Vocabulary
Characters
Plot
Plot/Style
Miscellaneous
100
"I will be sorry to part from little Adele..." Define: Part
to be seperated from
100
Name two characters you meet in chapters 9 - 13
Mary, Diana, St. John, Rochester's wife, Hannah
100
What is the major twist in the plot revealed in chapter 10?
Mr. Rochester is already married
100
Who's point of view is the book written in?
Jane's
100
How is Jane's life as a teacher at school different from her life at Thornfield?
free, honest, her own person, no entaglement/ no one could love her like Rochester had
200
Define: feverish
sick
200
Which servants continue to serve Mr. Rochester after he moves?
John and Mary
200
What prompts Mr. Rochester to move?
The fire
200
The author uses first names for some characters and last names for other. Why?
reader familiarity, social standing
200
How does Mr. Rochester convince Jane he loves her?
He explains that she is his equal/ swears he loves her/ explains why he pretended to be in love with Ms. Ingram
300
Define: giddy
happy, excited
300
Jane leaves her cousins to find Mr. Rochester. What does this tell you about what Jane values most.
Love (romantic not familial). She knows that she still has her families love.
300
Put these in order a) Jane marries Mr. Rochester b) A "strange creature" (woman) visits Jane at night c) Thornfield burns down d) Jane inherets money
b, c/d, a
300
List two things that happen in the falling action of the book.
Jane is taken in the Mary, Diana and St. John/ Janebecomes a teacher/ Jane finds out are her cousins/ She hears of the tragedy at Thornfield/ She goes in search of Mr. Rochester/ She finds Mr. Rochester
300
"...thirty miles off." Define: off
away
400
"I daresay Mr. Rochester is fond of you." Define: daresay
believe
400
Jane shares her fortune with her cousins. What does this say about her?
She is fair, kind, generous, remembers her past
400
Mr. Rochester wants to move to France with Jane. Why does she refuse?
He is already married and moving to France with him goes against her morality
400
Ch#13-14 How does the author show that Mr. Rochester and Jane have a deep love?
The "dreams" they had of each other/ his prayer/ Coming back to each other after time apart/ Forgiving past wrongs
400
"'What madness has seized me?' he cried." What does Mr. Rochester mean in saying this?
Am I crazy?/ Have I gone insane?/ Am I dreaming?
500
Define: dank and use the it in a sentence.
wet, damp and cold
500
What made Rochester go from confidence to desperation in the last couple chapters?
Losing his wife and not having Jane/ losing his home/ losing his sight
500
What is the climax of the story?
Jane's marriage to Rochester being interrupted/ he is already married/ Jane must leave
500
Why does the author include the part about the chestnut tree in chapter 9.
Foreshadowing - their love is doomed from the beginning
500
Based on what you know about Victorian society how do you think Jane would have been viewed if she had moved to France to live with Mr. Rochester (even though he was still married)?
Disgraceful, shameful, that she was an "easy" woman, dirty, it was wrong
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