It’s seen as an important novel for being a prequel to Charlotte Brontë’s “Jane Eyre” by imagining the life of Bertha Antoinetta Mason (the famous mad woman in the attic/first Mrs Rochester at Thornfield Hall). Squires & Steffanie Tan & Kassandra Tate & Katarina E.“Wide Sargasso Sea” is probably Jean Rhys’ most famous novel as it is widely taught in literature courses. Seibert & Rebecca Sky & Karim Soliman & Kate J. Peters & Michelle Jo & Dmitri Ragano & Elizabeth A. Latimer & Bryony Leah & Jordan Lynde & Laiza Millan & Peyton Novak & C.M. Evansley & Kevin Fanning & Ariana Godoy & Debra Goelz & Bella Higgin & Blair Holden & Kora Huddles & Annelie Lange & E. Popular ebooks IMAGINES: Celebrity Encounters Starring You by Anna Todd & Leigh Ansell & Rachel Aukes & Doeneseya Bates & Scarlett Drake & A. It was useless to tell myself that I was not far from the house. I decided to go back to the clearing and start again, with the same result. I must be within a few minutes of the path I thought, but after I had walked for what seemed a long time I found that the undergrowth and creepers caught at my legs and the trees closed over my head. She sobbed as she ran, a small frightened sound. The basket fell off, I called after her, but she screamed again and ran faster. I met her eyes and to my astonishment she screamed loudly, threw up her arms and ran. Then I saw a little girl carrying a large basket on her head. The light had changed and the shadows were long, I had better get back before dark, I thought. I don’t know how long it was before I began to feel chilly. What had I to think about and how could I plan? Under the orange tree I noticed little bunches of flowers tied with grass. And calm – so calm that it seemed foolish to think or plan. At the back of the ruins a wild orange tree covered with fruit, the leaves a dark green. Here were the ruins of a stone house and round the ruins rose trees that had grown to an incredible height. There had been a paved road through this forest. The stone I had tripped on was not a boulder but part of a paved road. This was why I stubbed my foot on a stone and nearly fell. A track was just visible and I went on, glancing from side to side and sometimes quickly behind me. Nothing but the trees and the green light under the trees. I stood still, so sure I was being watched that I looked over my shoulder. Not my father nor Richard Mason, certainly not the girl I had married. How can one discover truth I thought and that thought led me nowhere. Once I stepped over a fallen log swarming with white ants. I went on without looking at the tall trees on either side. The path is overgrown but it was possible to follow it. I had reached the forest and you cannot mistake the forest. I began to walk very quickly, then stopped because the light was different. And the girl with her blank smiling face. As I walked I remembered my father’s face and his thin lips, my brother’s round conceited eyes. I passed a sparse plantation of coffee trees, then straggly guava bushes. It must have rained heavily during the night for the red clay was very muddy. I went out following the path I could see from my window. Tags: Romance, General, Fiction, Historical, Literary, Classics