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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com Digital Library-Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte


33

Sitting on a low stool, a few yards from her arm-chair, I examined
her figure; I perused her features. In my hand I held the tract
containing the sudden death of the Liar, to which narrative my
attention had been pointed as to an appropriate warning. What had
just passed; what Mrs. Reed had said concerning me to Mr.
Brocklehurst; the whole tenor of their conversation, was recent,
raw, and stinging in my mind; I had felt every word as acutely as I
had heard it plainly, and a passion of resentment fomented now
within me.

Mrs. Reed looked up from her work; her eye settled on mine, her
fingers at the same time suspended their nimble movements.

‘Go out of the room; return to the nursery,’ was her mandate. My
look or something else must have struck her as offensive, for she
spoke with extreme though suppressed irritation. I got up, I went
to the door; I came back again; I walked to the window, across the
room, then close up to her.

Speak I must: I had been trodden on severely, and must turn: but
how? What strength had I to dart retaliation at my antagonist? I
gathered my energies and launched them in this blunt sentence‘I
am not deceitful: if I were, I should say I loved you; but I declare I
do not love you: I dislike you the worst of anybody in the world
except John Reed; and this book about the liar, you may give to
your girl, Georgiana, for it is she who tells lies, and not I.’ Mrs.
Reed’s hands still lay on her work inactive: her eye of ice continued
to dwell freezingly on mine.

‘What more have you to say?’ she asked, rather in the tone in
which a person might address an opponent of adult age than such
as is ordinarily used to a child.

That eye of hers, that voice stirred every antipathy I had. Shaking
from head to foot, thrilled with ungovernable excitement, I
continued - ‘I am glad you are no relation of mine: I will never call
you aunt again so long as I live. I will never come to see you when
I am grown up; and if any one asks me how I liked you, and how
you treated me, I will say the very thought of you makes me sick,
and that you treated me with miserable cruelty.’ ‘How dare you
affirm that, Jane Eyre?’ ‘How dare I, Mrs. Reed? How dare I?
Because it is the truth. You think I have no feelings, and that I can
do without one bit of love or kindness; but I cannot live so: and
you have no pity. I shall remember how you thrust me back-
roughly and violently thrust me back-into the red-room, and
locked me up there, to my dying day; though I was in agony;
though I cried out, while suffocating with distress, “Have mercy!
Have mercy, Aunt Reed!” And that punishment you made me
suffer because your wicked boy struck me-knocked me down for
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