Nonetheless, Jane learns that she never knew that “[she] loved him so well.” She eventually flees and lives with another family. Then another man, St. John asks her to marry him. It becomes very clear that she fears marrying the wrong man and living in a marriage without passion or true love. This is truly relatable to Janie’s situation as Janie was forced into a marriage with Logan, whom she had no love for. Miss Eyre has to battle her inner self and decide what she really wants out of life. It is then that she realizes that she fears living a loveless life and returns to the embrace of Rochester. It is clear when she thinks that St. John “give [her] one chance of heaven, nor relinquish, for the elysium of her love, one hope of the true, eternal Paradise.” St. John would only want Jane for a wife rather than a lover. And for Jane, this is what she fears and drives her to try and find true love. Her inner struggle is finally resolved and her fear is relinquished as she decides to go back and care for Rochester, the one who she truly loves. There is this common trend through most of literature as many characters are driven by fear in order to push through their human struggles in