In "Jane Eyre," Charlotte Brontë weaves a rich tapestry of personal struggle, social critique, and moral evolution through the life of its eponymous heroine. The novel is intricately structured as a bildungsroman, tracing Jane's journey from a tumultuous childhood marked by cruelty and isolation to her emergence as a strong-willed, independent woman. Brontë's narrative employs a lyrical yet direct...