Living with her aunt and being totally outcasted like a stranger has her at her wits end. Then when they send her to school for ten years was a blessing to Jane. After having achieved all she could at the school, she deems it appropriate to move on, so she does and gets a …show more content…
Reed, punishes her unjustly on one occasion Mrs. Reed locks Jane in the red room. As she is in the room, she starts seeing things and becomes hysterical, ¨Oh! I saw a light, and I thought a ghost would come.¨ (Bronte 21.) Jane got so worked up she eventually passes out, although she was distressed nobody let her out of the red room. The servants fetch a doctor to see Jane and later when she is coherent enough to have a conversation the doctor asks her if she would like to go to school. She loves the idea, later her aunt and her are alone in the room and when Mrs. Reed dismisses her so rudely she contemplates giving her a piece of her mind. As she makes her way to the door she turns and lets her have it. “I am glad you are no relation of mine… people think you a good woman, but you are bad, hard-hearted. You are deceitful!”(Bronte 29). The fact that her aunt was the one who put her in the room and didn't allow anyone to release Jane from the room made her very upset with Mrs. Reed. Jane was determined to hate her aunt forever, but later in life, after she has matured, she is summed to her aunt's house and amends are …show more content…
Of course they did; for I felt their eyes directed like burning-glasses against my scorched skin” (Bronte 69). After being humiliated in front of the school. Jane found an unlikely strength in a peer, “I mastered the rising hysteria, lifted up my head, and took a firm stand on the stool” (Bronte 70). Jane keeps a straight face in front of everyone but once alone she submits to her feelings and reacts by weeping. Soon after her friend, Helen, accompanied her and soothed her. After having gone through such an ordeal she did her best to only have positive attention towards