for the little girl to live at Thornfield?
Of course, without the girl living at Thornfield, then Jane Eyre couldn't come and wouldn't meet Mr. Rochester and Bertha...


I see your point, but all we can do is guess with the little information that we have. Depending on which moment of Victorian times the author was talking about, it could have been better, especially because Rochester was rich and could afford the best. For Bertha, it could have been pretty much the same (we don't know if she recognized people). For the rest of the household, it was safer without her, but perhaps that wasn't obvious to Rochester?
I wonder if his decision was also based on hiding the fact from people who knew him. People would know if Rochester had a wife in an asylum, but... nobody had to know he had one locked up in his attic?
The question about sending his daughter to school is trickier. I guess he just thought he could handle the situation. Maybe he never thought Bertha would be that dangerous.

I see your point, but all we can do is guess with th..."
I think Mr. Rochester knew Bertha was that dangerous. The first time Jane saved him from the fire, he was sort of calm, this happened before, he knew right away who did what, he asked Jane not to tell anybody.




Queen Victoria was the one who started with birth certificates and regular census and stuff, so probably Charlotte Bronte (and Jane Eyre, and Bertha, and Rochester) belonged to the last generation before it was a stable practice and people got used to it. It was cool to see that, too.
Now, while Bertha wasn't even English, making it less likely to have a birth certificate, the "illegitimate relative" only worked because nobody had seen her. The descriptions of Bertha are ambiguous, but make it obvious that she doesn't look British. Yes, people could have taken Rochester's word and fake paperwork in front of him, but the rumors and gossip could have been different behind his back.
Oh, the world of "what if"... I love it!


Alas, it is something that is lost on the modern reader. I hadn't even thought of it until this thread popped up.

And if the story was something different for Rochester's decision of keeping her, he could go to another town or country and marry Jane in a safe place without any bothering of Bertha's family.

That makes some sense. Thanks Brenda and Laura.


I think 'institution' would have been a better choice of words."
Thanks Gertt, advice taken.

I would agree with you if not for the fact that her caregiver was a drunk and obviously incapable of properly caring for her, otherwise she wouldn't have escaped so many times to catch people on fire. She should at least have had a separate day and night nurse. Instead of a dark attic, he could have placed her in a country cottage with a team of caregivers, headed by someone he trusted, where she would have had pleasant surroundings and adequate care. It would certainly have been safer for everyone. As it was, what he did was probably kinder than even the best institution, but just barely. He did just enough to feel that he had the moral high ground, but not enough to really be bothered. Until Jane came around he barely even visited to see if she was being well-cared for.
It's just silly to say he was compassionate because he could have killed her and didn't. That's just common human decency.



As we agree it's hard for Rochester to find someone who was willing to care for Bertha, so an institution could be a better choice where there were many professional people that were willing to care for her.
Also I don't think Jane was the only person who heard the laughters, I don't know why there were so many servants (seldom did Rochester stay there).
Why Adele was also there and hence Jane.
How dared Rochester invite his guests there to have a big party, wasn't Rochester afraid that the guests would hear Bertha's laughers in the evening?
All the people went there (including Mr Marson), so the story happened...



A country cottage with round the clock care sounds lovely, but Bertha was not a rational person, she was wild, violent and uncontrollable...Rochester was fortunat..."
Sorry I wasn't calling you silly. I was calling the idea that Rochester was compassionate just because he didn't kill Bertha silly. I wasn't even directing that at you, because that is not what you said. I wasn't trying to insult you.
It may be difficult to find good workers, but not impossible for a man of Rochester's vast wealth who could pay a decent wage. It's the least he could do considering a portion of his wealth was from Bertha's family. I also didn't mean that Bertha would wander freely in the country house. It wouldn't have had to be much to be better than a dark old attic. Locking her up in the attic with nothing but a drunk to watch her was a convenient way to get her out of the way. And it proved to be dangerous to her and others. She probably wouldn't have died if she had had adequate care, even just one additional person to watch her at night. I stand by my statement before, it may have been better than the best institution but just barely. The fact that he could have done worse is no excuse for him not doing better.
I suppose this is a topic I shouldn't even engage in, since I have several mentally ill people in my family and it's a sensitive subject. He may have been rushed into marriage, but he did marry her. He vowed to care for her in sickness and in health. And he did. But if he wasn't so bent on secrecy, if he had had more consideration for Bertha than he did for his own reputation, he could have done much better for her. That's all.

But you cannot demand of the period what is not there. They didn't give Bertha an MRI or Zoloft, either. Victorian medicine was truly ooky and monstrously primitive, and there is no getting around that.

Totally agree. Thanks.

he'd seen conditions in the asylums and for mercy's sake, couldn't bring himself to leave her there. i think he did the right thing. she was his wife. 'for better for worse, richer or poorer, in sickness and in health.'

he'd seen conditions in the asylums and for mercy's sake, couldn't bring himself to leave her there. i think he did the right..."
Thanks Jayne.
Maybe it was the best choice Mr. Rochester had thought. Mr. Rochester was a kind man for sure.
But It's like Lowood school was a better place for Jane than Gateshead, an institution would be a better place for Bertha than Thornfield. Was Lowood perfect? Hell no, but at least there were many people in the same boat.
I think having been locked in an attic for 15 years, a normal man could become insane.


he'd seen conditions in the asylums and for mercy's sake, couldn't bring himself to leave her there. i think he..."
i see what you're saying, but mrs rochester did have a nurse who attended to her, and she seemed too dangerous to be allowed the freedom to 'roam' the house at will. maybe the semi-isolation did aggravate her condition. who knows. but if i had a loved one with the same condition, i would rather keep them close to me with a trusted carer than hand them over to the complete mercy of an institution, where who knows how they might be treated. at least at thornfield edward could keep an eye on her ...

Awesome! I had no clue!

Wow, that's very interesting, at least new to me. Thanks for sharing!

I understand, indeed, many people do just like what you said.
While, Rochester didn't spend much time at Thornfield, seldom did he keep an eye on her either. He did it might be more for the sake of his own reputation as other readers implied.
I'm also thinking, had she been locked up before she's marriage too? I don't think so, I reckon she had led a better and happier life in Jamaica.

There was a white pigeon, it flied away, then Bertha opened her arms and "flied" like it and fell.
Does it imply how she desired a little freedom?

I think he had noble intentions in trying to care for her as best he could in those times. What I had a hard time forgiving him for is hiding her from everyone and attempting to deceive Jane.

@Jamie Lynn--It was a very politically incorrect (and besides that just plain incorrect) depiction of Bertha. Ouch. You're right.


Yes, it was unfair not only to Jane, but also to Bertha.
It's very sad. :)

OK, let's take a look at the history of psychiatric institutions.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lunatic_...
During the Enlightenment attitudes towards the mentally ill began to change. It came to be viewed as a disorder that required compassionate treatment that would aid in the rehabilitation of the victim. When the ruling monarch of the United Kingdom George III, who suffered from a mental disorder, experienced a remission in 1789, mental illness came to be seen as something which could be treated and cured.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jane_Eyre
The novel Jane Eyre is a first-person narrative of the title character. The novel is set somewhere in the north of England, during the reign of George III (1760–1820),

Yes, this is important. Yes, the descriptions of Bertha are kind of racist, but you have to consider the time when this was written. To give another example, I love all the Sherlock Holmes stories, even though there are a lot of racist and misogynistic descriptions and depictions in there.
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