Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë 1983 TV series Final E11 Subtitles

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As St. John plans to travel to India as a missionary, Jane considers his proposal for her to accompany him, but her feelings for Mr. Rochester still remain strong.
Transcript
00:30you're going on a journey so suddenly Jane without warning forgive me my dears
00:49I'm called away suddenly I shall be away about four days perhaps more but you're
00:56coming back to us while you're taking on there's nothing you're going alone yes
01:03it is to see or hear news of a friend about whom I've been uneasy for some
01:09time Oh Jane you look very pale are you sure you feel well enough to travel
01:15nothing else me but anxiety of mind which I hope my journey will dispel
01:22Oh Diane I cannot tell you any more of the matter not now I'm sorry forgive me
01:28this is your home Jane you're free to come and go as you please to go and come
01:34back you mean Oh Jane come back to us soon please
01:52my master might be abroad for all I knew and if he were at Thornfield Hall with
02:07his poor lunatic wife I dared not seek his presence or speak to him I decided
02:12to ask at the inn. they would be able to tell me all I sought to know.
02:34good day to you ma'am. I see you get down from the coach. do you wish for a room?
02:39yes. no. how far is Thornfield Hall from here? just two miles across the field yonder.
02:46I'm going there soon in the chaise if you'd like me to take you. thank you. I
02:51must go immediately. please could you look after my box? yes ma'am.
04:09is anybody there? ma'am? is that the lady from the coach? I'm here. what is happening? what are you
04:20doing here? you was in such a rare state ma'am. I was worried about you. I was
04:25coming this way so I thought I'd take a look at the poor old hall. I thought you
04:29might like me to take you back to the inn. it is sad ma'am isn't it? I used to
04:36live here once as butler. not in my time. you're a stranger to me. and you to me
04:40miss. no it was in the late mr. Rochester's time. the late? is he dead?
04:45I mean the present mr. Rochester's father. you must have been away from these
04:50parts ma'am or you would have heard what happened last autumn. a dreadful calamity
04:54ma'am. everything gone. everything burned. before the engines could arrive from
05:00Millcourt the whole building was one mass of flames. I witnessed it myself.
05:07was it known how it started? oh they guessed ma'am. they guessed. and the
05:12servants had a tale to tell. you are perhaps not aware ma'am that there was a
05:16lady, a lunatic kept in the house. I have heard something of it. a very queer thing
05:24happened a year since. a very queer thing. this lady ma'am turned out to be mr.
05:29Rochester's wife. and there was a young lady, a governess at the hall that mr.
05:34Edward fell in love with. never mind that please. tell me about the fire. very well
05:39ma'am. well it seems that upstairs in the lunatics room while our keeper was
05:43asleep...
05:59I hate you! I hate you!
06:29I hate you!
06:35and the next minute she lay smashed on the pavement as dead as the stones on
06:40which her brains and blood lay. it was frightful. good God. were any other lives
06:50lost? no ma'am. perhaps it would have been better if they had. what do you mean?
06:55well poor mr. Edward. some said it was a judgment for trying to marry that poor
06:59girl. who said he was alive? aye if you can call it alive. he's stone blind. well
07:07after mrs. Rochester died he was coming down but there was a crash and he was
07:11taken out of the ruins. he was only just alive. mr. Carter had to amputate one
07:16hand and one eye was lost and the other so badly inflamed mr. Rochester cannot
07:21see. he's a blind cripple. where is he now? with old John and his wife at Fern
07:28Dean. a house he has some 30 miles off. he's very broken down they say. you came
07:33in your shades. yes ma'am. please take me to Fern Dean. I will pay you well at
07:37once. please at once.
07:58nobody won't let folk help him. ever.
08:28Mariah how are you? and John how are you?
08:44not a word of welcome from either of you. I'm not a ghost you know. missy. is it
08:52really you miss? come to this lonely place at this late hour. it is secluded
08:57isn't it? he wishes to live away from the world miss. took me hours in the
09:06shades. I've come from Thornfield. I know what happened there. how terrible it was.
09:13I've sent the shades away. I'm sure you can find me a room for the night. there's
09:17none but that dusty old room upstairs. you can get up there with a broom John and
09:21light a fire and I can make sure that miss Eyre has dry sheets and a warm bed
09:26for the night. that's master. will you go into master. tell him there is someone
09:34who wishes to see him but do not give him my name. I don't think he'll see you
09:42miss. he refuses everybody. John I left my box under the tree by the gate. could
09:51you fetch it for me please? begins to grow dark. I can take it to my room. aye
09:58you haven't forgotten who does the fetching and carrying I see miss. thank
10:02you John. you're to send in your name and business. is this what he rang for?
10:19hi. he always has candles brought in at dark though he's blind. I will take it
10:25into him. what will he say to me? it's the room at the end of the corridor miss.
10:35give me the water Mariah.
11:05what's the matter? down pilot.
11:35this is you Mariah is it not? Mariah is in the kitchen. who is this? who is this?
11:48who speaks? will you take some more water sir? I spilled half of what was in
11:52the glass. who is it? what is it? pilot knows me. John and Mariah know I'm here.
12:00arrived only this evening. what delusion has come over me. sweet madness has seized me.
12:09no delusion. no madness. let me touch you.
12:16her very fingers. her small slight fingers. is it you Jane? what is it? this is her
12:25shape. and it's her voice. she is all here. her heart too. Jane Eyre. Jane Eyre. I'm coming back to you.
12:42such dreams I've had at night when I've clasped to my heart as I do now and kissed her.
12:55and felt that she loved me. trusted she would never leave me. Jane never will do from this day. never.
13:14I always woke and found it an empty mockery. gentle sweet dream. you will fly too.
13:27does this feel like a mockery? do you call this a dream? it is you is it Jane?
13:45you are come back to me. I am. don't lie dead in some ditch. you're not a despised
13:54outcast among strangers. I'm an independent woman now. an uncle in Madeira
13:58died and left me five thousand pounds. oh Janet you're an independent woman. a rich
14:07woman. a free woman. quite rich. enough to build a house close by. you can come and
14:20sit in my parlor when you need company of an evening. are you rich Jane? you have
14:27now no doubt friends who will not suffer you to devote yourself to a lame blind
14:30wreck. I am my own mistress sir. and you will stay? certainly. I'll be your neighbor, your nurse, your
14:48housekeeper. if I find you lonely I'll be your companion. I will read to you, walk
14:56with you, sit with you, wait on you, be eyes and hand to you. you will not be
15:01left desolate by me. this is pity not love. no. leave me. no. leave me!
15:13I beg you.
15:18you
15:29if it was ever that way. I remember the time mrs. Fairfax...
15:35Mariah. Mariah! yes sir? our visitor cannot have left. where is she? oh she she's
15:57somewhere in the house sir. I'll find her. bring her to me. yes sir. I'm here sir. still here.
16:09Jane
16:14you must not go. I've touched you, felt you, heard you. I cannot give up these
16:25joys. the world may think me selfish but no matter. very well sir. it is settled. yes.
16:37but you understand one thing by staying and I understand another. what do you say
16:46is my understanding? you mean to wait on me like a kind little nurse. you were
16:53ever kind. I suppose I must now entertain fatherly feelings for you. don't you
17:04think so?
17:09come tell me. I shall think sir what you like. it cannot always be my nurse
17:16Janet. you're young. you must marry someday. I don't care about being... you
17:25should care! if I were what I once was I would try to make you care. it is time
17:36someone undertook to rehumanize you sir. have your pocket comb about you. what for?
17:43come give it to me.
17:59that is better. your shaggy black mane is very alarming. and this?
18:09it is a pity to see it.
18:13pity to see your eyes scorn you for it.
18:23do you take supper sir? I don't want any supper. I never take supper. well you
18:29shall have some tonight. you're hungry I'm sure.
18:43yeah that's better. can you tell when there's a good fire? with the right eye.
19:02I can see a glow. can you see the candles?
19:09very dimly. each is a luminous blur. can you see me?
19:19no my fairy. but I can hear you and touch you. Jane I thought you'd be
19:30revolted by me. did you? am I hideous Jane? yes sir you always were you know.
19:45the wickedness hasn't been taken out of you whatever you have sojourned. I've
19:50been with far better people than you sir. quite more refined and exalted. who'd the
19:54deuce have you been with? you will not get it out of me tonight. you're far too
19:59tired. I will tell you tomorrow. the wicked changeling. fairy born yet human
20:05bred. now I'm going to leave you. I've been traveling these last three days and
20:12I too am tired. good night sir. Jane were there only ladies where you've been?
20:20good night sir.
20:59is your cousin? yes sir. did you like him Jane?
21:06St. John is a very good man. I could not help but like him. is he an able man?
21:12truly able sir. a thoroughly educated man? St. John is an accomplished and profound
21:21scholar sir. his manners I think you said they were not to your taste.
21:28friggish and parsonic. I never mentioned his manners but they are polished calm
21:36and gentleman like. his appearance I forget how you described his
21:47appearance. a raw curate half strangled in a white neckcloth hmm? St. John dresses
21:56well. he is a very handsome man. tall blonde blue-eyed and with a Grecian
22:07profile. damn him.
22:14did you like him Jane? oh yes I liked him sir but you've asked me that before.
22:21perhaps you would rather not sit beside me any longer miss Eyre. why not mr.
22:30Rochester? the contrast between a tall graceful fair-haired Apollo and a Vulcan
22:37black broad-shouldered and and blind into the bargain. I never thought of it
22:45before. but you are rather Vulcan like.
22:53this man Rivers he wanted to marry you? you need not be jealous. I only wanted to
23:02provoke you. I thought anger would be better than grief. I'm not foolish Jane.
23:08you formed a new tie. with whom? this man Rivers. St. John Rivers. he's young he's
23:23handsome he wants to marry you. he will. he does not love me. I do not love him.
23:35you of all people should know what that means.
23:42Jane four days ago last Monday a singular mood came over me. one in which
23:54grief replaced frenzy. I was sitting in my room by the open window and that
24:02broke involuntarily from my lips the words Jane. Jane Jane Jane. you spoke the
24:16words aloud? I did. you'll think me mad. for a voice I cannot tell whence it came
24:24but I know whose it was replied. it said I'm coming. wait for me. and then a few
24:40moments after there came upon the wind the words where are you? Jane I don't
24:51want a nurse or a friend. I want a wife. do you sir? yes. is it news to you? no.
25:06is it unwelcome news? that depends on circumstances sir. on your choice.
25:21what you shall make for me I will abide by your decision. I leave the choice to
25:31you. choose then sir. her who loves you best. I will at least choose her I love
25:45best. Jane will you marry me? yes sir. a blind man you'll have to lead about by
26:00the hand. yes sir. a crippled man nearly 20 years older than you who you'll have
26:07to wait on. yes sir.
26:15truly Jane? most truly sir. I have now been married ten years. within two years
26:31Edward recovered the sight of one eye just before our first child was born. I
26:35now know what it is to live for and with what I love best on earth. I am my
26:42husband's life as fully as he is mine. we are bone of each other's bone and flesh
26:47of each other's flesh.

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