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FREE ESSAY ON JANE EYRE & SONNET 79(SPENSER)

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JANE EYRE & SONNET 79(SPENSER)

Sonnet 79 & Jane Eyre Composition
Different people have different attitudes and ideas about true love. People also
express their feelings of love in many different ways. However, Edmund Spenser's
attitudes and ideas are very similar to those of Charlotte Bronti's novel Jane Eyre. 
In sonnet 79 Spenser is speaking to a woman known for her beauty. He notes
that the woman knows of her own beauty. "Men call you fair, and you do credit it."
Then Spenser goes on and tells how he does not like to pay close attention to outward
appearances, but greatly admires a women's internal beauty. Spenser notes that
internal beauty never fades, unlike external beauty. "But the true fair, that is the
gentle wit And virtuous mind, is much more praised of me." "He only fair, and what
He fair hath made; All other fair, like flowers, untimely fade." True beauty to
Edmund is the kind of person you are, your heart, your soul, and your wit. Not the
kind of beauty that can fade like outward beauty. 
In Charlotte Bronti's novel, Mr. Edward Rochester falls deeply in love with
young Jane Eyre. Jane Eyre is not a pretty woman to the naked eye. Though, Mr.
Rochester loves Jane for what she is made of. He loves her personality, her inner
strength and all her qualities. Mr. Rochester pays no attention to Jane's outward
appearance. Jane also falls in love with Mr. Rochester for the same reasons. At one
point in the novel, Mr. Rochester asks Jane if she thinks he is a handsome man, Jane
honestly replies no. However, their love for each other is so very strong and will
never fade because they love for the right reasons. 
It is very clear how similar Edmund Spenser's views on true love is to Mr.
Rochester's and Jane Eyre's views. They believe their love will never fade because
their reasons for love will never fade. If they were to be like many other people in the
world, they would fall in what they think is love and eventually fall out. You cannot
judge a book by it's cover, and that is a moral that Spenser, Rochester and Jane value
very much. 

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