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kelley o'hara fan account

@bronte-bitch / bronte-bitch.tumblr.com

mags // 22 // ⚢ Jane Eyre is a lesbian novel and I can prove it.
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Christa (1974) by Edwina Sandys • Woman Crucified (1913) by Frantisek Drtikol • The Crucifixion of St. Julia (1497) by Hieronymus Bosch • The Crucified Venus (1913) by Norman Lindsay • Christian Martyress (1866) by Gabriel Cornelius von Max • Eulalia (1880) by Emilio Franceschi

“I’ve often thought of a female Christ. David told me there’s one in a church in Montreal. Mostly the world can’t take it. Because of people’s feelings about the delicacy of women and also because of what a meaningless display female suffering simply is. If you belittle us in school, treat us like slaves at home and finally, if you get a woman alone in bed just tell her she’s all wrong, no matter what sex you are… or maybe you just grab one on the street and fuck her real fast– in an alley, or in her own bed. I mean if that’s the way it usually goes for this girl what would be the point in seeing her half nude and nailed up? Where’s the contradiction? could that drive the culture for 2,000 years? No way. Female suffering must be hidden, or nothing can work. It’s a man’s world and a girl on a cross would be like seeing a dead animal in a trap. We like to eat them, or see them stuffed, we even like to wear them, but watch them suffer? Hear them wail? The complaining lines were expunged from Florence Nightingale’s book.” - Eileen Myles, Cool for You
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bvkspine

thinking about how jane eyre is the absolute good bitch. thinking about jane eyre and all the reasons jane eyre is the perfect role model, about how the name jane is made holy by the existence you, jane eyre. mrs. eyre? I love you jane eyre, ma'am

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bronte-bitch

My favourite excerpts from Charlotte Bronte’s letters to her “best friend” and lesbian lover Ellen Nussey

“My dear, dear Ellen, I am at this moment trembling all over with excitement after reading your note”

“I will not tell you all I think, and feel about you Ellen, I will preserve unbroken that reserve which alone enables me to maintain a decent character for judgment; but for that I should long ago have been set down by all who know me as a Frenchified fool.”

“Ellen I wish I could live with you always, I begin to cling to you more fondly than ever I did. If we had but a cottage and a competency of our own I do think we might live and love on till Death without being dependent on any third person for happiness.—Farewell my own dear Ellen.” 

“Your notes are meat and drink to me.”

“If you love me do do do come on Friday, I shall watch and wait for you, and if you disappoint me I shall weep. I wish you could know the thrill of delight which I experienced, when as I stood at the dining-room window I saw your brother (George) as he whirled past, toss your little packet over the wall.” 

“Ellen—what shall I do without you? Why are we so to be denied each other’s society? It is an inscrutable fatality. I long to be with you because it seems as if two or three days or weeks spent in your company would beyond measure strengthen me in the enjoyment of those feelings which I have so lately begun to cherish.”

“Why are we to be divided? Surely, Ellen, it must be because we are in danger of loving each other too well—of losing sight of the Creator in idolatry of the creature.” 

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berrytart

mr Rochester is blatantly like [tearful confession voice] Jane how would you feel if hypothetically I denied all social custom and risked everything to be with you because I love you so much. you have changed me completely. I thought I was forever trapped in darkness but now I wish to become a better man because of you.I want to take back all the sinful actions of my past so I can be worthy of your love. Hypothetically Is there any way we could be together? and Jane is just sitting there like Did Y’all Hear Smth

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hey uh i’ve seen a few posts recently saying jane eyre is charlotte brontë’s fanfic of emma, which i can say with absolute certainty that it is not and that charlotte brontë actually didn’t like jane austen. she’s literally quoted as saying in a letter,

“Why do you like Miss Austen so very much? I am puzzled on that point… I had not seen Pride & Prejudice till I read that sentence of yours, and then I got the book and studied it. And what did I find? An accurate daguerreotyped portrait of a common-place face; a carefully-fenced, highly cultivated garden with neat borders and delicate flowers - but no glance of a bright vivid physiognomy - no open country - no fresh air - no blue hill - no bonny beck. I should hardly like to live with her ladies and gentlemen in their elegant but confined houses.”

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