Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Themes for Love
Through The Ages
- Expectations of society
- The relationship between Blanche
Ingram and Rochester represents
society's expectations of marriage
based on wealth and social class
rather than love
- ‘She Walks In Beauty’ also shows an idealised love,
without the speaker actually knowing the woman he
admires
- Mrs Fairfax embodies 19th Century attitudes
towards social class and marriage. She
disapproves of the relationship between
Rochester and Jane
- Blake criticises rules and restrictions in
'The Garden of Love'
- At Gateshead, Jane is treated
poorly by Mrs Reed and her
cousins. She is frequently
reminded about being a
“dependent”
- Rochester expects
Jane to stay with him
after finding out about
Bertha. Women were
expected to do what
men wanted them to
- In 'The Flea', the speaker tries to persuade
his lover to consummate their love
- In 'To His Coy Mistress', the speaker also tries to get
his lover to accept his romantic advances
- Rochester's arranged marriage to
Bertha was based on wealth
- Religion
- St John's strong
religious views
make him repress
his passion for
Rosamond. He
dedicates his life to
serving God, and
becomes a
missionary in India.
- In 'The Garden of
Love', Blake argues
that religion should
not impact sexual
freedom
- St John’s devotion to religion can be compared with the
presentation of obsessive love in ‘Non Sum Qualis Eram
Bonae Sub Regno Cynarae’
- This can be compared to the presentation
of selfless love in ‘Remember’
- Helen Burns is a source of inspiration for Jane.
Her religious teachings and trust in God
influence Jane throughout the novel and help
her to deal with the hardships she faces
- In the 'Garden of Love', Blake argues that
religion should be about love and
freedom.
- Jane's love for Rochester interferes with her religious
beliefs. Rochester replaces God as Jane's idol.
- Shakespeare’s ‘Sonnet 116’ explores
perfect, idealistic love
- 'The Flea' argues that passionate love itself is
scared, like religion
- In 'A Song (Absent from thee), Rochester may be
speaking to God, justifying his sinful behaviour
- St John wishes for Jane to marry him to help
with his missionary work, although this is not
what she wants. This offer could show the
oppressive and controlling nature of religious
devotion
- 'The Garden of Love' criticises the controlling
nature of religion
- Mr Brocklehurst uses the idea of “starve the
body to save the soul” at Lowood. The living
conditions and punishments at Lowood are
awful, with the aim of instilling Christian
values in the students.
- ‘The Garden of Love’ also
criticises religious
institutions
- Helen does not fear death, as she will
escape the suffering in the world and be
rewarded in Heaven.
- Grief and loss
- Helen tells Jane not to grieve for her
as she is being reunited with God
- This selfless attitude to love is also
shown by the speaker in
'Remember'
- In 'Ae Fond Kiss', although is Burns is upset
about losing 'Nancy', he accepts her
decision
- Helen continues to impact Jane's life
after her death
- The speaker in 'Remember'
wants to have a lasting impact
on their beloved
- Jane and Rochester's shared pain at their
parting
- In 'Ae Fond Kiss', separation is also presented as
sudden and painful
- Like in 'Sonnet 116', their love survives their separation
- ‘A Song (Absent From Thee)’ presents separation
as a painful, but inevitable, part of love
- Rochester’s relationship with Bertha was based
on lust rather than love, and both lost the
opportunity for true love and happiness
- The speaker in ‘The Scrutiny’ causes
pain through his attitude towards
women as conquests
- The knight in ‘La Belle Dame Sans Merci’ is condemned to a fate of
misery on the brink of death, left only with the memories of the time
he spent with the lady
- In Hardy’s ‘At An Inn’, the
speaker reflects on the lost
opportunity of love
- Dangerous sexuality
- Bertha was "unchaste", and
ends up "mad" and trapped
within Thornfield
- Men were much more able to express their sexuality. In 'A Song
(Absent from thee)', the speaker expects their lover to remain
faithful to them whilst they satisfy their desires for other women.
- Rochester threatens Jane when she tries to
leave him and tells her to "beware"
- The dangers of obsessive love can also be seen in ‘ Non
Sum Qualis Eram Bonae Sub Regno Cynarae’
- Rochester was trapped in an unhappy
marriage with Bertha. He was at first
"allured" by her, before realising she
wasn't what she appeared.
- 'Who So List To Hount' shows the danger's of sexuality.
The speaker chases after a woman to discover she is
owned by a powerful man.
- Bertha can be compared to the dangerous and
mysterious lady in ‘La Belle Dame Sans Merci’
- Throughout ‘Jane Eyre’ sexuality is linked
to sin, with religious links to the Garden
of Eden and the Sermon on the Mount
- Blake criticises the restrictive nature
of social conventions and organised
religion in ‘The Garden of Love’
- In ‘The Ruined Maid’, Hardy questions society’s
expectations of women being chaste
- Oppression of
women
- Rochester uses Blanche to make Jane jealous,
and disguises himself as a fortune-teller to find
out information that Jane otherwise would not
willingly tell him.
- In 'The Flea', the speaker uses a structured,
persuasive argument to convince his lover to
have sex, when she does not want to
- In 'A Song (Absent from thee)', the speaker
tries to persuade his lover to remain faithful
to him, whilst he has affairs with other women
- In 'To His Coy Mistress', the speaker tries to persuade a woman to
accept his romantic advances through a ‘carpe diem’ argument
- Rochester's treatment of Bertha shows the dangers
for women who did not control their passion
- In 'The Scrutiny', the speaker describes his quest to sleep with virgin women as like finding
"treasure" in "un-plowed-up ground". Women were valued on their chastity.
- Thomas Hardy challenges
stereotypes surrounding women’s
virginity in ‘The Ruined Maid’,
Amelia’s life has improved as a
prostitute
- Rochester's mistresses show how women were
just conquests for men
- In 'The Scrutiny', the speaker wants to go on a
"round", or a grand tour as a rite of passage,
sleeping with a variety of women
- In ‘A Song (Absent From Thee)’, the
speaker argues that his infidelity is a
natural instinct and beyond his control
- Eternal Love
- Jane and Rochester are
reunited after Rochester is
injured and Jane inherits a
fortune.
- 'Sonnet 116'
suggests that love
doesn't change with
time
- In 'A Song (Absent from thee)', the speaker thinks their
relationship won't change after his infidelity
- Jane continues to love Rochester even after
she finds out about Bertha and leaves
Thornfield
- The pain of eternal love is also
shown in ‘Ae Fond Kiss’
- In Hardy’s ‘At An Inn’, the speaker
regrets not recognising love until it
was too late
- Jane’s love for Helen lasts beyond death
- The speaker in ‘Remember’
wants to have a lasting influence
on their beloved after death
- In ‘ Non Sum Qualis Eram Bonae Sub Regno Cynarae’,
the speaker’s obsessive love for Cynara doesn’t fade
with time
- Blanche’s love for Rochester doesn’t last when
she discovers that his fortune isn’t what it was
said to be
- ‘She Walks in Beauty’ explores
an idealised love
- In ‘The Scrutiny’, the speaker’s interest
fades when he has taken the woman’s
virginity
- Rochester’s love relationship with Bertha is
based on lust and quickly breaks down
- In ‘To His Coy Mistress’, the speaker tries to convince
a woman to accept his advances, warning that they
will run out of time.
- Marriage and courtship
- During their month of courtship,
Rochester tries to lavish Jane with
gifts
- In 'To His Coy Mistress', the speaker promises
his lover gifts if she accepts his romantic
advances.
- In 'Who So List To Hount', the speaker enjoys
chasing after a woman to gain her favour
- Jane and
Rochester’s
relationship and
marriage breaks
societal
conventions
- In ‘The Flea’, the speaker tries to convince his lover to
sleep with him despite the “parents grudge”, arguing
that it will not impact her reputation
- Blake criticises these restrictions and
argues for sexual liberation in ‘The Garden
of Love’
- Rochester’s relationships with
Bertha and Blanche were based on
social reputation and wealth rather
than love
- Jane is only able to marry Rochester when he
is disabled and she gains a fortune
- Passionate and romantic
love
- The celestial imagery of the moon for Jane and the sun
for Rochester show how they compliment each other
- Jane and Rochester's painful parting shows
how passionate they were about each
other
- The motif of fire symbolises the passion between Jane and
Rochester, but with Bertha warns of the consequences of
allowing passion to be uncontrolled
- Sacrifice
- Rochester expects Jane to sacrifice her
reputation and live as his mistress
after their failed marriage
- The speaker in 'The Flea' also
tries to convince their lover to
have sex outside of marriage
- In ‘The Ruined Maid’, it is not the
prostitute Amelia who appears to
be “ruined”, but her friend
- Religious love is presented as a sacrifice
through St John’s devotion to God and his determination
to become a missionary
- Love is sacrificed for wealth and social status with
Rochester’s relationships with Blanche and Bertha
- Family
- Jane does not know a loving family as a child.
Mrs Reed treated her with cruelty
- Miss Temple acts as a maternal figure for
Jane, and Jane also finds platonic love with
Helen.
- In ‘At An Inn’, whilst the speaker regrets the lost
opportunity for love, the poem also shows the
importance of friendship
- Jane forgives Mrs Reed for mistreating
her, and visits her before she dies.
However, Mrs Reed still treats Jane badly.
- Jane finds a loving family with the Rivers. They keep in
contact with Jane, as shown in the conclusion.
- Like in 'Sonnet 116', the love of family is presented as
eternal, and acts as a guiding light (Jane is guided to
the Rivers by the light of a candle)
- Romantic
commitment
- Jane looks after Rochester at
Ferndean Manor after he is blinded
after the fire at Thornfield
- Jane's love for Rochester does not fade with beauty,
a sentiment echoed in 'Sonnet 116'
- Jane was surprised that Rochester wasn't
often visiting Blanche Ingram during their
courtship. This would have been
expected.
- Separation is presented as painful in ‘Ae Fond Kiss’
- Jane is always happy to help Rochester. She
helps with Mr Mason when he is injured,
save's Rochester's life and allows Rochester to
confide in her
- Rochester did not commit to relationships with his
mistresses in Europe
- In 'A Song (Absent from thee), the speaker is unfaithful to his lover,
and does not show romantic commitment, and yet expects it in
return
- In 'The Scrutiny', the speaker wants to try out a
variety of women before committing to a
relationship