《简爱》人物简介

如题所述

第1个回答  2019-12-01
简爱:

女主人公,一个性格坚强,朴实,刚柔并济,独立自主,积极进取的女性。她出身卑微,相貌平凡,但她并不以此自卑。她蔑视权贵的骄横,嘲笑他们的愚笨,显示出自立自强的人格和美好的理想。她有顽强的生命力,从不向命运低头,最后有了自己所向往的美好生活。

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。但她并没有绝望,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·爱的无限信心,却是简·爱的坚强不屈的精神,一种不可战胜的内在人格力量。

她对自己的命运、价值、地位的思考和努力把握,对自己的思想和人格有着理性的认识,对自己的幸福和情感有着坚定的追求。从简爱身上,表现力当今新女性的形象:自尊、自重、自立、自强,对于自己的人格、情感、生活、判断、选择的坚定理想和执着追求。

2.罗切斯特:

桑菲尔德庄园主,拥有财富和强健的体魄,大约三十六七岁年纪(比简爱大了将近二十岁),心地善良,表面上看起来有些冷漠,有点顽固,起初在简爱眼中,他个性格阴郁而又喜怒无常,有一种男子汉气概。他身体强健,不算很英俊,但面孔十分坚毅,有一头浓密的黑卷发和一双又大又亮的黑眼睛。

年轻时他被父兄迫害,受骗娶了疯女人伯莎·梅森,那个女人荒淫无度,过着放浪的生活,成天吼叫,罗切斯特非常厌恶她,但由于强烈的责任心和当时的一些要求不能抛弃她。

罗切斯特先生为了追求新的生活到欧洲各国旅游,但一直都没有找到自己的心上人,反而频频遭到背叛。后来决心认真生活,便回到了桑菲尔德庄园,认识了家庭女教师简·爱,爱上了她,并向她求婚,但已婚的事实被揭发。简爱离开,他悲痛欲绝。由于疯子妻子的疯狂放火而失去一条胳膊和一只眼睛,另一只眼睛也失明了。最后成为简·爱的丈夫。婚后两年眼睛复明。
第2个回答  2011-08-19
简·爱——女主人公,一个性格坚强,朴实,刚柔并济,独立自主,积极进取的女性。她蔑视权贵的骄横,嘲笑他们的愚笨,显示出自立自强的人格和美好的理想。她有顽强的生命力,从不向命运低头。   最后有了自己所向往的美好生活。   爱德华.费尔法克斯·罗切斯特——特恩费德庄园主,拥有财富和强健的体魄,年轻时他过着放浪的生活,后来决心认真生活,喜欢简爱并向她求婚。晚年时由于第一任妻子的疯狂放火而失去一条胳膊和一只眼睛。最后成为简爱的丈夫。   贝茜——盖茨赫德庄园的仆人,相较之下她对简爱很好,后来嫁给看门人利文,曾来庄园看望过简爱。   里德太太——简·爱的舅妈,曾违心答应丈夫收养简爱,对简·爱并不公平。儿子自杀使她中风,临死前良心发现,告诉简·爱她还有亲属在世真相。(已死)
第3个回答  2007-09-27
简爱

《简·爱》1847是一部自传成分很浓的小说,虽然书中的故事是虚构的,但是女主人公以及其他许多人物的生活、环境,甚至许多生活细节,都是取自作者及其周围人的真实经验。作者夏洛蒂·勃朗特1816年生于英国北部的一个牧师家庭。母亲早逝,八岁的夏洛蒂被送进一所寄宿学校。在那里生活条件极其恶劣,她的两个姐姐因染上肺病而先后死去。于是夏洛蒂和妹妹艾米利回到家乡,在荒凉的约克郡山区度过了童年。15岁时她进了伍勒小姐办的学校读书,几年后又在这个学校当教师。后来她曾作家庭教师,但因不能忍受贵妇人、阔小姐对家庭教师的歧视和刻薄,放弃了家庭教师的谋生之路。她曾打算自办学校,为此她在姨母的资助下与艾米利一起去意大利进修法语和德语。然而由于没有人来就读,学校没能办成。但是她在意大利学习的经历激发了她表现自我的强烈愿望,促使她投身于文学创作的道路。

《简·爱》写于1846年,是夏洛蒂的第二部小说。她借一个出身寒微的年轻女子奋斗的经历,抒发了自己胸中的积愫,深深打动了当时的读者。小说于1847年秋以柯勒·贝尔的笔名发表,随即在次年又相继两次再版。这位名不见经传的作者,夏洛蒂·勃朗特,由此进入英国著名小说家的行列。

《简·爱》的独特之处不仅在于小说的真实性和强烈的感染力,还在于小说塑造了一个不屈于世俗压力,独立自主,积极进取的女性形象。小说中简·爱对罗切斯特的爱情故事,生动地展现了的那火一样的热情和赤诚的心灵,强烈地透露出她的爱情观。她蔑视权贵的骄横,嘲笑他们的愚蠢,显示出自强自立的人格和美好的理想。她大胆地爱自己所爱,然而当她发现自己所爱之人还有妻子的时候,又毅然离开她所留恋的人和地方。小说表达出的思想,即妇女不甘于社会指定她们的地位而要求在工作上以至婚姻上独立平等的思想,在当时不同凡响,对英国文坛也是一大震动。小说的虚构结尾,描写简爱获得一笔遗产,回到孤独无助的罗切斯特身边。这一情节虽然值得推敲,但是它显露出作者的理想—女性在经济、社会地位以及家庭中的独立平等以及对爱情的忠贞不移。

在写作风格上,夏洛蒂也独树一帜。她文笔简洁而传神,质朴而生动,加之第一人称的叙述语言,使得小说贴近读者,贴近现实。同时,小说又体现了欧洲浪漫主义文学传统的特点,显示出作者丰富的想象力和诗人的气质。作者在叙述中自然地使用了梦境、幻觉、预感和象征、隐喻等手法,使小说的“自然”境界扑朔朦胧,情节扣人心弦。

在当今文坛中,有人批评小说缺乏对社会现实更理智而深刻的分析。在对疯女人的描写中,过多地追求“哥特式小说”的神秘气氛而减弱了表现现实的真实性。在对牧师圣约翰的描写上,美化他献身基督教的传道事业,而掩盖了殖民主义者文化侵略的性质。小说中所表现的这些局限性的成因很复杂,有的是受作者本人的阅历所限她只活了39岁,有的是因作品本身形式的特点而定,而有的则是由于历史的局限性所至。总之,一百多年来,《简·爱》的影响不衰,作家、评论家对它的热情不成。它至今仍然是广大读者喜爱的书
第4个回答  2019-12-08
一~情节

简·爱是个孤女,从小被寄养在盖茨海德庄园舅妈里德太太家,笼罩在被舅母虐待的阴影下,十岁那年被送进了罗伍德(Lowood)寄宿学校,院长是个自私残忍的人。

她经历了种种折磨,她的好友海伦死于肺病;但她靠着坚强的意志完成了学业,成为一名优秀的教师,在孤儿院当了两年教师,但她受不了那里的孤寂,于是受聘于桑费尔德庄园(Thornfield Hall)。

庄园的主人罗彻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,但两人却逐渐漫生情愫。有一天里德太太派人来找简·爱,说她病危,要见简·爱一面。见面时,里德太太给她一封信,这封信是三年前简·爱的叔父寄来的,向她打听简·爱的消息。

里德太太谎称简·爱在孤儿院病死了,临终前里德太太终于良心发现把真相告诉简·爱。罗彻斯特向她求婚,简·爱答应了,并高兴地准备婚礼,但是在婚礼上却发现罗彻斯特已经有合法妻子,而且他的妻子受过精神创伤,是一个精神病患者。

简·爱伤心地逃离了桑费尔德庄园。她身无分文,并且遗失了包裹,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醒。并且帮助她找到教师的工作。后来圣约翰发现简·爱是他的表妹,简·爱的叔父把所有遗产留给了她,她又把遗产平分给了她和她的三位表亲戚。

表兄圣约翰向她求婚,但简·爱没答应。简·爱回到桑费尔德庄园时,整个庄园已是一片废墟。罗彻斯特的妻子跳楼而死,罗彻斯特被烧瞎了双眼并失去了一只手,孤苦无依。简·爱跟罗彻斯特终于结婚,生了一个男孩,而罗彻斯特的眼睛则恢复到可以见到儿子。

二~评价
当时英国的《季度评论》认为此作有“明显的反基督成分”。 虽然作者本人只是想借助此作来反抗维多利亚时代的生活方式,但《季度评论》依旧认为此作实在过于激进,是对传统人世及神学权威的挑战。
《简·爱》后来成为了英语名著之一,现在是常见的英语世界国家中学教材,2003年BBC的大阅读调查中其排在第10位。
第5个回答  2009-02-04
Jane Eyre
The orphaned protagonist of the story. When the novel begins, she is an isolated, powerless ten-year-old living with an aunt and cousins who dislike her. As the novel progresses, she grows in strength. She distinguishes herself at Lowood School because of her hard work and strong intellectual abilities. As a governess at Thornfield, she learns of the pleasures and pains of love through her relationship with Edward Rochester. After being deceived by him, she goes to Marsh End, where she regains her spiritual focus and discovers her own strength when she rejects St. John River’s marriage proposal. By novel’s end she has become a powerful, independent woman, blissfully married to the man she loves, Rochester.

Edward Fairfax Rochester
Jane’s lover; a dark, passionate, brooding man. A traditional romantic hero, Rochester has lived a troubled wife. Married to an insane Creole woman, Bertha Mason, Rochester sought solace for several years in the arms of mistresses. Finally, he seeks to purify his life and wants Jane Eyre, the innocent governess he has hired to teach his foster daughter, Adèle Varens, to become his wife. The wedding falls through when she learns of the existence of his wife. As penance for his transgressions, he is punished by the loss of an eye and a hand when Bertha sets fire to Thornfield. He finally gains happiness at the novel’s end when he is reunited with Jane.

Sarah Reed
Jane’s unpleasant aunt, who raises her until she is ten years old. Despite Jane’s attempts at reconciliation before her aunt’s death, her aunt refuses to relent. She dies unloved by her children and unrepentant of her mistreatment of Jane.

John Reed
Jane’s nasty and spoiled cousin, responsible for Jane’s banishment to the red-room. Addicted to drinking and gambling, John supposedly commits suicide at the age of twenty-three when his mother is no longer willing or able to pay his debts.

Eliza Reed
Another one of Jane’s spoiled cousins, Eliza is insanely jealous of the beauty of her sister, Georgiana. She nastily breaks up Georgiana’s elopement with Lord Edwin Vere, and then becomes a devout Christian. But her brand of Christianity is devoid of all compassion or humanity; she shows no sympathy for her dying mother and vows to break off all contact with Georgiana after their mother’s death. Usefulness is her mantra. She enters a convent in Lisle, France, eventually becoming the Mother Superior and leaving her money to the church.

Georgiana Reed
Eliza’s and John’s sister, Georgiana is the beauty of the family. She’s also shallow and self-centered, interested primarily in her own pleasure. She accuses her sister, Eliza, of sabotaging her plans to marry Lord Edwin Vere. Like Eliza, she shows no emotion following their mother’s death. Eventually, Georgiana marries a wealthy, but worn-out society man.

Bessie Lee
The maid at Gateshead who sometimes consoles Jane by telling her entertaining stories and singing her songs. Bessie visits Jane at Lowood, impressed by Jane’s intellectual attainments and ladylike behavior. Bessie marries the coachman, Robert Leaven, and has three children.

Mr. Lloyd
The kind apothecary who suggests that Jane be sent to school following her horrifying experience in the red-room. His letter to Miss Temple clears Jane of the accusations Mrs. Reed has made against her.

Mr. Brocklehurst
The stingy, mean-hearted manager of Lowood. He hypocritically feeds the girls at the school starvation-level rations, while his wife and daughters live luxuriously. The minister of Brocklebridge Church, he represents a negative brand of Christianity, one that lacks all compassion or kindness.

Helen Burns
Jane’s spiritual and intellectual friend at Lowood. Although she is unfairly punished by Miss Scatcherd at Lowood, Helen maintains her poise, partially through her loving friendship with Miss Temple. From Helen, Jane learns tolerance and peace, but Jane can’t accept Helen’s rejection of the material world. Helen’s impressive intellectual attainments inspire Jane to work hard at school. Dying in Jane’s arms, Helen looks forward to peace in heaven and eventual reunion with Jane.

Maria Temple
The warm-hearted superintendent at Lowood who generously offers the girls bread and cheese when their breakfasts are inedible. An impressive scholar, a model of ladylike behavior and a compassionate person, Miss Temple is a positive role model for Jane. She cares for Jane and Helen, offering them seedcake in her room and providing Helen with a warm, private bed when she is dying.

Miss Miller
Teacher for the youngest students at Lowood who greets Jane on her first night at the school.
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