The Superiority of Moral Worth over Physical Charms
'The critic is he who can translate into a new manner or a new material
his impression of beautiful things. The highest as the lowest form of criticism
is a mode of autobiography. Those who find ugly meanings in beautiful things
are corrupt without being charming. This is a fault. Those who find beautiful
meanings in beautiful things are the cultivated. For these there is hope.
They are the elect to whom beautiful things mean only Beauty.' - Oscar Wilde
Each person's perception of beauty is, thankfully different. Over the years,
the way in which beauty is thought of has also altered, from an age where
vanity was considered a good thing to an age where vanity is considered a
flaw, one thing is always certain, that beauty is one topic which shall always
be debated upon. The time in which the Bronte's lived is perhaps one of the
best eras for us to look at the 'superiority of moral worth over physical
charms' for here, more than ever, do we see the concept of good conquering
bad, and moral righteousness winning out over physical attributes. It is interesting
to converse about how these topics have changed, from their times to ours,
but also throughout their novels, from the earliest to the latest, how have
their heroines changed? What type of heroine prevails in their novels? Does
the heroine stereotype change over the course of their writing? Do the morals
which these heroines ascertain to, stay constant throughout the novels? We
shall study all these questions in a bid to discover whether or not moral
worth truly does have superiority over physical charms, or whether it is an
idea in theory which is actually not followed in practice.
However, before we launch into this head on, and discuss the woman's place
in the novel, let us not dismiss the title by confining it solely as referring
to women. Why not include men also? There is much to interest in the concept
of male vanity over moral superiority in novels at the time, as much in the
novels of the Bronte's as anyone else. It is interesting in fact, to discover
how these pioneering female authors of their time pitched the male against
the female in their novels, how each sex is portrayed and stereotyped, and
whether or not this was influenced very heavily by their background, and by
the times in which they lived.
It surely follows that these authors would have been predisposed to discuss
the position and the temperament of the characters about which they write
drawing on their own experiences of life. It seems important that we begin
therefore by looking at the way in which the Bronte's grew up, how they were
treated, by their parents, by those around them, by society in general and
later by those critics of their time who discussed their novels and criticised
them merely for being women. How did this affect them? How did these events
change their hero's and heroine's from novel to novel? Perhaps, by studying
the progression of their lives we can also discover the progression of their
novels, and the characters of their novels - how these developed in accordance
with their own personal development and of course, the development of the
time in which they lived, indisputably being a very inconsistent era in which
to live, particularly for the female species.
To begin therefore, the Bronte sisters were all born in the early 1800's,
Charlotte in 1816, Emily in 1818, and Anne in 1820. In just 1821, a short
18 months after the birth of Anne, Mrs Bronte died, leaving her sister to
bring up her daughters. Indeed, there is nothing at all to suggest that this
was as traumatic for the girls as it must have been - all of them being of
a young age. By all accounts they were well provided for and well loved, being
part of a large and close family. However, life in the early 1800's for any
woman was not always easy. Women in fact were considered at this time to be
'separate' from men. G.M.Young maintains in his book, Victorian England, that
the fundamental issue of feminism, though 'often obscured by agitation for
subordinate ends - the right to vote, to graduate, to dispose of her won property
after marriage, is the entry of woman into the sexless sphere of disinterested
intelligence, and of autonomous personality.' This is typical of the box into
which women were put in this era, and attempts to make headway within society
were met with such resistance at times that it must indeed, have been disheartening
for anyone to keep trying over and over again to be taken seriously just on
the basis of what sex they were. Charlotte once retorted to a critic that
'to you, I am neither man nor woman - I come before you as an author only.'
This is an interesting defence, implying that the issues with which she dealt
in Jane Eyre are indeed those of a multifaceted and androgynous author, she
believes she has addressed the issues from the point of view of an author,
merely, not a man or a woman so to speak.
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