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


210

about the dulness of the house, and wishing over and over again
that her aunt Gibson would send her an invitation up to town. ‘It
would be so much better,’ she said, ‘if she could only get out of the
way for a month or two, till all was over.’ I did not ask what she
meant by ‘all being over,’ but I suppose she referred to the
expected decease of her mother and the gloomy sequel of funeral
rites. Eliza generally took no more notice of her sister’s indolence
and complaints than if no such murmuring, lounging object had
been before her. One day, however, as she put away her account-
book and unfolded her embroidery, she suddenly took her up
thus‘Georgiana, a more vain and absurd animal than you was
certainly never allowed to cumber the earth. You had no right to be
born, for you make no use of life. Instead of living for, in, and with
yourself, as a reasonable being ought, you seek only to fasten your
feebleness on some other person’s strength: if no one can be found
willing to burden her or himself with such a fat, weak, puffy,
useless thing, you cry out that you are ill-treated, neglected,
miserable. Then, too, existence for you must be a scene of continual
change and excitement, or else the world is a dungeon: you must
be admired, you must be courted, you must be flattered-you must
have music, dancing, and society-or you languish, you die away.
Have you no sense to devise a system which will make you
independent of all efforts, and all wills, but your own? Take one
day; share it into sections; to each section apportion its task: leave
no stray unemployed quarters of an hour, ten minutes, five
minutes-include all; do each piece of business in its turn with
method, with rigid regularity. The day will close almost before you
are aware it has begun; and you are indebted to no one for helping
you to get rid of one vacant moment: you have had to seek no one’s
company, conversation, sympathy forbearance; you have lived, in
short, as an independent being ought to do. Take this advice: the
first and last I shall offer you; then you will not want me or any
one else, happen what may. Neglect it-go on as heretofore,
craving, whining, and idling-and suffer the results of your idiocy,
however bad and insufferable they may be. I tell you this plainly;
and listen: for though I shall no more repeat what I am now about
to say, I shall steadily act on it. After my mother’s death, I wash my
hands of you: from the day her coffin is carried to the vault in
Gateshead Church, you and I will be as separate as if we had never
known each other. You need not think that because we chanced to
be born of the same parents, I shall suffer you to fasten me down
by even the feeblest claim: I can tell you this-if the whole human
race, ourselves excepted, were swept away, and we two stood
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com Digital Library-Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte



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