She continues to yell, “You think I have no feelings and that I can do without one bit of love and kindness; but I cannot live so; and you have no pity…people think you are a good woman, but you are bad, hard hearted, you are deceitful” (33). This shows how Jane has started to become stronger and is willing to confront her own aunt for everything she did. It’s as if Jane is trying to have some relief by confronting her aunt after leaving Gateshead and by yelling what she truly feels about her aunt is making her show a sense of moral principles and freedom. Once at Lowood, Jane realizes that everything in Lowood has bad living condition but she feels a sense of relief and some type of freedom from her aunt, she also feels that she has change for the better because now she feels a sense of freedom and triumph that she never felt before and this marked the first part of her journey to gain freedom and integrity. “My soul begin to expand; to exult, with the strangest sense of freedom, of triumph, I ever felt” (33). The confrontation made Mrs. Reed feel frightened by Jane’s
She continues to yell, “You think I have no feelings and that I can do without one bit of love and kindness; but I cannot live so; and you have no pity…people think you are a good woman, but you are bad, hard hearted, you are deceitful” (33). This shows how Jane has started to become stronger and is willing to confront her own aunt for everything she did. It’s as if Jane is trying to have some relief by confronting her aunt after leaving Gateshead and by yelling what she truly feels about her aunt is making her show a sense of moral principles and freedom. Once at Lowood, Jane realizes that everything in Lowood has bad living condition but she feels a sense of relief and some type of freedom from her aunt, she also feels that she has change for the better because now she feels a sense of freedom and triumph that she never felt before and this marked the first part of her journey to gain freedom and integrity. “My soul begin to expand; to exult, with the strangest sense of freedom, of triumph, I ever felt” (33). The confrontation made Mrs. Reed feel frightened by Jane’s