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Jane Bewick (1787–1881) was the eldest daughter of Isabella and wood-engraver Thomas Bewick. She edited her father's biography and supervised his works. She and her sister Isabella Bewick agreed that the Bewick engravings, blocks and papers should be donated to institutions including the British Museum .
- 7 April 1881 (aged 93), Newcastle upon Tyne, England
- English writer
- 29 April 1787, Newcastle upon Tyne, England
- Robert Elliott Bewick (brother), Isabella Bewick (sister), Elizabeth Bewick (sister)
Hace 1 día · Jane Bewick (1787 - 1881) RA Collection: People and Organisations Business-woman, publisher. Daughter of wood-engraver Thomas Bewick (1753-1828); sister of Isabella Bewick (1790-1883), engraver Robert Elliot Bewick (1788-1849). Profile. Born: 1787 Died: 1881. Share
John Reed throws the History of British Birds at Jane when she is ten; Jane uses the book as a place to which to escape, away from the painful Reed household; and Jane also bases her artwork on Bewick's illustrations. Jane and Mr Rochester use bird names for each other, including linnet, dove, skylark, eagle, and falcon.
- Thomas Bewick
- England
- 1821
- Natural history
24 de ago. de 2022 · Description: At the opening of Jane Eyre, we find Jane reading A History of British Birds (1797, 1804) by Thomas Bewick. The natural history book captivates and comforts young Jane, who lives unhappily with the Reeds at Gateshead.
30 de mar. de 2023 · But all this absorption in what goes on in the world of three dimensions and real people serves extreme acts of visual imagination, sometimes impossible to enact in any other dimension: the extraordinary image Loving Bewick, for example, when Jane kisses
Charlotte Brontë. What purpose do the passages from Bewick's History of British Birds serve in Jane Eyre? Quick answer: In this chapter, Jane recounts her time at Lowood Institution, which...
17 de dic. de 2018 · Resonances of Jane’s, and Charlotte Brontë’s, profound connection to Thomas Bewick’s avian volumes reverberate far beyond the opening scenes of the novel, revealing a greater symbiosis between these two texts than critics have hitherto acknowledged.