"There was no possibility of taking a walk that day." "The cold winter wind had brought with it clouds so somber i was glad of it." "I never liked long walks, especially on chilly afternoons." "Come, my darlings." "John, dear, just one to start with, and one for you, georgiana." "Oh, thank you, mama." "And one for my darling eliza." "Thank you, mama, thank you." "You are hungry after your play." "Bessie, why did you let them stay out so late?" "A minute more and they would have been caught in the rain." "Well, it was that jane, ma'am." "I called and called, but she'd gone off on her own, and i couldn't find her anywhere." "Of course." "You may go, bessie." "What does bessie say i have done, aunt reed?" "A child must not take up her elders." "Until you can speak pleasantly, remain silent." "Boo!" "Where the dickens is she?" "Lizzy." "Georgy." "Jane is not here." "Tell mama she is run out in the rain." "Bad animal." "What do you want?" "What do you want, what?" "What do you want, cousin?" "Cousin?" "Starveling cousin." "Orphan cousin." "Call me master reed." "I want you to come here." "That's for your impudence to mama and me." "And for your sneaking ways, getting behind curtains, you rat." "What were you doing behind the curtain?" "I was reading." "Show the book." "You are dependent." "Mama says you have no money." "I'll teach you." "Wicked boy!" "You never stop bullying me." "Rats." "You're like a murderer." "Rats." "You're like a slave driver!" "Mama!" "You're like the roman emperors... jane, no!" "Disgraceful!" "Oh, dear, dear." "If you had heard what she said to me." "Did anybody see such a picture of passion?" "Abbot, bessie." "Take her to the red room and lock her in there." "No!" "Oh." "Miss jane, come on." "Let me go!" "He hit me, bessie." "He is always hitting me." "Boys will be boys, miss jane." "Hold her arms, miss abbot." "She's like a mad cat." "For shame, for shame, miss eyre." "Hold still, will you?" "Get in." "No." "Come here." "Come here." "Come here!" "Now, it is not ladylike to strike a young gentleman... your benefactress's son, your youn master!" "Master?" "How is he my master?" "Am i a servant?" "No." "You are less than a servant." "For you do nothing for your keep." "Now sit down here and think over your wickedness." "Now, if you don't sit still, we shall have to tie your hands." "Lend me your garters, miss abbot, because she'd break mine directly." "Don't tie me up!" "I won't stir." "I promise." "Oh, she never did so before." "No, but it was always in her." "I've said so to missus before and missus agreed with me." "Oh, she's an under-hand little thing." "You ought to be aware, miss, that you are under obligations to mrs." "Reed." "If she were to turn you out, you'd have to go to poor house." "You'her dear dead husband to ponly took you in because he was your mother's brother." "So just you think on it, miss eyre." "You mustn't leave me in here." "My uncle died in that bed." "I try to do my duty, but i'm always punished." "It's only because i'm different." "I'm different from you all and you won't forgive me." "Come, bessie." "We will leave her." "I wouldn't have her heart for anything." "Aye." "But the ghost." "Say your prayers, child." "If you don't repent, own chimney and fetch you away., I come d own chimney and fetch you away., I come d" "it is unjust!" "Unjust!" "Let me out!" "Let me out, please!" "Aah!" "Let me out, please!" "Abbot, bessie, i'm frightened!" "Help!" "Let me out, abbot, bessie, please!" "Miss jane, are you ill?" "What a dreadful noise." "It went right through me." "Let me out." "Let me go to my room." "What for?" "Are you hurt?" "Have you seen something?" "Oh, i saw a light." "I thought a ghost was coming." "A light?" "A light?" "Just now?" "You silly child." "That was ruddock the gardener." "I saw him crossing the lawn with a lantern." "I thought it was my uncle." "You screamed out on purpose." "I know your naughty tricks." "What is all this?" "Abbot." "Bessie, i believe i left orders that jane eyre should be locked in the red room till i came to her myself." "Miss jane screamed so loud, ma'am." "Let her go." "Child, release bessie's hand." "You cannot sby these means." "I abhor artifice, particularly in children." "You will now stay here an hour longer." "Aunt reed, please." "And it is only on condition of perfect submission and stillness that i shall liberate you then." "Oh, aunt, let me be punished some other way." "I cannot endure it." "I shall be killed if... silence!" "This violence is almost repulsive." "Go." "And never disobey me again!" "Yes, ma'am." "Yes, ma'am." "Aunt reed, please... aunt reed, please..." "Ah, ah." "Ah." "Good morning, miss eyre." "Good morning." "Well, who am i?" "Mr. Lloyd, the physician." "I... i was in that room." "Missus said i could let you out." "You were that quiet." "I thought you were dead when i saw you." "Could you eat a little now?" "No, thank you." "Could you sleep some more?" "Yes." "Ah." "And i shall get some rest, too." "'Cause i've been up all night with you." "I had sarah from kitchen for company." "I were that e." "What is the matter with me?" "Am i ill?" "You fell sick in red room." "With crying, i suppose." "You'll soon be better." "Don't try to talk just now." "I wonder if she did see some'at." "Missus was rather too hard with her." "Well, never mind that now." "We'll leave jane to sleep." "Now, plenty of sleep, miss eyre." "And i'll call back and see you again this afternoon." "Thank you." "?" "In the days that we went gypsying?" "?" "A long time ago?" "?" "Oh, the days that we went gypsying?" "?" "A long time ago?" "Come, miss jane, don't cry." "Have a bit of tart." "I cannot." "Please forgive me, bessie." "Perhaps later." "Doctor's here, bessie." "And it's dinner time." "What?" "Already up?" "Les well, nurse, how is she?" "She's doing very well, except she won't eat." "Oh, she will when she's hungry." "If you are well, you should look more cheerful." "Come here, jane." "Your name is jane, is it not?" "Yes, sir." "Well, miss jane eyre, you've been crying." "Can you tell me what about?" "Ou in pain?" "Can you tell me what about?" "Are y no, sir." "Oh, i dare say she was crying 'cause she could not go out with missus in carriage." "I never cried for such a thing in my life." "I hate going out in the carriage." "I cry because i am miserable." "Oh, fie, miss." "Well, jane, what made you ill last night?" "She had a fall." "Fall." "Well, that's like a baby again." "You can walk at your age." "I was knocked down, but that didn't make me ill." "Oh, that would be for you, nurse." "Go for your dinner." "Yes, sir." "Well, jane, the fall didn't make you ill." "What did then?" "I was shut up in a room where there is a ghost till after dark." "Ghost?" "What, you are a baby after all." "Ha ha." "You're afraid of ghosts?" "Of mr." "Reed's ghost i am." "They told me something about a gardener, but mr." "Reed died in that room." "No one would go into it at night." "It was cruel to shut me up in it without a candle." "So cruel that i shall never forget it." "Are you afraid now in daylight?" "No, but night will come again soon." "And besides, i am unhappy." "Very unhappy..." "for other things." "What other things?" "Could you tell me some of them?" "Well, for one thing, i have no mother or father, brothers or sisters." "You have a kind aunt and cousins." "But john reed knocked me down and my aunt shut me up in the red room." "Don't you think gateshead hall is a beautiful house?" "Are you not indeed thankful to have such a fine place to live at?" "It's not my house, sir." "Abbot says i have less right to be here than a servant." "Ha ha." "Pooh." "You can't be silly enough to want to leave such a splendid place." "My aunt wouldn't have kept me here if my uncle hadn't made her promise in his last moments." "I should be glad to leave it... if there was anywhere else to go." "But i can never leave gateshead till i am a woman." "Perhaps you may." "Who knows?" "Would you like to go to school?" "I should indeed like to go to school." "Well, who knows what may happen." "Ah, mrs." "Reed is back i see." "Missus is back, sir." "Yes." "I would like to speak to her before i go." "She's in breakfast room." "Will you come with me, sir?" "Thank you." "Good-bye, jane." "And if i don't see you again, remember, i've not forgotten you." "Remember, i've not forgotten you." "My discourse with mr." "Lloyd awakened hope in me." "But days and weeks passed, except that she now kept me and her own children apart even more than ever." "My only comfort was from books." "Caught you again stealing my books." "I'm not stealing." "I'm borrowing." "And they're not yours." "They will be." "All of this house will be mine one day." "And i'll have the right to punish you." "Mama!" "Mama!" "Mama!" "She flew at me like a wildcat." "Don't talk to me about her, john." "I told you not to go near her." "She's not worthy of notice." "I do not choose that either you or your sisters should associate with her." "They are not fit to associate with me!" "Why, you... come here." "Come." "Come on." "Come on." "Don't you dare rise from that place or utter one syllable fday." "What would uncle reed say to you if he were alive?" "What?" "My uncle reed is in heaven and can see all you do and think, they know how you shut me up all day and wish me dead." "Ooh... ooh." "Without a doubt, miss jane, you're the most wicked and abandoned child ever reared under a roof." "Bessie!" "You awake, miss jane?" "Yes, bessie." "I've brought you some nice gingerbread." "Eat it up, now." "I shan't stir till you have." "that supper she sent you wasn't enough to feed a mouse." "Would you like some more gingerbread or some bread and butter?" "No." "This is all i want, thank you." "Now be a good girl and go to sleep." "Now." "Good night, miss jane." "Good night, bessie." "Good night, bessie." "Miss jane, take off your pinafore." "Have you washed your hands and face?" "Of course, but... hurry when your told, you troublesome child." "Go down directly." "You're wanted at drawing room." "This is the little girl respecting whom i applied to you." "Her size is small." "What is her age?" "10 years." "So much?" "Your name, little girl." "Jane eyre, sir." "Well, jane eyre, and are you a good child?" "Perhaps the less said on that subject the better, mr." "Brocklehurst." "I am sorry indeed to hear it." "No sight so sad as that of a naughty child, especially a naughty girl." "Do you know where the wicked go after death?" "They go to hell." "And what is hell?" "Can you tell me that?" "A pit full of fire." "And should you like to fall into that pit and be burning there forever?" "No, sir." "What must you do to avoid it?" "I must keep in good health and not die." "How can you keep in good health?" "Children younger than you die daily." "I buried a little child of 5 years old only a day or two since." "Ild whose soul is now in heaven." "It is to be feared that the same could not be said of you, called hence." "I hope that sigh is from the heart and that you rep having been the occasion of discomfort to your excellent benefactress." "Of discomfort to your excellent benefactress." "Do you say your prayers, night and morning?" "Yes, sir." "Do you read your bible?" "Sometimes." "With pleasure?" "Are you fond of it?" "Bits of it." "Shocking." "I have a little boy, younger than you, who knows 6 psalms by heart and much else." "N you ask him whether he would rather have a gingerbread nut else." "E or learn a psalm, he says, "oh, a psalm to learn." ""Angels sing psalms, and i wish to be a little angel here below."" "He then gets 2 nuts as reward for his piety." "But psalms are not interesting." "That proves you have a wicked heart." "And you must pray to god to change it." "You may sit down, jane." "Mr. Brocklehurst, i believe i intimated to you in my letter that this girl's disposition and character is not quite what i could wish, should you admit her into lowood school." "School." "Be silent, child." "Should you consent to do so, mr." "Brocklehurst, i would be glad if the superintendent and teachers were requested to keep a strict eye upon her, and above all to guard against her worst fault, a tendency to deceit." "I mention this in your hearing, jane, that you may not attempt to impose on mr." "Brocklehurst." "Deceit is indeed a sad fault in a child." "It is akin to falsehood, and all liars will have their portion in the lake burning with fire and brimstone." "Amen." "She shall, however, be watched, mrs." "Reed." "I will speak to my headmistress, miss temple, and to the teachers." "I should wish her brought up with your permission, she will spend all her vacations at lowood." "You will not be burdened with her again, mrs." "Reed." "As to your you that pupils at lowood are taught humility as a christian grace and that worldly pride must be mortified." "That is a state of things i quite approve." "Plain food, simple attire, hardy accommodation, and constant activity... such is the order of the day at lowood." "Quite right, sir." "I may depend upon your receiving this child then, as a pupil?" "Madam, you may, and i trust she will show herself grateful for the privilege." "I will send her to you then, as soon as possible." "Of course." "I shall write and te miss temple to expect a new girl." "And i must bid you good morning." "May i?" "I shall return to brocklehurst hall in a week or so." "I am staying with my g friend, the arch deacon, and he will not permit me to leave him sooner." "And he will not permit me to leave him sooner." "Uh, see that my carriage is ready." "Good-bye, mrs." "Reed." "Good-bye, mr." "Brocklehurst." "And agusta and theodore and master broughton brocklehurst." "I will indeed." "Hmm... hmm... here is a book entitled the child's guide." "Read it with prayer, especially the account of the torments inflicted in hell upon deceitful children." "Of the torments inflicted in hell upon deceitful children." "You may leave her in our hands." "There will be no softness." "You will return to your room." "You will return to your room." "I am not deceitful." "If i were i should say i loved you, but i declare i do not love you." "I dislike you the worst of anyone in the world, except john reed." "And this book about the liar, you may give it to your girl, georgiana." "She's the one who tells lies and not i." "She's the one who tells lies and not i." "What more have you to say?" "I'm glad you are no relation of mine." "I will never call you aunt again as long as i live." "I will never come to see you when i'm grown up, and if anyone asks me how i liked you and how you treated me, i'll say the very thought of you makes me sick and that you treat me with miserable cruelty." "How dare you affirm that, jane eyre?" "How dare i, mrs." "Reed?" "Because it is the truth." "You think i have no feelings and can do without one bit of love or kindness, but i cannot live so." "You have no pity." "People think you are a good woman, but you are bad and hard-hearted." "Youare deceitful." "Jane, you are under a mistake." "Well, what is the matter with you?" "Why do you tremble so violently?" "Would you like a drink of water?" "No, mrs." "Reed." "Is there anything else you wish for, jane?" "I desire to be your friend." "You do not." "You told mr." "Brocklehurst i had a bad character." "I'll tell everybody what you are." "Jane, you do not understand about these things." "Children must be corrected for their faults!" "Deceit is not my fault!" "Oh, but you are passionate, jane." "That you must allow." "Oh, return to your room, jane." "There's a dear, and lie down a little." "I am not your dear." "Send me to school, mrs." "Reed, for i hate to live here." "For i hate to live here." "Fred will take you to where the coach stops and wait with you." "What did you e you would not even bid her good-bye." "No." "That was wrong, miss jane." "I was quite right, bessie." "Oh, you sharp little thing." "You've got a new way of talking." "What makes you so venturesome?" "I shall be away from you soon... oh, so you're glad to leave me." "You're not afraid of me, are you?" "I don't think i shall ever be afraid of you again." "Because i've got used to you." "And i will soon have another set of people to dread." "If you dread them, they'll dislike you." "As you do, bessie?" "I don't dislike you, miss." "In fact i'm fonder of you than all the others." "I dare say if i were to ask you for a kiss you wouldn't give it to me." "I'll kiss you and welcome." "Bend your head down." "Off you go now." "Good-bye, dear bessie." "And good-bye, gateshead." "You may leave her in our hands." "There will be no softness." "There will be no softness." "My duty towards my neighbor is to love him as myself." "My duty towards my neighbor is to love him as myself." "This way, girl." "To love, honor and second my father and mother." "Make haste, make haste." "You just wait here, my lass." "This child is very young to be sent alone." "She had better be put to bed at once." "She looks tired." "Are you tired?" "A little, ma'am." "And hungry, too, no doubt." "Miss miller, let her have some supper before she goes to bed." "Very well, miss temple." "Now, jane eyre, is this the first time you have left your parents to come to school?" "I have no parents, ma'am." "How long have they been dead?" "Sine i was a baby, ma'am." "Can you read and write?" "Yes, ma'am." "And sew?" "A little, ma'am." "I hope you will be a good child." "Go with miss miller now." "Yes, ma'am." "That is the bedtime bell." "We have no time for idleness here." "You will learn to live by the bell." "Yes, miss." "Step aside, step aside." "Jane eyre." "Jane eyre." "The bell, miss eyre." "Do you not hear a bell?" "Be up at once." "You have 5 minutes to wash before prayers." "You 3 are late." "Report to me after morning classes." "Silence." "All rise." "For what we are about to receive, may the lord make us truly thankful." "May the lord make us truly thankful." "Sit." "Eeuuww." "Eeuuww." "Girl girl" "it's disgusting." "Sit down at once, girl." "Silence, girls." "It's like rotten potatoes." "Pigs get better than us." "This is abominable." "I'd like to make mr." "Brocklehurst eat the whole lot." "Girls!" "You will be punished if you are disrespectful to our benefactor." "If you are disrespectful to our benefactor." "To your classes!" "Miss miller, i have a word to address to the pupils." "Be seated everyone." "You had this morning a breakfast which you could not eat." "You must be hungry." "I have ordered that bread and cheese shall be served to all." "Silence!" "But miss temple... it is on my responsibility." "Ooh!" "Cheese." "Oh, cheese." "Be quiet, will you?" "Sit still, burns." "Obey your teachers, girls." "Eat your breakfast." "Eat your breakfast." "A-u." "Tres bien." "Sophie." "A-u-e-o-u." "Ou-ou-ou." "Penelope." "A-o-e-ou." ""...in the water under the earth." ""Thou shalt not bow down thyself to them," ""nor serve them." "For i, d thy god, am a jealous god..."" "To the garden." "To the garden." "Is your book interesting?" "I like it." "What's it about?" "Emily." "Emily." "There are no pictures." "I like wild, mysterious stories with pictures." "Do you want me to go away?" "I did want someone to talk to." "I did want someone to talk to." "Why do they call this an institution?" "Why do they call this from other schools?" "Different it's partly a charity school." "You and i are charity children." "Have you been here long?" "2 years." "Are you an orphan?" "My mother is dead." "My father married again." "You ask rather too many questions." "I want to read." "Burns, you are slouching." "Sit up straight immediately." "He was deeply religious." "He made promises to the people which he failed to keep and was the author of his own downfall." "And was the author of his own downfall." "Oh, that is nicely done, jane." "Thank you, miss smith." "In what year did charles the first come to the throne?" "Fuller." "Fuller." "Harrison." "Harrison." "16... 1610?" "Wrong." "Burns." "1625, miss." "Someone must have prompted you." "No, miss." "Ha." "I refuse to believe a word you say." "And i insist on you holding your head up." "I will not have you standi in that attitude." "Pay attention, girls." "His first favorite was the dashing george villiers, duke of buckingham, who was assassinated in 1628." "Charles then fell under the influence of his wife who was a catholic." "We all know how evil popery is." "That turned the people even more against charles." "Many of them were known as puritans." "Burns, why were they called puritans?" "Because they wished to purify the church by dropping out many catholic practices." "You are glib enough, but you still defy me by letting your head droop!" "But you still defy me by letting your head droop!" "Hold out your hand." "Hold out your hand." "You dirty, disagreeable girl." "You did not clean your nails this morning." "Yes, miss, i did." "You contradict me?" "You dare to contradict me?" "And lie to me?" "Did i not say you were a liar?" "Fetch me the instrument of correction." "Fetch me the instrument of correction." "Your hand." "Hardened girl." "Nothing will correct you." "Take the rod back." "Jane, you dropped my skein." "Jane, what is the matter with you?" "I should get it from her hand and break it under her nose." "Probably, you would do nothing of the sort." "If you did, mr." "Brocklehurst would expel you." "It is far better to endure patiently." "The bible bids us return good for evil." "If people were always kind and obedient to those who are cruel and unjust, the wicked woul all their own way." "They would never feel afraid, but grow worse and worse." "When we are struck at without reason, we should strike back very hard." "I'm sure i should... so hard as to teach the person never to do it again." "Christ says "love your enemies."" "Then i should love mrs." "Reed and her son john, which i can never do." "Who are they?" "Oh, dear." "It's evening study." "I'll tell you on the way down." "I'll tell you on the way down." "My first quarter at lowood seemed an age of cold, hunger, hardship and heavy tasks." "But at its end i had made progress." "This is excellent, jane." "No wonder you're head of your class." "All your teachers praise you." "Do you find the girls friendly?" "They are now, ma'am." "Good." "I like your pictures." "I shall give you drawing lessons myself." "Oh, thank you, ma'am." "And i think you are capable of learning french." "I shall speak to madame pierrot." "You may go." "Thank you, ma'am." "But there was one visitor to lowood of whose arrival i was in constant dread." "Of whose arrival i was in constant dread." "Let the classes continue." "Back to work, girls." "Madame pierrot." "Monsieur." "Miss miller." "Disgraceful, burns." "Stand up." "Look at these girls." "Their hair!" "Flaunting curls." "Godless vanity her?" "In an evangelical school." "Every girl's hair will be cut short and these topknots removed." "I shall send a barber tomorrow." "But, sir... let them resume their work." "But, miss temple... silence!" "Sit down, girls." "Continue with your work." "I have a matter to discuss with you." "The accounts." "I am being forced to spend far too much." "We are being most economical, sir." "Allow me to disagree with you, miss temple." "You are not being most economical." "If you were, i should have no need for complaint." "As it is, i must direct you to trim your cloth by one quarter." "Your directions shall be attended to, sir." "Your directions shall be attended to, sir." "Hmm." "It is the new pupil." "I have a word to say respecting her." "Fetch that stool." "Girl." "Girl." "Stand upon it." "Face the classes." "Miss temple, teachers, girls... you all see this girl?" "Who would think that the evil one had alfound a servant in her?" "And yet such, i grieve to say, is the case." "You must be on your guard against her." "You must shun her example, and exclude her from your sports." "Teachers, you must watch her." "Punish her body to save her soul... if indeed such salvation be possible, for... my tongue falters while i tell it... this girl, this child of a christian land, this girl is a liar." "How shocking." "This i learned from her benefactress... the lady who adopted her in her orphan state, reared her as her own daughter, and whose kindness this unhappy girl repaid with an ingratitude so bad, so dreadful, that at last her excellent patroness" "was obliged to separate her from her own young ones, fearful lest her vicious example should contaminate their purity." "She has sent her here to be healed." "Teachers, i beg of you not to spare her if she is to be saved." "If she is to be saved." "Miss temple, we will now inspect the rest of the premises." "The rest of the premises." "Be seated." "Let her stand a half hour longer on that stool." "Face the classes!" "And let no one speak to her for the remainder of the day." "For the remainder of the day." "Oor closes]" "Come, eat something." "Come, eat something." "I have tried so hard to do well." "Helen, why do you keep friendly with a girl whom everybody believes a liar?" "Jane, you are mistaken." "After what mr." "Brocklehurst said?" "He is little liked here." "Besides, jane, if all the world hated you, you would not be without friends." "But i cannot bear to be alone and hated." "Jane, you think too much of the love of human beings." "You're too impulsive, too vehement." "I came on purpose to find you, jane eyre." "I want you in my room." "You may come, too, helen burns." "You may come, too, helen burns." "Is it all over?" "Have you cried your grief away?" "I'm afraid i shall never do that." "Why?" "I have been wrongly accused, ma'am, and everybody now will think me wicked." "We shall think you what you prove yourself to be, my child." "Tell me, the lady whom mr." "Brocklehurst called your benefactress is mrs." "Reed, your uncle's wife?" "Yes, ma'am." "He is dead and she didn't want me, but all the servants knew... your story, my dear, as you told it to her." "Is all that true?" "Yes, ma'am." "Did she tell you about the red room?" "I shall never forget the day... i have heard all about that, jane." "Is there anyone else who can verify your story?" "Betsy might." "She's one of the servants." "Or there is mr." "Lloyd, the physician." "He came to see me after... i know." "I know." "E to him." "And if his reply agrees with your statement, well, we shall know what to do." "Well, we shall know what to do." "Helen, how are you tonight?" "Have you coughed much today?" "Not quite so much, i think, ma'am." "And the pat?" "It is a little better." "You 2 are my guests." "I am neglecting you." "Come to the table, girls." "Jane, helen." "Here we are." "Thank you, barbara." "Can you bring a little more bread and butter?" "There's not enough for 3." "Um... well, uh... i did ask mrs." "Harden, d she wouldn't." "Not after mr." "Brocklehurst's orders to her." "Very well." "Thank you, barbara." "You may go." "Thank you, barbara." "You may go." "Fortunately, i can supply the deficiency." "I had meant to give you this to take away with you." "We shall feast now, shall we?" "It is so good to see you both smiling." "The lord is my shepherd, i shall not want." "I have inspected the dormitory, and once more, your drawer was a disgrace." ""...he leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for his name's sake..."" "you will wear that until bedtime." "Take your seat." "Yes, miss." ""...for thou art with me." ""Thy rod and thy staff will comfort me." ""Thou preparest a table before me" ""in the presence of mine enemies." ""Thou annointest my head with oil." "My cup..."" "mademoiselles, this is your hour of recreation." "I shall leave you now." "No noise, please." "How can you be so passive?" "!" "Sembled?" "we all as all present, miss temple." "I have an announcement to make." "It concerns the charges which were alleged in your presence against jane eyre one week ago." "Jane eyre, come forward." "Up here." "Stand beside me." "Teachers, girls, i have made inquiries concerning these charges of a person who is fully informed and utterly reliable." "And i am most happy to be able to pronounce her innocent of every imputation made against her." "You may step down, jane." "I am so glad, my dear." "I'm not at all surprised." "Bravo, mademoiselle." "Je suis contente pour vous." "You are fortunate in your protector, child." "You are fortunate in your protector, child." "Let the classes resume." "Well, jane, i know that you will work harder than ever to prove your merit." "I will, miss temple." "I would not leave lowood now for gateshead and all its luxuries, ma'am." "For gateshead and all its luxuries, ma'am." "It was typhus." "Overcrowding, lack of sanitation, seml-starvation, and previously neglected illnesses had made most of the pupils an easy prey to the deadly fever." "To the deadly fever." "Teachers helped those girls to pack to take them away from the seat of contagion." "Driver." "Some died at the school and were buried quickly and quietly." "And were buried quickly and quietly." "Miss temple is waiting for you in the sick room." "I shall stay and help her." "Mr. Bates, please." "What is it, girl?" "I have other patients, you know." "Where is helen burns?" "She has not come down to the garden yet." "Helen burns." "No." "I fear she took a turn for the worse." "She is very poorly." "Her complaint is not typhus, you know." "It is consumption." "You are a god-fearing child." "You have seen other friends go to their maker." "Helen is not with us for long." "Typhus fever died away at lowood, he a new management committee was formed as a result of public indignation at the abuses which had caused the epidemic and condemned its many victims." "Mr. Brocklehurst managed to retain his post because of his wealth and family connections." "But lowood became in time a truly useful and noble institution." "I was a pupil there for 6 more years, and as for the 2 years which followed..." "Please, miss eyre." "Shh." "Miss eyre, please, miss eyre." "Very well, mary." "B-o-u-g-h." "Bough of a tree." "B-o-w." "Bow." "Very good." "I'm very pleased with all of you girls." "Now i would like you to learn the next 10 words in your book for tomorrow." "Thank you." "You may start now." "Thank you." "Thank you." "Thank you." "Yes, i was a teacher and loved it." "But since helen's death, my one, my only, my dear friend remained miss temple." "And a day came that was inevitable." "God bless the bride and groom." "God bless the bride and groom!" "Hooray!" "Hooray!" "God bless the bride and groom!" "Hooray!" "Hooray!" "Write to me, miss temple." "Please write to me." "And me!" "I will, i will!" "Well, good-bye." "Good-bye, miss temple!" "Hooray!" "With miss temple's departure, i tired of the routine of 8 years in one afternoon." "I longed for change, for liberty, or, at the very least, a new servitude." "What do people do to get a new place?" "Apply to friends?" "I have no friends." "Or... advertise." ""Is desirous of meeting with a situation" ""where the children are under 14." "J.e. Lowton.""