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  1. Jane Eyre Chapters 7-11 Comprehension Questions. Describe Mr. Brocklehurst. Click the card to flip 👆. He is a hypocrite and a man who preaches but never practices what he preaches. He is a man of judgment and cruelty. He stated that all the girls most cut off their hair like Julia Severn to be deemed more modest and to avoid vanity and lust.

  2. Jane Eyre Chapter 7-11 Study Guide Questions. Describe Mr. Brocklehurst. He is the master of Lowood and is stern and hypocritical. He thinks that girls should restrain from the lust and vanities of this world by cutting their hair if it is at all curled and they should eat small and meager portions. He gives the girls the bare minimum.

  3. Download this Chart (PDF) Download the Teacher Edition. Previous. Chapter 6 Quiz. Jane Eyre: Chapter 7 Quiz 4 questions. Next. Chapter 8 Quiz. Get 3 quizzes a month with a free LitCharts account. You'll also get updates on new titles we publish and the ability to save highlights and notes. Previous.

  4. In sympathy, Jane gives most of her small meals to other starving girls. Mr. Brocklehurst's type of religion is cold and lifeless. His "charity" is literally killing the girls he is supposed to teach and nourish. In contrast, Jane nourishes others even when she herself is underfed. Active Themes.

    • He chastises her for giving the girls bread and cheese instead of forcing them to eat the burnt porridge.
    • Helen tells Jane that Mr. Brocklehurst is disliked by the girls and that they would only have disliked Jane if he had given her special preference.
    • The unsanitary conditions at the school coupled with its damp and swampy location prove to be a breeding ground for disease. That the girls are unhealthy and undernourished makes them especially susceptible to getting sick.
    • Jane, being a child, doesn’t understand what consumption is and thinks it is a much less serious illness than typhus.
  5. Jane Eyre Volume 1, Chapter 7 Summary. Back. More. Jane continues to settle in at Lowood, if you can call it settling in. Not only does she have to learn all the new school rules and the course material, she also has to cope with the fact that nobody in the school ever gets enough to eat and they’re always cold because their clothes are thin ...

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  7. Many girls are taken from school by friends or relatives, and many others die. Jane remains healthy and spends her days outside with her new friend, Mary Ann Wilson. Meanwhile, Helen has taken ill ...

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