agent
Lasting Words Ltd
479 Wellingborough RoadNorthamptonNN3 3HNUnited Kingdom
More Books from this agent
Jane Eyre Charlotte Brontë
Romance
Gothic
Feminist Literature
1905
Hardcover
USD$1,871

Description

UK: Dent, 1905. First Edition Thus . Hardcover. Very Good/No Jacket. 16mo - over 5¾" - 6¾" tall. Edmund Dulac. 1st Edition Thus 1905. Un-common set. The Novels of Charlotte, Emily and Anne Bronte. Complete in Ten Volumes. Jane Eyre, Agnes Grey, Tenant of Wildfell Hall, Wuthering Heights, Shirley, The Professor and Villete. Six coloured plates per volume. A nice decorative gift set bound in their original publishers cloth. The books are very good with uniform darkening/dulling/age toning to spines. Light superficial cracking to internal gutters. Contents average with foxing and heaby age toning to page edges/endpapers. More images can be taken upon request. Ref18853

About Jane Eyre

"Jane Eyre" by Charlotte Bronte is a bildungsroman that chronicles the life of its eponymous protagonist. Orphaned and mistreated as a child, Jane Eyre grows up at Gateshead Hall under the care of her cruel aunt and cousins. She then attends Lowood School, where she faces hardship but receives an education that shapes her character. As a young woman, Jane becomes a governess at Thornfield Hall, employed by the enigmatic and brooding Mr. Rochester. Jane's time at Thornfield Hall is marked by her growing affection for Rochester, despite their differing social statuses. Their relationship blossoms until a shocking revelation about Rochester's past disrupts their plans for marriage. Forced to leave Thornfield Hall, Jane finds refuge at Moor House, where she discovers her distant relatives, the Rivers family. She forms strong bonds with them but remains haunted by her love for Rochester. The narrative reveals Jane's fierce independence, unwavering principles, and quest for autonomy and love despite societal constraints. Eventually, she inherits a fortune and learns that Rochester, now blind and maimed from a tragic fire, seeks reconciliation. Returning to Rochester, Jane finds him humbled and rehabilitated. They reunite and marry, embracing a life together built on mutual respect and equality. "Jane Eyre" is not only a tale of romance but also a nuanced exploration of societal expectations, feminism, morality, and the struggle for personal identity and integrity. Bronte's novel broke boundaries by portraying a strong-willed, independent female protagonist who defies convention in her pursuit of love and self-realization. The novel's enduring appeal lies in its compelling characters, richly detailed settings, and themes that resonate across generations, making "Jane Eyre" a timeless classic in English literature.

Identifying the First Edition of Jane Eyre

The title page should bear the following details: "Jane Eyre: An Autobiography," the author's name "Currer Bell" (which was Bronte's pseudonym), and the publisher's name, Smith, Elder & Co.