简爱1~28章节的主要内容出现人物和时间地点
文学是以语言文字为工具,比较形象化地反映客观现实、表现作家心灵世界的艺术,包括诗歌、散文、小说、剧本、寓言、童话等体裁,是文学的重要表现形式,以不同的形式即体裁,表现内心情感,再现一定时期和一定地域的社会生活。作为学科门类理解的文学,包括中国语言文学、外国语言文学及新闻传播学。
文学是属于人文学科的学科分类之一,与哲学、宗教、法律、政治并驾于社会建筑上层。它起源于人类的思维活动。最先出现的是口头文学,一般是与音乐联结为可以演唱的抒情诗歌。最早形成书面文学的有中国的《诗经》、
印度的《罗摩衍那》和古希腊的《伊利昂纪》等。中国先秦时期将以文字写成的作品都统称为文学,魏晋以后才逐渐将文学作品单独列出。欧洲传统文学理论分类法将文学分为诗、散文、戏剧三大类。现代通常将文学分为诗歌、小说、散文、戏剧四大类别。
文学是语言文字的艺术,是社会文化的一种重要表现形式,是对美的体现。文学作品是作家用独特的语言艺术表现其独特的心灵世界的作品,离开了这样两个极具个性特点的独特性就没有真正的文学作品。一个杰出的文学家就是一个民族心灵世界的英雄。文学代表一个民族的艺术和智慧。文学,是一种将语言文字用于表达社会生活和心理活动的学科,属社会意识形态范畴。
扩展资料
(一)社会意识形态之一,古今中外都曾把一切用文字书写的书籍文献统称为文学。现代专指用语言文字塑造形象以反映社会生活、表达思想感情的艺术,故又称“语言艺术”。中国魏晋南北朝时期,曾将文学分为韵文和散文两大类,现代通常分为诗歌、散文、小说、戏剧、影视文学等体裁。在各种体裁中又有多种样式。
(二)孔门四科之一, 《论语·先进》:“文学,子游、子夏。”
邢炳疏:“若文章博学,则有子游、子夏二人也。”亦指教贵族子弟的学科。《宋书·雷次宗传》:“上留心艺术,使丹阳尹何尚之立玄学,太子率更令何承天立史学,司徒参军谢元立文学。”
(三)指辞章修养,元结《大唐中兴颂序》:“非老于文学,其谁宜为?”
(四)官,汉代置于州郡及王国,或称“文学掾”,或称“文学史”,为后世教官所由来。汉武帝为选拔人才特设“贤良文学”科目,由各郡举荐人才上京考试,被举荐者便叫“贤良文学”。“贤良”是指品德端正、道德高尚的人;“文学”则指精通儒家经典的人。魏晋以后有“文学从事”之名。唐代于州县置“博士”,德宗时改称“文学”,太子及诸王以下亦置“文学”。明清废。
(五)文学是艺术的一个门类,属社会意识形态。中国在先秦时,含文学与博学二义。现代专指以语言塑造形象反映社会生活,并作用于社会生活的一种艺术形式。中国一般分其为诗歌、散文、小说、戏剧文学等四类。
(六)文学具有全人类性、社会性、民族性、人民性、阶级性和真实性等。文学的发展是受文学内部和外部各种因素影响的复杂过程。一般说,文学随着社会生活的发展而发展。文学的社会作用主要有三个方面: 一是认识作用,二是教育作用,三是美感作用。三种作用同时发生,构成了文学的社会功能。
(七)文学,意识的产物,生活的反映,文学是客观的东西到了人的头脑中后,人重新组织编出用文字表达出来的东西。(八)文学不管在中国还是在外国都存在着,但是外国文学与中国文学有不同之处。例如:外国的小说分类和中国的有所不同。
(九)文艺复兴之后,世界对文学的定义逐步演变成:文学即一种以文字语言为载体的艺术。因为其载体为语言文字,所以区别于音乐、美术等艺术形式。
文学(英语:literature),在最广泛的意义上,是任何单一的书面作品。更严格地说,文学写作被认为是一种艺术形式,或被认为具有艺术或智力价值的任何单一作品,通常是由于以不同于普通用途的方式部署语言。它的拉丁词根literatura/litteratura(本身起源于littera:letter或handwriting)被用来指代所有的书面记录,尽管当代定义将术语扩展到包括口头或唱歌的文本(口头文学)。
文学可以根据是虚构作品还是非虚构作品进行分类,也可以根据是韵文还是散文进行分类;可以根据长篇小说、中篇小说、短篇小说等主要形式进一步区分;作品往往根据历史时期或者遵守某些美学特征或期望(艺术类型)进行分类。以语言文字为工具形象化地反映现实的艺术,包括韵文、散文、剧本、小说等,是文化的重要表现形式,以不同的流派表现内心情感和再现一定时期和一定地域的生活。
这个概念随着时间的推移而改变了意义:现在它可以扩大到非书面的口头艺术形式,可以与语言或文字本身配合,因此很难就其起源达成一致。印刷技术的发展使得书面作品的分布和扩散成为可能,最终导致了网络文学。
文学并不一定是客观的,一名成功的文学家能在自己的文学作品中,展现自己对于文学的主观看法,抒发自己的情绪和感触,但借由尝试建立一个“客观的标准”,有时对能帮助作家了解“读者的感受”以求将内心之情感与艺术表现完整的体现在读者心中。有时也能藉作家主观想法带给社会不同面相去省思现况,例如女性文学的兴起。
扩展资料:
文学分类
不同语言或国家的文学:
亚洲文学:中国文学、马新文学、日本文学
欧洲文学:英国文学、德国文学、希腊文学、俄罗斯文学
美洲文学:美国文学、拉丁文学
(文学同样是分民族的)
比较文学: 比较文学指的是跨文化与跨学科的文学研究。
比较文学是一种文学研究,它首先要求研究在不同文化和不同学科中人与人通过文学进行沟通的种种历史、现状和可能。它致力于不同文化之间的相互理解,并希望相互怀有真诚的尊重和宽容。
按载体分为:口头文学、书面文学、网络文学三大类。
按地域分为:外国文学、中国文学等。
按读者年龄分为:儿童文学、成人文学等。
按读者群体及内容分为:严肃文学和通俗文学或大众文学、民间文学、少数民族文学、宗教文学等。
按内容分为:史传文学、纪实文学、奇幻文学、报道文学等。
按表达体裁分为:小说、散文、诗歌、报告文学、新韵文、戏剧、歌剧、剧本、民间传说、寓言、笔记小说、野史、童话、对联和笑话等;其他如史传、哲理、赋、骈文、小品文、文学批评、有文字剧情架构的电脑游戏(含游戏主机)与动漫等。
按创作理念分为:浪漫主义文学、现实主义文学等。
文学理论
按地域分为西方文学理论与东方文学理论。
文学作品的评论和研究文学史:外国文学史和中国文学史文学流派、文学思潮和文学社团。
文学研究
按研究方向分为文艺美学、文学艺术、社会主义新时期文学、文学思想史、文学批评、文学史等。
按时间分为现代文学与近代文学。
按单一研究方向分比较文学、舞蹈文学、红学等。
文学体裁中文体裁
中国古典文学分为诗和文,文又分为韵文和散文,现代一般分为:诗歌、散文、小说、戏剧,并称为四大文学体裁;中国的抒情诗和散文(称为古文)最早而比较发达。西方则分为诗歌与散文两个基本类型。叙事诗和戏剧成熟较早,此外小说比较发达。
参考资料:百度百科:文学
只有英文的,行吗?
The novel begins in Gateshead Hall, where a ten-year-old orphan named Jane Eyre is living with her mother's brother's family. The brother, surnamed Reed, dies shortly after adopting Jane. His wife, Mrs. Sarah Reed, and their three children (John, Eliza and Georgiana) neglect and abuse Jane, for they resent Mr. Reed's preference for the little orphan in their midst. In addition, they dislike Jane's plain looks and quiet yet passionate character. The novel begins with young John Reed bullying Jane, who retaliates with unwanted violence. Jane is blamed for the ensuing fight, and Mrs. Reed has two servants drag her off and lock her up in the "red-room", the unused chamber in which Mr. Reed died. Still locked in that night, Jane sees a light and panics, thinking that her uncle's ghost has come. Her scream rouses the house, but Mrs. Reed just locks her up for a longer period of time. Then Jane has a fit and passes out. A doctor, Mr. Lloyd, comes to Gateshead Hall and suggests that Jane go to school.
Mr. Brocklehurst is a cold, cruel, self-righteous, and highly hypocritical clergyman who runs a charity school called Lowood Institution. He accepts Jane as a pupil in his school, but she is infuriated when Mrs. Reed tells him, falsely, that she is a liar. After Brocklehurst departs, Jane bluntly tells Mrs. Reed how she hates the Reed family. Mrs. Reed, so shocked that she is scarcely capable of responding, leaves the drawing room in haste.
Jane finds life at Lowood grim. Miss Maria Temple, the youthful superintendent, is just and kind, but another teacher, Miss Scatcherd, is sour and abusive. Mr. Brocklehurst, visiting the school for an inspection, has Jane placed on a tall stool before the entire assemblage. He then tells them that "...this girl, this child, the native of a Christian land, worse than many a little heathen who says its prayers to Brahma and kneels before Juggernaut—this girl is—a liar!"
Later that day, Miss Temple allows Jane to speak in her own defense. After Jane does so, Miss Temple writes to Mr. Lloyd. His reply agrees with Jane's, and she is cleared of Mr. Brocklehurst's accusation.
Mr. Brocklehurst embezzles the school's funds to support his family's luxurious lifestyle while hypocritically preaching to others a doctrine of privation and poverty. As a result, Lowood's eighty pupils must make do with cold rooms, poor meals and thin garments whilst his family lives in comfort. The majority become sick from a typhus epidemic that strikes the school.
Jane is impressed with one pupil, Helen Burns, who accepts Miss Scatcherd's cruelty and the school's deficiencies with passive dignity, practicing the Christian teaching of turning the other cheek. Jane admires and loves the gentle Helen and they become best friends, but Jane cannot bring herself to emulate her friend's behaviour. While the typhus epidemic is raging, Helen dies of consumption in Jane's arms.
Many die in the typhus epidemic, and Mr. Brocklehurst's neglect and dishonesty are laid bare. Several rich and kindly people donate to put up a new school building in a more healthful location. New rules are made, and improvements in diet and clothing are introduced. Though Mr. Brocklehurst cannot be overlooked, due to his wealth and family connections, new people are brought in to share his duties of treasurer and inspector, and conditions improve dramatically at the school.
The narrative resumes eight years later. Jane has been a teacher at Lowood for two years, but she thirsts for a better and brighter future. She advertises as a governess and is hired by Mrs. Alice Fairfax, housekeeper of the Gothic manor, Thornfield, to teach a rather spoiled but amiable little French girl named Adèle Varens. A few months after her arrival at Thornfield, Jane goes for a walk and aids a horseman who has taken a fall. He is rude to her and calls her a witch, but she helps him back on the horse nonetheless. On her return to Thornfield, Jane discovers that the horseman is her employer, Mr. Edward Rochester, an ugly, moody yet wonderful, passionate, Byronic, and charismatic gentleman nearly twenty years older than she. Adèle is his ward.
Rochester seems quite taken with Jane. He repeatedly summons her to his presence and talks with her. Adèle, he says, is the illegitimate daughter of a French opera singer, Celine, who was his mistress for a time, though he doubts Adèle is his daughter. That same night, Jane hears eerie laughter coming from the hallway and, upon opening the door, sees smoke coming from Rochester's chamber. Rushing into his room, she finds his bed curtains ablaze and douses them with water, saving Rochester's life. Rochester says a matronly servant named Grace Poole is responsible but does not fire her, and she shows no signs of remorse or guilt. Jane is amazed and perplexed. But by this time, Rochester and Jane are in love with each other, although they do not show it.
Soon after the fire incident, Mr. Rochester departs Thornfield, reportedly to the Continent. He returns unexpectedly with a party of high-class ladies and gentlemen, including Miss Blanche Ingram, a beautiful but shallow socialite whom he seems to be courting. The party is interrupted when a strange old gypsy woman arrives and insists on telling everyone's fortunes. When Jane's turn comes, the gypsy tells her a great deal about her life and feelings, and questions her sentiments toward Rochester, much to Jane's surprise. Then the gypsy reveals "herself" to be Rochester in disguise.
That night, after a piercing scream wakes everyone in the house, Mr. Rochester comes to Jane for help in attending to a wounded guest, a certain Mr. Richard Mason, a handsome yet placid Englishman from the West Indies. Mr. Mason has been stabbed and bitten in the arm, and a surgeon comes and secretly whisks him away. Again, Rochester hints that Grace Poole is responsible.
Jane receives word that Mrs. Reed, upon hearing of her son John's apparent suicide after leading a life of dissipation and debt, has suffered a near-fatal stroke and is asking for her. So Jane returns to Gateshead, where she encounters her cousins Eliza and Georgiana Reed. Eliza has become self-righteous. Georgiana, much admired for her beauty in London a season or two ago, has become plump and vapid, always moaning about her love affair with Lord Edwin Vere. Eliza, out of envy, had prevented their marriage. The two sisters despise each other and are barely on speaking terms.
Although she rejects Jane's efforts at reconciliation, Mrs. Reed gives Jane a letter that she had previously withheld out of spite. The letter is from Jane's father's brother, John Eyre, notifying her of his intent to leave her his fortune upon his death. Mrs. Reed dies in the night, and no one mourns her. Eliza enters a convent in France, and Georgiana travels to London, eventually marrying a wealthy but worn-out society man.
About a fortnight after Jane's return to Thornfield, Jane, after months of concealing her emotions, vehemently proclaims her love for Edward, who in turn passionately proposes to her. Following a month of courtship, Jane's forebodings arise when a strange, savage-looking woman sneaks into her room one night and rips her wedding veil in two. Yet again, Rochester attributes the incident to Grace Poole.
The wedding goes ahead nevertheless. But during the ceremony in the church, the mysterious Mr. Mason and a lawyer step forth and declare that Rochester cannot marry Jane because his own wife is still alive. Rochester bitterly and sarcastically admits this fact, explaining that his wife is a violent madwoman whom he keeps imprisoned in the attic, where Grace Poole looks after her. But Grace Poole imbibes gin immoderately, occasionally giving the madwoman an opportunity to escape. It is Rochester's mad wife who is responsible for the strange events at Thornfield. Rochester nearly committed bigamy, and kept this fact from Jane. The wedding is cancelled, and Jane is heartbroken.
Back in his library, Rochester explains further. "When I left college, I was sent out to Jamaica, to espouse a bride already courted for me. My father said nothing about her money; but he told me Miss Mason was the boast of Spanish Town for her beauty: and this was no lie. I found her a fine woman, in the style of Blanche Ingram: tall, dark, and majestic. Her family wished to secure me because I was of a good race; and so did she. They showed her to me in parties, splendidly dressed. I seldom saw her alone, and had very little private conversation with her. She flattered me, and lavishly displayed for my pleasure her charms and accomplishments. All the men in her circle seemed to admire her and envy me. I was dazzled, stimulated: my senses were excited; and being ignorant, raw, and inexperienced, I thought I loved her. There is no folly so besotted that the idiotic rivalries of society, the prurience, the rashness, the blindness of youth, will not hurry a man to its commission. Her relatives encouraged me; competitors piqued me; she allured me: a marriage was achieved almost before I knew where I was. Oh, I have no respect for myself when I think of that act!—an agony of inward contempt masters me. I never loved, I never esteemed, I did not even know her. I was not sure of the existence of one virtue in her nature: I had marked neither modesty, nor benevolence, nor candour, nor refinement in her mind or manners—and, I married her:—gross, grovelling, mole-eyed blockhead that I was!"
However, he was not aware that the members of Bertha's family carry a hereditary vein of madness in their genes, with women in particular succumbing to it. Rochester assumed that Bertha's mother was dead when really she was locked away in an asylum due to her madness. The same illness affected her grandmother, and a younger brother who was all but mentally retarded. When Bertha became openly insane, Rochester secured her in Thornfield and departed for a life of dissipation (but not debauchery) in Europe.
Rochester then asks Jane to accompany him to the south of France, where they will live as husband and wife, even though they cannot be married. But though she still loves him, Jane refuses to betray the God-given morals and principles she has always believed in.
"...while he spoke my very conscience and reason turned traitors against me, and charged me with crime in resisting him. They spoke almost as loud as Feeling: and that clamoured wildly. "Oh, comply!" it said. "Think of his misery; think of his danger—look at his state when left alone; remember his headlong nature; consider the recklessness following on despair—soothe him; save him; love him; tell him you love him and will be his. Who in the world cares for you? or who will be injured by what you do?"
Still indomitable was the reply—"I care for myself. The more solitary, the more friendless, the more unsustained I am, the more I will respect myself. I will keep the law given by God; sanctioned by man. I will hold to the principles received by me when I was sane, and not mad—as I am now. Laws and principles are not for the times when there is no temptation: they are for such moments as this, when body and soul rise in mutiny against their rigour; stringent are they; inviolate they shall be. If at my individual convenience I might break them, what would be their worth? They have a worth—so I have always believed; and if I cannot believe it now, it is because I am insane—quite insane: with my veins running fire, and my heart beating faster than I can count its throbs. Preconceived opinions, foregone determinations, are all I have at this hour to stand by: there I plant my foot."
But she does not trust herself to refuse a second time. In the dead of night, she slips out of Thornfield and takes a coach far away to the north of England. When her money gives out, she sleeps outdoors on the moor and reluctantly begs for food. One night, freezing and starving, she comes to Moor House (or Marsh End) and begs for help. St. John Rivers, the young clergyman who lives in the house, admits her.
Jane, who gives the false surname of Elliott, quickly recovers under the care of St. John and his two kind sisters, Diana and Mary. St. John arranges for Jane to teach a charity school for girls in the village of Morton. At the school, Jane observes the interactions of St. John, a cold and stern man but a truly devout Christian, and Rosamond Oliver, a beautiful but silly young heiress. Jane comes to believe that the two are in love, and boldly says so to St John. St. John confesses his love but says that Rosamond would make a most unsuitable wife for a missionary, which he intends to become.
One snowy night, St. John unexpectedly arrives at Jane's cottage. Suspecting Jane's true identity, he relates Jane's experiences at Thornfield and says that her uncle, John Eyre, has died and left Jane his fortune of 20,000 pounds. After confessing her true identity, Jane arranges to share her inheritance with the Riverses, who turn out to be her cousins.
Not long afterwards, St. John decides to travel to India and devote his life to missionary work. He asks Jane to accompany him as his wife. Jane consents to go to India but adamantly refuses to marry him because they are not in love. St. John is not cruel or hypocritical like Mr. Brocklehurst, but he does not respect other people's feelings when they conflict with his own. He continues to pressure Jane to marry him, and his forceful personality almost causes her to capitulate. But at that moment she hears what she thinks is Rochester's voice calling her name, and this gives her the strength to reject St. John completely.
The next day, Jane takes a coach to Thornfield. But only blackened ruins lie where the manorhouse once stood. An innkeeper tells Jane that Rochester's mad wife set the fire and then committed suicide by jumping from the roof. Rochester rescued the servants from the burning mansion but lost a hand and his eyesight in the process. He now lives in an isolated manor house called Ferndean. Going to Ferndean, Jane reunites with Rochester. At first, he fears that she will refuse to marry a blind cripple, but Jane accepts him without hesitation.
Speaking from the vantage point of ten years, Jane describes their married life as blissful.
I know what it is to live entirely for and with what I love best on earth. I hold myself supremely blest—blest beyond what language can express; because I am my husband’s life as fully as he is mine. No woman was ever nearer to her mate than I am: ever more absolutely bone of his bone, and flesh of his flesh. I know no weariness of my Edward’s society: he knows none of mine, any more than we each do of the pulsation of the heart that beats in our separate bosoms; consequently, we are ever together. To be together is for us to be at once as free as in solitude, as gay as in company. We talk, I believe, all day long: to talk to each other is but a more animated and an audible thinking. All my confidence is bestowed on him, all his confidence is devoted to me; we are precisely suited in character—perfect concord is the result. (Chapter XXXVIII)
Meanwhile, St John has gone to India as a missionary. In the novel, Jane writes, "I know that a stranger's hand will write to me next, to say that the good and faithful servant has been called at length into the joy of his Lord" (Chapter XXXVIII). Therefore, while St John's death may be implied, it is never clearly stated.
Rochester eventually recovers sight in one eye, and can see their first-born son when the baby is born.
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32、三十二章:简爱全心全意忠实地做乡村女教师的工作,渐渐成了那一带乡亲们喜欢的人,那段日子,简爱表面上很平静,但常常在梦中遇到罗伯斯特先生,心里焦躁不安。 33、三十三章:圣约翰是个狂热的教徒,准备去印度传教,临行前向简·爱求婚,但他坦率地告诉她,他要娶她并不是因为爱她,而是他需要一个很有教养的助手。
简爱每章节概括
1、第一章:简爱的父亲是个穷牧师,当她还在幼年时,父母就染病双双去世。简爱被送到盖茨海德庄园的舅母里德太太家抚养。2、第二章:舅父里德先生在红房子中去世后,简爱过了10年受尽歧视和虐待的生活。一次,由于反抗表哥的殴打,简被关进了红房子。肉体上的痛苦和心灵上的屈辱和恐惧,使她大病了一...
简爱的章节概括每章100 共38章的概括
三十三章:不久,圣约翰接到家庭律师的通知,说他的舅舅去世了,留给他二万英镑,要圣约翰帮助寻找简爱。圣约翰发现简爱是他的表妹,简爱执意要与他们分享遗产。圣约翰准备去印度传教,临行他前向简爱求婚,但他坦率地告诉她,他要娶她并不是因为爱她,而是他需要一个很有教养的助手。 三十四章:圣约翰非常自信简爱会追随...
简爱章节概括
26、教堂事件惊爆主人生活内幕,我的心一下子由巅峰跌入了谷底,痛苦之余我别无选择,准备离开。27、罗切斯特向我讲述他的“爱情”经历,但我去意己决,在黎明到来之前,我偷偷离开了桑菲尔德府。四、别后(28--35章)离开桑菲尔德的同时,简.爱的生活也再一次陷入了困境。经过几天的流浪和乞讨,简....
简爱章节概括每回200字
简爱的学生是一个不到10岁的女孩阿黛拉·瓦朗,罗切斯特先生是她的保护人。 第十二章:一天黄昏,简·爱去镇上寄信时遇到刚从国外归来的罗切斯特,这是他们第一次见面。罗切斯特从受惊的马上摔了下来,简爱扶他上马,回到家后简才知道他便是庄园主罗切斯特。 第十三章:阿黛尔很不容易教,不专心,处处找借口去寻找...
简爱的章节概括200字
13.在桑费尔德庄园只有庄园主罗切斯特和他的私生女阿黛勒,而罗切斯特经常到国外旅行,所以简•爱到桑费尔德好几天也没见到罗切斯特。14.罗切斯特是个性格阴郁而又喜怒无常的人,他和简•爱经常为某种思想辩论不休。15.在桑费尔德庄园不断发生奇怪的事情。有一天夜里,简•爱被一阵奇怪的...
简爱每一章的主要内容
28.简??爱来到惠特克劳斯,她的仅有的积蓄花光了,沿途乞讨,最后晕倒在牧师圣约翰家门前,被圣约翰和他的两个妹妹救了。30.简??爱住了下来,圣约翰为她谋了一个乡村教师的职位。31.这样,一座山村农舍就成了简的家,她有二十名学生,其中能识字的只有三个,能写和算的一个也没有。有几个会...
员虎蟾麝: 简.爱生存在一个父母双亡,寄人篱下的环境.从小就承受着与同龄人不一样的待遇:姨妈的嫌弃,表姐的蔑视,表哥的侮辱和毒打...然而,她并没有绝望,她并没有自我摧毁,并没有在侮辱中沉沦.所带来的种种不幸的一切,相反,换回的却是简...
黔南布依族苗族自治州19626771922: 《简爱》的主要内容、主题及其人物分析 - ?
员虎蟾麝: 首先,我看过.人物少,内容简单. 简·爱是个孤女,出生于一个穷牧师家庭.父母染上伤寒,一个月之中去世.幼小的简寄养在舅父母家里.舅父里德先生在红房子中去世后,简过了10年受尽歧视和虐待的生活.一次,由于反抗表哥的殴打...
黔南布依族苗族自治州19626771922: 谁有简爱每章出现的人物,急急急!!!! - ?
员虎蟾麝: 简.爱,约翰,罗切斯特,梅森.
黔南布依族苗族自治州19626771922: 急需简爱1 - 28章概括 - ?
员虎蟾麝: 简·爱是个孤女,她出生于一个穷牧师家庭.不久父母相继去世. 幼小的简·爱寄养在舅父母家里.舅父里德先生去世后,简·爱过了10年倍受尽歧视和虐待的生活.舅母把她视作眼中钉,并把她和自己的孩子隔离开来,从此,她与舅母的对...
黔南布依族苗族自治州19626771922: 简爱每一章概括300字 - ?
员虎蟾麝: 具体总结: 1、简·爱的父亲是个穷牧师,当她还在幼年时,父母就感染伤寒双双去世.简·爱被送到盖茨海德庄园的舅母里德太太家抚养.受尽了表兄表姊妹的欺侮. 2、舅父里德先生在红房子中去世后,简爱过了10年受尽歧视和虐待的生活....
黔南布依族苗族自治州19626771922: 简爱的故事概括、主要人物及人物性格 - ?
员虎蟾麝: 简·爱是个孤女,父母由于染上伤寒去世.幼小的简寄养在舅父母家里,简过了10年受尽歧视和虐待的生活.舅母把她视作眼中钉,并把她送进了孤儿院.孤儿院教规严厉,生活艰苦,简在孤儿院继续受到精神和肉体上的摧残.由于谭波尔儿小...
黔南布依族苗族自治州19626771922: 简爱的故事情节主题,主要人物形象性格 - ?
员虎蟾麝: 小说主要内容是女主人公简爱的成长历程,她从小失去父母,寄住在舅妈家,不平等的待遇让她饱受欺凌,小小年纪就承受了别人无法想象的委屈和痛苦.成年后,她成了桑菲尔德贵族庄园的家庭教师,她以真挚的情感和高尚的品德赢得了主人...
黔南布依族苗族自治州19626771922: 《简·爱》第一章的主要内容 - ?
员虎蟾麝: 简爱从令人讨厌的学校毕业,在罗契斯特先生的庄园找了份家教的工作,负责教育罗契斯特先生的女儿,在此过程中两人擦出爱的火花,但在两人结婚当天,意外得知罗契斯特先生的前一位夫人并没有死,而是疯了并且正关在庄园里,于是简爱离开庄园,并碰到自己的表哥表妹,正当简爱犹豫是否与表哥一起离开英国做传教士的妻子时,罗契斯特的庄园由于疯妻纵火毁于一旦,他本人也受伤致盲,心灵有所感应的简爱赶回庄园,两人从此幸福的生活在一起.
黔南布依族苗族自治州19626771922: 《简爱》中有关主人公的故事情节有哪些? - ?
员虎蟾麝: 简爱父母早亡寄居在舅舅家,舅舅病逝后,舅母把她送进孤儿院,来到桑恩费尔德,当男主人公罗彻司特先生家的家庭教师,罗彻先生脾气古怪,经过几次接触,简爱爱上了他.在他们举行婚礼时,梅森闯进来指出古堡顶楼小屋里的疯女人是...
黔南布依族苗族自治州19626771922: 简爱第一章人物形象分析 ?
员虎蟾麝: 简爱的多重性格主要表现在她对爱情的勇敢追求及对现实及命运的坚强抗争,她渴望得到自由的生活、渴望追求真理的精神影响了诸多读者.但简·爱另有诸多美好的品质...