Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte
"Jane Eyre" by Charlotte Bronte (a Yorkshire girl!) is one of my all time favourite love story and it is different from the rest because their love is not based on looks but a mutual yearning of their soul. They do indeed in the beginning of the book admit to each other that they do not find each other attractive.
Unlike Jane Austen's "Emma", who is self-righteously brilliant, witty and beautiful and also can be sometimes "wittily" cruel to others, Jane Eyre has certain vulnerability and a deep sense of compassion, which touches the core of our own soul. Jane Eyre's suffering does not change her but makes her into a strong and a compassionate person. We identify with her because we can relate to her. She knows herself but also has self-doubt but she triumphs in her self-dignity. Even when she is about to lose everything she stands firm and does not become an emotional wreck. In one of the poignant moments in the book, she brings to the surface the turmoil of her soul when she learns that Mr. Rochester, the man she loves is to marry someone else, with tears running down her cheeks she tells him:
Quote:
"Do you think I can stay to become nothing to you?
Do you think I am an automaton?
A machine without feelings?
And can bear to have my morsel of bread snatched from my lips,
And my drop of living water dashed from my cup?
Do you think, because I am poor, obscure, plain, and simple,
I am soulless and heartless?
You think wrong!
I have as much soul as you,
And full as much heart!
And if God had gifted me with some beauty
And much wealth, I should have
Made it as hard for you to leave me,
As it is now for me to leave you..."
I think it is the most heart-wrenching words ever written in the name of love...a love that stands beyond physical beauty, wealth and power. A love that does not make a slave of each other's lust but makes each other grow not in each others shadow but in bright sunshine of their souls...