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Thoughts on Jane Eyre's Reading Eight Hundred Words
Jane Eyre is a classic handed down from generation to generation in the history of English literature. It successfully created the first female image in the history of English literature who took an independent and positive attitude towards love, life, society and religion and dared to fight for freedom and equality. The following are the thoughts of Jane Eyre that I collected after reading. I hope everyone will read it carefully!

I like reading Jane Eyre, because I am deeply attracted by the indomitable spirit of the protagonist Jane Eyre and a rare personality charm of ordinary people.

Jane Eyre lost her parents when she was a child, and was often discriminated and abused by menstruation and her children. Finally, Jane Eyre was sent to Loward Church School, which has the nature of an orphanage. When the heroine Jane Eyre grew up, she came to Thornfield Manor as a governess in order to pursue an independent and free life. She fell in love with Rochester, the owner of the manor, but later found out that Rochester had a wife-a crazy woman imprisoned in the attic. Sad, Jane Eyre fled the manor alone, wandering around the primary school, and had a hard time. Later, because she always thought of Rochester, she returned to him. At this time, the manor was beyond recognition, and Rochester was blind. Jane Eyre resolutely lives happily with him forever. ...

Jane Eyre, who has lost her parents' love since childhood, is often discriminated and abused by her aunt and children, but she can live so tenaciously and independently. As for me, my parents are afraid of falling into my hands and melting into my mouth, which has developed my willfulness and disobedience. Every time my father says something about me, I feel uneasy. Although I know he is good for me, I always feel that he is finding fault in an egg. After reading Jane Eyre's miserable childhood life and thinking about her attitude towards her father, I will think that Jane Eyre must be thinking, "If only she had a father and could listen to his teaching when she did something wrong!" " Therefore, I decided to cherish this fatherly love more in the future.

Jane Eyre has a strong and unyielding spirit in the face of difficulties, which is far behind her. I always feel that my math scores are poor. Every time I encounter a math problem that I can't do, my first reaction is to ask my parents. I never wanted to solve it myself. I once encountered such a problem: Fahrenheit = Celsius times 1.8 plus 3.2. At that time, I felt very complicated at first sight, and shouted "Mom-Mom-Mom" without thinking. After listening to the analysis, I found that this problem is actually very simple. I just don't have Jane Eyre's indomitable spirit in the face of difficulties. I think, where will I fall and get up again when I encounter difficulties in the future?

So I want to thank the book Jane Eyre, which makes me understand a lot of life truths: no matter what setbacks I encounter, as long as I face them bravely and persevere, there is hope for success!

Second, Jane Eyre, the heroine who read this book, is an orphan who has lost his parents. Under the abuse of her aunt, she lived a strong life and struggled hard. She pursues freedom and doesn't want to be scolded and insulted by others. My aunt sent her to lowood school, and she was very happy. She thought she could finally get rid of bad luck, and the reality did improve. Life at lowood school made her feel mixed, and what she saw and heard inspired her deeply. From her friend Helen, she saw what strength and patience were, and she was daily growing and mature in learning and exploring.

In the last two years in Lowood, Jane Eyre became a teacher, but she felt that she had lost a lot. She wanted to pursue a free life, so she found another job-tutoring. On the night of delivering the letter, he met Mr. Rochester and helped him. Later, he learned that Rochester was the owner of the Thornfield family. After getting to know each other, they fell in love. During this period, Jane Eyre let bygones be bygones, forgave menstruation who had hurt herself, and accompanied her until her death.

When Jane Eyre is about to become Rochester's bride, she knows that Rochester has a wife, even though she is a crazy woman. Jane Eyre is very sad. She can't accept all this. Moral and conscience condemnation made her decide to leave this place. On the way to leave, she experienced hardships, even wandering, but this did not crush Jane Eyre. She met her cousin's family by chance and started her own school, which brought knowledge and happiness to the children. Because she always cared about Mr. Rochester from the bottom of her heart, she returned to Thornfield. Upon inquiry, she learned that Rochester's wife died in a fire caused by her madness. In that disaster, Rochester was blind and disabled in one hand, in order to save people. Jane Eyre finds Rochester and tells him that even though he is disabled, she still loves him and decides to live happily with him forever. I admire Jane Eyre's indomitable spirit of pursuing a free and happy life forever.

I was deeply impressed by everything she experienced before and after, as well as her tolerant and open-minded personality. She dares to resist, to pursue, to fight, to be self-reliant and self-respecting since childhood. Although her appearance is not beautiful, her background is ordinary and she has nothing, but her temperament is supercilious and simple and modest, which makes people around her admire her. She pursues a free and equal life, but fate seems to deliberately temper her and make her suffer from confusion and pressure again and again. But in the end, she overcame her fate and got happiness. Fate has given preferential treatment to this kind, strong and brave ordinary woman, and everything has changed and become better and better because of her own efforts. We should learn Jane Eyre's spirit of self-respect, self-love, strength, independence and not being intimidated by difficulties. We should pursue our own life ideals, weigh the happiness in our hands, grasp every wonderful moment of life, and let ourselves live with relish and enjoy it in suffering.

Third, after reading Jane Eyre, if Jane Eyre was independent, she would have been strangled in her childhood under her patron. Without that independence, she would have lived with Rochester, who has a wife and a daughter, and started a new life with money and status. If she didn't have that purity, Jane Eyre in our hands now is no longer a touching classic that makes people cry. So, I began to think about why Jane Eyre moved us so much and couldn't put it down-that is, her independent personality and exciting personality charm.

Jane Eyre, the protagonist, is thin and ordinary, without money and status, but with extraordinary temperament and a very rich emotional world. In the tempering of life, she abandoned the natural cowardice and femininity of women and gradually developed a strong and independent personality. She won't lose face in the face of her cousin's cruelty, but she will fight for it. Even if the result is not satisfactory, but never bow; In "Blocker", Mr. Hess was cruel as the devil, so she didn't show any fear, but calmly carried it down and survived independently and strongly.

After reading Jane Eyre, I feel sad for the abuse she suffered as a child, and I feel the hurt of Jane Eyre's young and sensitive heart with empathy. I also fell in love with Jane Eyre. I like her supercilious attitude in front of so-called upper-class people who are higher than her, and her spirit of self-respect and self-improvement in front of love. I can't help sighing in my mind that she has made progress for two hundred years in the modern age where she lives. How many women have the courage to say no to a beloved rich man for their own dignity? Jane Eyre will do! On her body, the grandeur and sublimity of an independent personality are always flashing!

Jane Eyre, she is "poor, humble, humble and short", but she has a smart, strong and brave heart, which makes those external beauty look pale and powerless in front of this inner beauty. What is more commendable is that Jane Eyre did not feel inferior because of poverty and looks. On the contrary, she is brave and firm: "I am equal to your soul." "I have the same soul as you, and I have the same heart!" "I'm not talking to you according to customs, conventions, or even flesh and blood-it's my heart talking to your heart, as if we have all passed away, and we stand before God together, equal to each other-just like us!"