Dreams Jane Eyre

In the book, Jane Eyre, by Charlotte Bronte’, the main character Jane Eyre is a young mistrest going through problems with herslef, and the men in her life. Jane never has had any parents and as a child lived with her Aunt Reed, who never liked her and treated her as a worker. As she grew older she moved to Thornfeild to be a mistress and found herslef falling in love with Mr. Rotchester. She, as a living person, whithdrawls a number of significant dreams and day dreams. These dreams aren’t nonefficient to her life though, they forshadow many events in her future and anylize her thoughts.
As Jane encounters Thornfeild and the events Mr. Rotchester has enccountered, she uses a saying from her old governess Bessie, towards her dreams. Bessie herself has experienced this saying. "To dream of children was a sure sign of trouble, either to one's self or one's kin"(26), and the next day Bessie trajicly discovers that her sister had died. Dreams for Jane serve as representaions of events in her life that just like Bessies, will cause a pause in herh life. She Later starts having dreams of infants and childeren when realizing her and Mr Rochesters love. She starts thinking about what may happen to the two them in the future, a walk a round the garden may have changed Jane’s way of dreaming for the passed week and life. She describes her dreams of   an “infant: which [she] sometimes hushed in [her] arms, sometimes dandled on [her] knee, sometimes [she] watched playing with daisies on a lawn; or again, dabbling its hands in running water.” But as the nights progress the baby shows emmotions as “ a wailing child ..., and a laughing one the next: now it nestled close to me, and now it ran from [her]."(   ) Remembering Bessie’s belifes towards dreams of babies and trouble, she wakes up from her dream from a loud almost murduring sound of Bertha Mason, Mr Rochesters wife locked in the attic. Sadly day after this incident,she learns her cousin John has died and her Aunt Reed is...