Across
- 3. Faithfulness shown by characters like Jane and Helen.
- 5. Self-control, a Victorian virtue Jane often practices.
- 7. Jane’s mysterious employer and love interest.
- 9. Holding back feelings or desires, important in Victorian society.
- 13. Struggles between characters or within Jane herself.
- 15. The wild, natural landscape symbolizing freedom and emotion.
- 16. Jane’s strong sense of right and wrong.
- 17. Dark, eerie atmosphere with mysterious elements.
- 19. The chance to make amends or find forgiveness.
- 20. The story is told from Jane’s first-person perspective.
Down
- 1. Regional speech that adds realism to characters.
- 2. A story with a hidden moral or spiritual meaning.
- 4. Rochester’s hidden, mentally ill wife.
- 6. Intense emotion driving Jane and Rochester’s relationship.
- 8. The theme of women’s independence and equality.
- 10. Objects or settings that represent deeper meanings.
- 11. Jane’s experience of loneliness and self-reliance.
- 12. Jane’s job caring for children, reflecting her social position.
- 14. The process of learning or being taught, relevant to Jane’s growth.
- 18. The strong, independent heroine of the novel.
