Jane Eyre displays a wide range of Gothic settings. When Jane tours Thornfield Hall, she sees, “the staircase window [as] high and latticed… [and] the long gallery into which the bedroom doors opened looked as if it belonged to a church rather than a house” (121). Mr. Rochester’s manor shows elements of a gothic style and can be seen by the description of the medieval bedroom doors and the mysterious staircase windows. Because of this, readers …show more content…
She sees a “vision coming from another world… [her] heart grew thick, [her] head grew hot; a sound filled [her] ears… she was oppressed [and felt] suffocated [with her] endurance broken down” (16). Jane, at this moment, feels a sense of high and overwrought emotions. Because Uncle Reed died in the room, she thinks that her uncle might be coming back to get revenge for Mrs. Reed not following his final wish of Jane being well taken care of. She becomes so frightened that she calls for help, but, is only denied and forced to endure another hour in the room. Following Jane’s agitated experience, the atmosphere of mystery and suspense when she first meets Mr. Rochester contributes a significant part in the novel’s gothic