Becoming a Governess
1. The woman Question is the voice of the women in the nineteenth century, asking to be heard and answered. Like all that women, this novel ‘Jane Eyre’ asks us to think about a woman in the middle of Victiorian England, trying to make sense of her own destiny. It asks that we understand the voice of a feminist and that we listen to ‘What women want’.
Higher education became available to women in 1848 when the Queen’s college opened. This made it able for women to get a higher qualification and to get a decent job and earn their own money.
2. “Women are supposed to be very calm generally: but women feel just as men feel; they need exercise for their faculties, and a field for their efforts as much as their brothers do;”
Jane worked at Mr Rochester’s house as a governess. When she first met him he recognised her as the governess because of the way she dressed.
- “He stopped, ran his eye over my dress, which, as usual, was quite simple – a black merino cloak, a black beaver bonnet; neither of them half fine enough for a lady’s-maid. “ “Ah, the governess!” (Bronte, 135)
Governesses were seen as dumb and Mr Rochester could not believe that it was Jane who drew that beautiful pictures.
- “Out of my head. That head I see on your shoulders?” (Bronte. 146)
A governess was expected to look after the children
- “what are you about Miss Eyre, to let Adele sit up so long? Take her to bed” (Bronte, 149)
3. A governess in the nineteenth century was known as a low class woman. She had to do domestic work in the house, nurture the children and do everything the man wants her to do; she was like a middle class mother. The governess was expected to preside over the contradictions written into the domestic ideal. For gentlemen a governess was a tabooed woman. They couldn’t marry her, because she was a governess and in their eyes a governess was a lunatic and fallen woman. The governess also never performed as a mother. She was only helping out in the family when the mother couldn’t do it or when a family’s mother died. Being a governess in the nineteenth century must have been very humiliating to the women. No one cared about their humanity and they didn’t have respect for them.