![]() Jane feels a sense of triumph and exultation, and Mrs. Reed is not her relation, and, finally, that Mrs. Angry and hurt, Jane declares that she is not a liar, that she is glad Mrs. Reed's statements about her character, and when the two are alone together, Jane retaliates against her aunt. Reed declares that her niece is a liar, and Brocklehurst promises to alert the other members of the school to Jane's deceitful nature. Her aunt's worst suspicions about her moral character are confirmed when Jane declares to Brocklehurst that the "Psalms are not interesting." As a final poke at Jane, Mrs. Brocklehurst interviews Jane about hell, sin, and the Bible. ![]() ![]() ![]() On January 15, after three months of waiting for a change, Jane is finally summoned to the breakfast-room. But the only change Jane notices in her status following her experience in the red-room is that the boundary between Jane and the Reed children is more solid. Lloyd, Jane expects that she will soon be sent away to school. ![]()
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