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She was rather manipulative, drove Rochester up the wall when he would get horny. His countenance is unappealing and his manners are wild. Despite his drawbacks, he ends up winning Jane's love for him. Jane falls for him because she felt that they are kindred spirits; he won her over by being the first one to offer Jane love for a lifetime and real home. There is nothing conventional about this couple. Mr. Rochester does not get attracted to Jane's appearance. He got mesmerized by her mind, her intellect and her personality.
Madly in love with each other, Rochester gives Jane Eyre the affection, devotion, passion, and home, she had always yearned for. However, it was a culmination of one of his dark traits that made him hold a big secret from Jane – his marriage with Betha Mason whom he had married for her wealth. When the truth is revealed to Jane, she decides to leave him. She leaves him because she felt that her dignity and self-esteem would be at stake if she lived with Rochester as a mistress. After a year of Bertha’s death, Jane revisits Rochester and the two get back together.
She does not accept him back in his life because he was a widow. She accepts him because she hears his voice out of the blue; she felt a supernatural connection and thus decides to return. By then he was blind and his hand was amputated, yet the madness of their love was still intact.Mr. Rochester is a very complex character. His love for Jane is pure madness.. Yet Rochester is unfettered about it and goes on to love and propose. This proves that he was his own person and never cared about what others thought of him.
He is shown to be excessively caring for his loved ones. Perhaps Jane saw and fell for the inner calm in him, his inner side which was oblivious to the world. Bronte unveils many dark qualities of Rochester through the course of the novel but he is a romantic hero, who is hopelessly in love with Jane. His approach to winning her was wrong. It was imbibed in insecurity, lies and fear. But towards the end of the novel, his character got redeemed. Somewhere, the tragedy on the Thorn field estate had a huge role to play in the way Mr.
Rochester transformed. He changed from a dark, arrogant abusive man to someone who was weak and humble. He had lost his property, his money, his wife, his eyes, one of his hands. He was physically dependent on others around him. As Bronte puts it in the novel "Herethe I have hated to be helped-to be led." (Gilbert; 2007; 650)The phrase implies how he had transformed. He had become very humble. His nature had mellowed down by then and he was on his way to enlightment. There is a plenty of evidence to support this claim “I began to experience remorse, repentance; the wish for reconcilement to my maker”.
(Gilbert; 2007; 953) He made this confession to Jane Eyre much to her delight. Bronte thus transformed their relationship, into an affair that was based on truth and reality towards the end. All the darkness had gone; there was no controlling power and no restraint. Jane Eyre points out in the last chapter that she is in a very happy marriage with Rochester. They had been married for 10 years now and his dark qualities
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