at he never loved Blanch and she never loved he.In the story “Jane Eyre” the setting as the reader knows renders to be quite a degrading one in a way. The setting describes all of the elegance which went along with being wealthy like Mr. Rochester, Louisa Eshton, Mary Ingram, et cetera and the poor hard life which went along with being born with so called not good blood and therefore a person was started out in life knowing that he or she would never acquire a life of luxury but a life of hard work and a feeling of inferiority. During the social get together Jane, Mrs. Fairfax, and many others were at the Thornfield house for the only reason of making the richer guests happy by waiting on them hand and foot and performing whatever tasks in which they were told to do such as serving supper and helping dress the ladies and gentlemen. The guests, Mrs. Eshton, Amy and Louisa Eshton, Lady Lynn, Mrs. Colonel Dent, Lady Ingram, Blanch and Mary Ingram, Henry and Frederick Lynn, Colonel Dent, Mr. Eshton, and Lord Ingram were all sat in the nicely cleaned and furnished dinning room to eat supper and were well provided with the best silverware and china for such occasions as tea and all meals while the servants would eat in the kitchen or their room.During the stay of these wealthy people the plot was to seem that Mrs. Ingram and Mr. Rochester were going to get married but the reader knows that he really loves Jane. Mr. Rochester and Blanch would make eye contact frequently and do such acts together as he singing while she played the piano together. This was all but an act put on by Mr. Rochester. He knew that Blanch Ingram only loved him for his money. Mr. Rochester rumored that he wasn’t worth a third of the fortune that people thought and after that Blanch and her mother were very cold to him. Mr. Rochester told Jane that she must be present every night. The reader knew so he could see and talk to Jane.Mr. Rochester&...