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  1. Like Jane, Helen is an orphan who longs for a home, but Helen believes that she will find this home in Heaven rather than Northern England. And while Helen is not oblivious to the injustices the girls suffer at Lowood, she believes that justice will be found in God’s ultimate judgment—God will reward the good and punish the evil.

    • Introduction
    • Helen’s Quiet Endurance of Punishment
    • A True Follower of Christ’s Teachings
    • Her Death, A Poignant Event
    • Role of Helen Burns
    • Conclusion

    Helen Burnsis one of the girls studying at the charity institution known as Lowood School. Jane becomes acquainted with Helen Burns on the very day of her admission to the school. It is from Helen Burns that Jane comes to know that Lowood Institution is partly a charity-school, and that all the girls studying here and living in the boarding-house a...

    On the day of her admission to the school, Jane also finds that Helen Burns has been made to stand in the middle of the school-room by Miss Scatcherd, the history teacher, as punishment for some offence which she has committed. Jane feels that the punishment given to Helen Burns is in a high degree disgraceful, especially for a girl who is thirteen...

    Helen Burns spends much of her leisure in reading books. One book, Dr. Johnson’s novel Rasselas, has particularly interested her. On being asked by Jane why Miss Scatcherd is so cruel to her, Helen Burns replies that Miss Scatcherd is not at all “cruel” but only “severe”, and that Miss Scatcherd simply dislikes her (Helen’s) faults. Helen Burns fur...

    Later we learn that Helen Burns is suffering from consumption; and subsequently she dies a premature death at the school. Jane had developed a good deal of intimacy with Helen Burns: and it is almost in Jane’s arms that Helen Burns dies. Her death is a very poignant and moving event in the novel. The event contributes much to the pathos which is th...

    Apart from contributing to the pathos of the novel, Helen Burns serves to convey to us, and to emphasize. Jesus Christ’s message to mankind. Helen Burns is an embodiment of piety and humility, and humility is one of the principal virtues which the New Testament preaches. Helen Burns is one of the most important subsidiary characters in this novel; ...

    Thus there is a marked autobiographical element in Charlotte Bronte’s portrayal of Helen Burns. Some critics have found fault with this portrayal; but we strongly disagree with their criticism. In our opinion, this portrayal is one of the best and finest ingredients of the novel Jane Eyre.

  2. Más tarde, Jane conoce a Helen Burns, su primera amiga en Lowood y por la que Jane siente una gran admiración y amor. Helen le enseñó tanto trabajos de la escuela como moral cristiana pero Jane tampoco fue capaz de adoptar su fe puesto que era demasiado pasiva. [ 5 ]

  3. 20 de may. de 2024 · Helen Burns is Jane's only friend at Lowood School. Helen is honest, pious, loyal and compassionate. Helen is continuously victimised by her teachers and regularly takes the punishment without...

  4. Helen Burns Jane's best friend at Lowood, and a model of personal strength and even temperament for Jane. Helen is a withdrawn intellectual with an optimistic religious view of universal salvation that contrasts with St. John's beliefs.

  5. Character Analysis. (Click the character infographic to download.) Helen is Jane’s pious best friend at Lowood Institute. Helen is extremely intelligent, calm, and caring, but her most important aspect is her devout religious faith.