Antwort Why can’t St John marry Rosamond? Weitere Antworten – Does St. John love Rosamond

Why can't St John marry Rosamond?
St John loves Miss Rosamund but will not marry her, as he believes she will not make a good missionary's wife. St John isolates himself from Miss Rosamund by being cold-hearted and distant. He does this, as he believes God has called him to become a missionary.She agrees to go to India as a missionary but says that she will not be his wife because they are not in love. St. John harshly insists that she marry him, declaring that to refuse his proposal is the same as to deny the Christian faith.Though Rosamond loves him in return, he refuses to consider her as a wife because he doesn't believe she'd be the right kind of wife for a clergyman. Upon meeting Jane, he offers to wed her with the proposal that she would act not as much as a wife, but rather as an assistant on his missionary journey to India.

Why does Jane reluctantly agree to go with St. John but not as his wife : In six weeks, St. John will leave for India, and he wants Jane to accompany him, as his wife. If she goes to India, Jane knows she'll die prematurely, but she agrees to go anyway — if she can go as his sister, not his wife, because they don't love each other as husband and wife should.

Who was St John in love with

Rosamund Oliver

John does not love Jane. He wants to marry her just because he thinks she would make a good missionary's wife because of her intelligence,dedication and virtues. He loves Rosamund Oliver passionately,but doesn't want to marry her because he thinks she is unsuited for the work of a missionary's wife.

Who is in love with Rosamond in Jane Eyre : St. John

The iciness of St. John's character is most pronounced in his relationship with Rosamond Oliver. Although he "flushes" and "kindles" at the sight of her, St. John would rather turn himself into "an automaton" than succumb to Rosamond's beauty or fortune.

St.

John proposed marriage to Jane as if he were proposing to buy a dairy cow. He thought she would make a useful missionary companion, and therefore he thought they should be married at once and she should accompany him to India. He does not love her and he does not pretend to.

Marriage to St. John would traumatically erase Jane's identity and douse her passions for life. St. John achieves his goal and conducts a "warrior-march trample" through India, ultimately dying young following ten hard years of missionary work.

Does St John try to marry Jane

St.

John is STILL not vanquished, and he tries once more to persuade Jane to marry him. After reading some verses from the Bible calculated to convince Jane she is disobeying God in refusing to marry him, St. John tells her that she should think over his proposal again.From their interaction, Jane believes that Rosamond and St. John are in love.The iciness of St. John's character is most pronounced in his relationship with Rosamond Oliver. Although he "flushes" and "kindles" at the sight of her, St. John would rather turn himself into "an automaton" than succumb to Rosamond's beauty or fortune.

He tells Jane that God formed Jane "for labour, not for love," and that she has no "personal, but mental endowments." St. John means that Jane's nature and personality is suited to being a hardworking, chaste, self-sacrificing missionary's wife.

How does St. John feel about Rosamond : John loves Rosamond wildly, he knows she wouldn't be a good wife for him, and he'd probably tire of her in twelve months. Rosamond wouldn't make an effective missionary's wife, and St. John isn't willing to relinquish his goals, because he is a cold, hard, ambitious man.

Why did St. John want to marry Jane : St.

John proposed marriage to Jane as if he were proposing to buy a dairy cow. He thought she would make a useful missionary companion, and therefore he thought they should be married at once and she should accompany him to India. He does not love her and he does not pretend to.

Why does St. John ask Jane to marry him

St.

John proposed marriage to Jane as if he were proposing to buy a dairy cow. He thought she would make a useful missionary companion, and therefore he thought they should be married at once and she should accompany him to India. He does not love her and he does not pretend to.

Soon after arriving in Middlemarch, he becomes involved with and later marries Rosamond Vincy, whom he finds to be “polished, refined, [and] docile,” all qualities he wants in a wife. For her part, Rosamond believes that marriage to Lydgate, who she does not realize is poor, will improve her social standing..St. John makes it incredibly clear that he has no romantic feelings for Jane – he just views her as someone who would make a good partner for missionary work abroad. Jane has also watched him deny his own happiness over and over (because he is clearly in love with Rosamund).

What is the relationship between Rosamond and Lydgate : It would be difficult to argue that Rosamond is in love with Lydgate. Rather, she wants a certain lifestyle, and enjoys attention. She is disgusted by Lydgate's medical profession, something which is central to his character. Rather than supporting him, she wishes that he would do something more respectable.