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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com Digital Library-Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte


168

him, or not like him with true affection! If she did, she need not
coin her smiles so lavishly, flash her glances so unremittingly,
manufacture airs so elaborate, graces so multitudinous.

It seems to me that she might, by merely sitting quietly at his side,
saying little and looking less, get nigher his heart. I have seen in his
face a far different expression from that which hardens it now
while she is so vivaciously accosting him; but then it came of itself:
it was not elicited by meretricious arts and calculated manoeuvres;
and one had but to accept it-to answer what he asked without
pretension, to address him when needful without grimace-and it
increased and grew kinder and more genial, and warmed one like
a fostering sunbeam. How will she manage to please him when
they are married? I do not think she will manage it; and yet it
might be managed; and his wife might, I verily believe, be the very
happiest woman the sun shines on.’

I have not yet said anything condemnatory of Mr. Rochester’s
project of marrying for interest and connections. It surprised me
when I first discovered that such was his intention: I had thought
him a man unlikely to be influenced by motives so commonplace
in his choice of a wife; but the longer I considered the position,
education, etc., of the parties, the less I felt justified in judging and
blaming either him or Miss Ingram for acting in conformity to
ideas and principles instilled into them, doubtless, from their
childhood. All their class held these principles: I supposed, then,
they had reasons for holding them such as I could not fathom. It
seemed to me that, were I a gentleman like him, I would take to my
bosom only such a wife as I could love; but the very obviousness of
the advantages to the husband’s own happiness offered by this
plan convinced me that there must be arguments against its general
adoption of which I was quite ignorant: otherwise I felt sure all the
world would act as I wished to act.

But in other points, as well as this, I was growing very lenient to
my master: I was forgetting all his faults, for which I had once kept
a sharp look-out. It had formerly been my endeavour to study all
sides of his character: to take the bad with the good; and from the
just weighing of both, to form an equitable judgment.

Now I saw no bad. The sarcasm that had repelled, the harshness
that had startled me once, were only like keen condiments in a
choice dish: their presence was pungent, but their absence would
be felt as comparatively insipid. And as for the vague something-
was it a sinister or a sorrowful, a designing or a desponding
expression?- that opened upon a careful observer, now and then, in
his eye, and closed again before one could fathom the strange
depth partially disclosed; that something which used to make me
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com Digital Library-Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte



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