《简·爱》中冰与火的意象 [4]
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论文字数:5319论文编号:org201405242023389139语种:英语 English地区:中国价格:免费论文
关键词:《简·爱》冰与火的意象The Images of Ice and Firein Jane EyreEnglish literature history
摘要:The two images of “ice” and “fire” appear in the novel frequently, which are closely related to the hero’s and the heroine’s fates. One has become the symbol of sadness, misery and despair, and the presentation of ice is always in the time when the heroine is in most miserable conditions and in the most despair mood.
in the lover related to utility is burned out in the fire, and then it makes the love between Jane and Mr. Rochester more absolute and more pure. Because the true love must go though the burning of the fire, it could be sublimed, and can be ever-lasting and be vitalized forever. Mr. Rochester requires lighting a candle in the room after he loses his sight. Although he can not see, the candlelight kindles his somber heart; this candlelight is his hope for the love and the life, and it is the embodiment of his strong will, and symbolizes his unyieldingness of the life oppression. And Jane Eyre is just like a fire, warm, bright and pure. With her, Mr. Rochester can see the sunshine again. In the end of the novel, when Jane and Mr. Rochester reunites together, Jane finds the blind Mr. Rochester sits besides “a fire without no one to care”, and her first action is to let the fire burn vigorously again. Later, Mr. Rochester resumes his eyesight, and eveyone could see the magic power of the love.
2.1.2 Fire of Revenge
The image of “fire” is also represented as the fire of revenge, which is mainly displayed as two fires set out by the mad woman Bertha Mason. She is filled with full hatred towards Mr. Rochester (when she has a clear mind, she is also a vivid woman). The first time when the relationship between Mr. Rochester and Jane Eyre becomes intimate daily, this mad woman sets fire to burn the bed of Mr. Rochester as a warning to their behavior, which makes a suspense in the novel, and hints that Jane Eyre is getting more and more close to the secret of Thornfield, but does not know that it conceals the perdition of her increasing love. The second fire set by Bertha Mason is just after Jane’s running away when her wedding suffers setbacks. She burns down the Thornfield Hall in which she has been confined for many years, and she herself loses her life in the fire in her loud shout. The fire takes away all hatred and regrets, and completes its revenge. The fire also has the deep symbolic meaning that the Thornfield not only confines the freedom of Bertha Mason, but also block the hard times of Mr. Rochester and Jane, and Mr. Rochester’s mercenary marriage, pulls down the obstacles which lies between him and Jane, and brings the freedom to pursue the happy marriage. The fire gives the inspiration to the love and helps to fulfill the love. The fire represents the author’s pursuit for love, as it becomes the tool which helps to realize the love and ideal. In the other way, the fire seems to be a charge. When Bertha Mason stands on the top of the burning building, with her long hair waving in the fire flame, it is seem to hear that the author’s crying and sighing for the tribulation in the life. This fire is the author’s comprehension of the significance of the life existing, and is also the author’s response to the miserable life. The author uses the firebrand in this mad woman Bertha Mason, to express her complaint to everything powerful to block the freedom, and the determination to fight against the fate, pursue the freedom and equality.
2.2 The Image of “Ice” —— St.John Rive
St John Rivers represents the opposite extreme from Rochester. Where Rochester is a man of fire, St John is one of ice. “I am cold: no fervour infects me”, as St John himself admits. St John, up to his name, is described using images of ice and earth, the cold elements which are the antithesis of本论文由英语论文网提供整理,提供论文代写,英语论文代写,代写论文,代写英语论文,代写留学生论文,代写英文论文,留学生论文代写相关核心关键词搜索。