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"As Due By Many Titles I Resign My Self To Thee, O God …" (Donne) What Do You See As The Most Interesting Or Challenging Aspects Of Therelationship Between The Human And Divine In The Texts ‘Jane Eyre' And The Poetry Of John Donne?


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In looking at this question, it is my opinion that it is arousing a discussion of the self-denial that religion imposes and also the conflict it imposes on the self. For this I will primarily be looking at Charlotte Bronte's ‘Jane Eyre' and the poetry of John Donne.

The progression of Jane Eyre's life is shown by a variety of links to religion due to the many changes in her way of life. Bronte shows her childhood at Gateshead in a passively religious context, but the Red Room scene in Chapter 2 gives the reader an insight into Jane's childhood worries of life and death. The contrast of "crimson cloth" with "a snowy Marseilles counterpane" (Bronte, Chap 2 ‘Jane Eyre) provides the reader with thoughts of purity versus sin and passion and consequently the conflicts within religion which are shown to prey on Jane's mind:

I began to recall what I had heard of dead men,
troubled in their graves by the violation of their last wishes, revisiting
the earth to punish the purged......

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Approximate Word Count: 2432
Approximate Pages: 10 (260 words per double-spaced page)

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