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


269

family wished to secure me because I was of a good race; and so
did she. They showed her to me in parties, splendidly dressed. I
seldom saw her alone, and had very little private conversation with
her. She flattered me, and lavishly displayed for my pleasure her
charms and accomplishments. All the men in her circle seemed to
admire her and envy me. I was dazzled, stimulated: my senses
were excited; and being ignorant, raw, and inexperienced, I
thought I loved her. There is no folly so besotted that the idiotic
rivalries of society, the prurience, the rashness, the blindness of
youth, will not hurry a man to its commission. Her relatives
encouraged me; competitors piqued me; she allured me: a marriage
was achieved almost before I knew where I was. Oh, I have no
respect for myself when I think of that act!- an agony of inward
contempt masters me. I never loved, I never esteemed, I did not
even know her. I was not sure of the existence of one virtue in her
nature: I had marked neither modesty, nor benevolence, nor
candour, nor refinement in her mind or manners-and, I married
her:- gross, grovelling, mole-eyed blockhead that I was! With less
sin I might have-But let me remember to whom I am speaking.
‘My bride’s mother I had never seen: I understood she was dead.
The honeymoon over, I learned my mistake; she was only mad,
and shut up in a lunatic asylum. There was a younger brother, too-
a complete dumb idiot. The elder one, whom you have seen (and
whom I cannot hate, whilst I abhor all his kindred, because he has
some grains of affection in his feeble mind, shown in the continued
interest he takes in his wretched sister, and also in a dog-like
attachment he once bore me), will probably be in the same state
one day. My father and my brother Rowland knew all this; but
they thought only of the thirty thousand pounds, and joined in the
plot against me.

‘These were vile discoveries; but except for the treachery of
concealment, I should have made them no subject of reproach to
my wife, even when I found her nature wholly alien to mine, her
tastes obnoxious to me, her cast of mind common, low, narrow,
and singularly incapable of being led to anything higher, expanded
to anything larger-when I found that I could not pass a single
evening, nor even a single hour of the day with her in comfort; that
kindly conversation could not be sustained between us, because
whatever topic I started, immediately received from her a turn at
once coarse and trite, perverse and imbecile-when I perceived that
I should never have a quiet or settled household, because no
servant would bear the continued outbreaks of her violent and
unreasonable temper, or the vexations of her absurd, contradictory,
exacting orders-even then I restrained myself: I eschewed
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com Digital Library-Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte



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