St John Flashcards

1
Q

an _____ _____ of those very ‘laws and principles’ on the strength of which Jane has rejected Rochester

A

external embodiment

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2
Q

Offers an alternative to Rochester, both ______ as an opposing character type, and ______ as a potential mate for Jane

A

structurally, personally

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3
Q

‘restless’ ‘eager’ ‘troubled by…

A

insatiate yearnings’

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4
Q

by whose sermons ‘the heart was ____, the mind astonished’

A

thrilled

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5
Q

even before St John’s literal kinship to Jane is disclosed, there is a strong sense of likeness:

A

‘I was sure St John Rivers… had not yet found that peace of God which passeth all understanding: he had no more found it, I thought, than had I’

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6
Q

St John directly mirrors her own history when he says:

A

‘it is hard to control the workings of inclination, and turn the bent of nature: but that it may be done, I know from experience. God has given us, in a measure, the power to make our own fate’

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7
Q

Diana: ‘St John looks quiet… but he hides a ____ in his vitals… in some things he is as _____ as death’

A

fever,

inexorable

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8
Q

‘with all his firmness and self-control… [he] locks

A

every feeling and pang within - expresses, confesses, imparts nothing’

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9
Q

What Jane finds in Rivers is…

A

a version of her own self

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10
Q

Where Bertha embodies Jane’s displaced sexuality,

A

in Rivers the austerity Jane has cherished as her inward guardian now confronts her externally

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11
Q

Jane detects ‘elements within either ____, or hard, or eager’

A

restless

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12
Q

Structurally, St John is more a foil to Bertha than to Rochester, pitting against her animal instincts his __________.

A

inverse model of pure rationalism

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13
Q

‘a cold, ____ , ambitious man…. Reason, and not Feeling is my guide’

A

hard

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14
Q

‘a ____ instead of a man’

A

statue

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15
Q

But for all his fierce zeal, stern stoicism and loveless rigidity, St John ‘could not bind all that he had in his nature, the rover, the aspirant, the poet, the priest….

A

in the limits of a single passion’

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16
Q

St John does note simply represent a corrective to Jane, but an ________.

A

enticement

17
Q

when he asks her to leave for India with him as helpmeet in the fulfilment of his missionary purpose…

A

it is never inconceivable that he is offering salvation

18
Q

When she says ‘I can but die… Let me try to with His will in silence’ …

A

she hears St John’s voice ‘close at hand’ - literally her saviour

19
Q

he is ‘___ her nature’

A

half

20
Q

‘Is not the _______ he offers me truly the most ____ man can adopt or God can assign?

A

occupation, glorious

21
Q

‘Alas! If I join St John… If I go to India, I go to ________’

A

premature death

22
Q

‘my mind… is like a ________ ________, with one shrinking fear fettered in its depths - the fear of being persuaded by you to attempt what I cannot accomplish’

A

rayless dungeon

23
Q

‘If I were his wife - this good man, pure as the deep sunless source, could soon ____ __’

A

kill me

24
Q

‘If I were to marry you, you would kill me, you are killing me now….

A

to do as you wish me, would I begin to think, be almost equivalent to committing suicide’

25
Q

It is remarkable that in the religious novel, the true ___ __ _____ is the refusal of the formal religious life.

A

act of faith

26
Q

‘I had never seen that handsome face of his look more like

A

chiselled marble than it did just now’

27
Q

‘I will give the missionary my _____ - it is all he wants - but not myself’

A

energies

28
Q

St John’s address is pompous and cold - more like a ______ or a sermon than an offer as it is possessive and demanding

A

ceremony

29
Q

St John manifests ‘________’

A

repressed fervour

30
Q

He has preached humility, but his own arrogance, spiritual and physical vanity are affronted by Jane’s proposal to go as St John’s ____.

A

sister

31
Q

‘my iron _____ contracted round me’

A

shroud

32
Q

Jane sees….

A

mored death than life in his proposal

33
Q

His are virtually the last words of the book, exemplifying a _______.

A

tenacity of faith

34
Q

While Jane enjoys life, St John moves inexorably, wishfully towards death and Jane knows she’ll soon hear…..

A

‘that the good and faithful servant has been called at length into the joy of his Lord’

35
Q

St John shows that service dictated by ____ gives an illusion of being dogmatically right

A

duty

36
Q

St John is a rigorous study of a man able to subdue the temptations of the flesh…

A

and who thus loses what humanity he has

37
Q

‘You shall be mine: I claim you,

A

not for my own pleasure. but for my Sovereign’s service’

38
Q

‘a part of

A

me you must become’