Reader, classics Professor Mary Beard loves this unlikely romance
âJane Eyre raises all those wonderful questions about what women want, what really counts as happiness and success.â
Photograph by Alice Hawkins.
Articles written from interviews by Sophie Robinson, edited by Natalie Smith.
 We are filming in Professor Beard's Cambridge sitting room.
Weâre here to talk about Charlotte BrontĂ«âs Jane Eyre, a book Beard first read as a rather precocious ten year old.Â
âIt was the first âgrown-up bookâ I ever read,â she says.
âItâs also been a book that Iâve come back to over my life, so almost 50 years. Iâve read it again and again and itâs always been different.â
âJane Eyre raises all those wonderful questions about what women want, what really counts as happiness and success. It cuts down to the real essentials of womenâs options. Janeâs a working girl. Sheâs a governess. Sheâs independent.â
âSheâs somebody who is finding their own way in the world. That feels very modern. There are all kinds of Victorian heroines that just donât feel like us any longer but Jane really does. Sheâs out there, sheâs on her own and sheâs fending for herself.â
Quite a feat for a book published in 1846.
At its heart, Jane Eyre is the âhappy ending storyâ of a girl who starts out life orphaned.Â
âThis book is about perseverance and survival and the idea of triumph over the odds.â
âSheâs living with a really nasty family of relatives, sent away to a terrible school, becomes a governess, falls for the man of the house, nearly gets married to him - but he turns out to be married already, to a mad woman in the attic. Jane has a semi-dalliance with a bit of a prig but in the end comes back to Mr Rochester and gets the guy in the end,â Professor Beard neatly summarises.
âAs you get more cynical and as you grow up, though, you see that maybe marriage wasnât the only answer to a girlâs life.â
âOn second and third readings, I became more interested in the other characters that tell a different story. The guy she marries has a previous wife, thatâs very important in the story. You start thinking, âWhat was her story? Who was the first Mrs Rochester?âÂ
Then there is Rochesterâs blindness. By the time Jane âgets the blokeâ, heâs blind, no longer in his prime. That ambivalence fascinates Beard, as does Janeâs lack of (traditional) beauty.
âJane is not particularly pretty. This book is great for women who donât think of themselves as real cutesies because Janeâs attraction is her character.â
âI used to see myself as Jane because I never thought I was very pretty. I always thought I was going to be a working girl. As time has gone on Iâve got greater distance from her,â she says.Â
âI read Jane Eyre and for a little while I became Jane Eyre. Weâre as one.â
Most keenly, she has distance from the ending of the book, where Jane reaches that âultimate female goalâ of marriage. Professor Beard, whilst happily married, now knows that itâs not the only answer, as she may have thought aged ten.
âThe sentence that stands out, and I think stands out for everybody, is the first sentence in the last chapter â âReader, I married him. The quiet wedding we had.ââ That becomes such a sort of climatic moment for the book. In some ways it has entered peopleâs consciousness as the novel, the almost clichĂ© of the novelâs happy ending or any novelâs happy ending, this is, âMy reader, I married him,â moment. I think that you can never get that line out of your head.âÂ
Professor Mary Beard is Professor of Classics at Cambridge University, a Professor of Ancient Literature at the Royal Academy of Arts, blogger, BBC television presenter and Classics editor of the Times Literary Supplement. Professor Beard recommends Jean Rhysâ 1966 novel Wide Sargasso Sea, a spin-off prequel to Jane Eyre which tells the story of the âfirst Mrs Rochesterâ.
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