Charlotte Bronte was born in Thornton, Yorkshire on 21 April 1816. Her mother was called Maria and her father was the Reverend Patrick Bronte. Charlotte was the third child born into the family. At that time he had two older sisters, Maria and Elizabeth, and then a year later his only brother Patrick Branwell Bronte was born. She then had two younger sisters, Emily born in 1818 and the younger Anne born in 1820. Just a year after moving to the Personage at Haworth in 1820, Charlotte's mother died in 1821 and her mother's sister, Elizabeth Branwell, went to live with them. The eldest daughter was only seven years old at that time, and the six small children consoled each other. In July 1824 the two older girls, Maria and Elizabeth, were sent to school at Cowen Bridge and Charlotte and Emily followed months later. The place was cold and damp and had been set up by a priest to provide a low-cost education for the poor priest's daughters. Mary and her sister Elizabeth fell ill at school due to the poor conditions and Mary was sent home in February 1825 and died three months later of tuberculosis at the age of eleven. Elizabeth was also sent home three weeks later and also died of tuberculosis. less than a month later. Mr Bronte was quick to bring his other two daughters home from school, but Charlotte always remembered the harness shown to her sisters at school and blamed the school for their deaths. When Charlotte wrote Jane Eyre a few years later, she based Lowood on the Cowen Bridge school. She also models the long-suffering Helen who died of illness at Lowood in Jane Eyre on her sister Maria. The novel "Jane Eyre" by Charlotte Brontë consists of the continuous diary...... center of the paper...... Rochester's equal, financially, physically and emotionally. She was once dependent on him and now they are both equal as he is as dependent on her as she is on him. Jane and Rochester are married within the three days that Rochester promised her. In the final chapter Charlotte Bronte simply describes their life together and describes it as a life of pure contentment and happiness. They were a match suited to each other in every way. Bronte tells us how her cousins Diana and Mary marry good men and lead happy lives, Jane places Adele in a good school where she is taught well and grows up to be a good young woman, and Rochester regains his sight in one of his eyes. , giving him the ability to see his newborn baby. These five physical journeys mirror Jane's four emotional journeys. Jane goes from being an immune child to a mature woman at Lowood Boarding School.
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