From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Anne Brontë (pronounced /ˈbrɒnti/ or /ˈbrɒnteɪ/)[1] (17
January 1820 – 28 May 1849) was a British novelist and poet, the
youngest member of the Brontë literary family.
The daughter of a poor Irish clergyman in the Church of
England, Anne Brontë lived most of her life with her family at
the small parish of Haworth
on the Yorkshire moors.
For a couple of years she went to a boarding school. At the age of
nineteen, she left Haworth working as a governess between 1839 and
1845. After leaving her teaching position, she fulfilled her
literary ambitions. She wrote a volume of poetry with her sisters
(Poems by Currer,
Ellis, and Acton Bell, 1846) and in short succession she
wrote two novels: Agnes Grey, based upon her experiences
as a governess, was published in 1847; her second and last novel,
The Tenant of Wildfell
Hall appeared in 1848. Anne's life was cut short with her
death of pulmonary
tuberculosis when she was 29 years old.
Anne Brontë is often overshadowed by her more famous sisters, Charlotte, author of four novels
including Jane
Eyre, and Emily, author of Wuthering
Heights. Anne's two novels, written in a sharp and ironic
style, are completely different from the romanticism followed by
her sisters. She wrote in a realistic, rather than a romantic
style. Her novels, like those of her sisters, have become classics
of English
literature.
Family
background
Anne from Branwell's group portrait (below)
Anne's father, Patrick Brontë (1777–1861), was born in
a meagre two-room cottage in Emdale, Loughbrickland, County Down, Ireland.[2][3]
He was the first of ten children born to Hugh Brunty and Eleanor
McCrory, a couple of poor Irish peasant farmers.[4]
The family surname mac
Aedh Ó Proinntigh had been earlier Anglicised as Prunty or sometimes
Brunty.[2]
Struggling against poverty, Patrick learned how to read and write
and from 1798 to teach others. In 1802, at the age of twenty-six,
he won a place at Cambridge to study theology at
St.
John's College. There he gave up his original name, Brunty, and
called himself by the more distinguished Brontë. In 1807 he was
ordained in the priesthood in the Church of England.[5]
He served as an assistant priest or curate in various parishes and in 1810 he
published his first poem Winter Evening Thoughts in a
local newspaper,[6]
followed in 1811 by a collection of moral verse, Cottage
Poems.[7]
In 1811, he was made vicar of St. Peter's church in Hartshead in Yorkshire.[8]
The following year he was appointed an examiner of Bible knowledge
at a Wesleyan
academy, Woodhouse Grove School. There,
at age thirty-five, he met his future wife, Maria Branwell, the
headmaster's niece.
Anne's mother, Maria Branwell (1783–1821), was the daughter of a
successful, property-owning grocer and tea merchant of Penzance, Thomas Branwell and
Anne Crane, the daughter of a silversmith in the town.[9]
The eighth of eleven children, Maria had enjoyed all the benefits
of belonging to a prosperous family in a small town. After the
death of both parents within a year of each other, Maria went to
help her aunt with the teaching at the school. A tiny, neat woman,
aged thirty, she was well read and intelligent.[10]
Her strong Methodist faith immediately attracted
Patrick Brontë.[11]
Though from vastly different backgrounds, within three months
Patrick Brontë and Maria Branwell were married on 29 December
1812.[12]
Their first child, Maria (1814–1825), was born after their move to
Hartshead. In 1815,
Patrick was made curate of a chapel in the little village of Thornton, near Bradford; a
second daughter, Elizabeth (1815–1825), was born shortly after.[13]
Four more children would follow: Charlotte, (1816–1855), Patrick
Branwell (1817–1848), Emily, (1818–1848) and Anne
(1820–1849).
Early
life
Anne, the youngest member of the Brontë family, was born on 17
January 1820, at number 74 Market Street in the village of Thornton, Bradford, Yorkshire County, England.[14]
When Anne was born, her father was the curate of Thornton and she
was baptised there on 25 March 1820. Shortly after, Anne's father
took a perpetual curacy, a secure but not enriching vocation, in
Haworth, a remote small town some seven miles (11 km) away. In
April 1820, The Brontë family moved into the Haworth Parsonage.
This five-room building became the Brontës' family home for the
rest of their lives.
Anne was barely a year old when her mother became ill of what is
believed to have been uterine cancer.[15]
Maria Branwell died on 15 September 1821.[16]
In order to provide a mother for his children, Patrick tried to
remarry, but he had no success.[17]
Maria's sister, Elizabeth Branwell (1776–1842), had moved into the
parsonage, initially to nurse her dying sister, but she
subsequently spent the rest of her life there raising the Brontë
children. She did it from a sense of duty, but she was a stern
woman who expected respect, rather than love.[18]
There was little affection between her and the eldest children, but
to Anne, her favorite according to tradition, she did relate. Anne
shared a room with her aunt, they were particularly close, and this
may have strongly influenced Anne's personality and religious
beliefs.[19]
In Elizabeth Gaskell's biography, Anne's
father remembered her as precocious, reporting that once, when she
was four years old, in reply to his question about what a child
most wanted, "she answered: age and experience".[20]
In the summer of 1824, Patrick sent his eldest daughters Maria,
Elizabeth, Charlotte and Emily to Crofton Hall in Crofton, West Yorkshire, and
later to the Clergy Daughter's School, Cowan Bridge, Lancashire.[21]
When the two eldest siblings died of consumption in 1825, Maria on
6 May and Elizabeth on 15 June, Charlotte and Emily were
immediately brought home.[20]
The unexpected deaths of Anne's two eldest sisters distressed the
bereaved family enough that Patrick could not face sending them
away again. For the next five years, all the Brontë children were
educated at home, largely by their father and aunt.[22]
The young Brontës made little attempt to mix with others outside
the parsonage, but relied upon each other for friendship and
companionship. The bleak moors surrounding Haworth became their
playground.
Education
Anne's studies at home included music and drawing. Anne, Emily
and Branwell had piano lessons at the parsonage from the Keighley
parish organist. The Brontë children received art lessons from John
Bradley of Keighley and all of them drew with some skill.[23]
Their aunt tried to make sure the girls knew how to run a
household, but their minds were more inclined to literature.[24]
Their father's well-stocked library was a main source of knowledge.
They read the Bible, Homer, Virgil, Shakespeare, Milton, Byron, Scott, and many
others, and examined articles from Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Fraser's
Magazine, and The Edinburgh Review. In addition, they read
history, geography and biographies.[25]
Those readings fed the Brontës' imaginations. The children's
creativity soared after their father presented Branwell with a set
of toy soldiers in June 1826. They named the soldiers and developed
their characters, which they called the "Twelves".[26] This
led to the creation of an imaginary world: the African kingdom of
"Angria". That was illustrated
with maps and watercolour renderings. The children kept themselves
busy devising plots about the people of Angria, and its capital
city, "Glass Town", later called Verreopolis, and finally,
Verdopolis.[27]
These fantasy worlds and kingdoms gradually acquired all the
characteristics of the real world—sovereigns, armies, heroes,
outlaws, fugitives, inns, schools and publishers. For these peoples
and lands the children created newspapers, magazines and
chronicles, all of which were written out in extremely tiny books,
with writing that was so small it was difficult to read without the
aid of a magnifying glass. These juvenile creations and writings
served as the apprenticeship of their later, literary talents.[28]
Juvenilia
Around 1831, when Anne was eleven, she and her sister Emily
broke away from Charlotte and Branwell in the creation and
development of the fictional sagas of Angria establishing their own
fantasy world of Gondal. Anne was at this time particularly close
to Emily; the closeness of their relationship was reinforced by
Charlotte's departure for Roe Head School, in January 1831.[29]
When Charlotte's friend Ellen Nussey visited Haworth in 1833, she
reported that Emily and Anne were "like twins", "inseparable
companions". She described Anne at this time: "Anne, dear gentle
Anne was quite different in appearance from the others, and she was
her aunt's favourite. Her hair was a very pretty light brown, and
fell on her neck in graceful curls. She had lovely violet-blue
eyes; fine pencilled eyebrows and a clear almost transparent
complexion. She still pursued her studies and especially her
sewing, under the surveillance of her aunt."[30][31]
Anne also took lessons from Charlotte, after she came back from the
boarding school, at Roe Head. Later, Anne began more formal studies
at Miss Wooler's school at Roe Head, Huddersfield. Charlotte returned there on
29 July 1835 as a teacher. Emily accompanied her as a pupil; her
tuition largely financed by Charlotte's teaching. Within a few
months, Emily was unable to adapt to life at school, and by
October, was physically ill from homesickness. She was withdrawn
from the school and replaced by Anne.
At fifteen, it was Anne's first time away from home, and she
made few friends at Roe Head. She was quiet and hard working, and
determined to stay and get the education that would allow her to
support herself.[32][33]
Anne stayed for two years, winning a good-conduct medal in December
1836, and returning home only during Christmas and the summer
holidays. Anne and Charlotte do not appear to have been close
during their time at Roe Head (Charlotte's letters almost never
mention Anne) but Charlotte was concerned about the health of her
sister. At some point before December 1837, Anne became seriously
ill with gastritis and
underwent a religious crisis.[34]
A Moravian
minister was called to see Anne several times during her illness,
suggesting that her distress was caused, at least in part, by
conflict with the local Anglican clergy. Charlotte was sufficiently
concerned about Anne's illness to notify Patrick Brontë, and to
take Anne home where she remained to recover.
Employment at Blake Hall
Little is known about Anne's life during 1838, but in 1839, a
year after leaving the school and at the age of nineteen, she was
actively looking for a teaching position. As the daughter of a poor
clergyman, she needed to earn a living. Her father had no private
income and the parsonage would revert to the church on his death.
Teaching or being a governess in a private family were among the
few options available to poor but educated women. In April, 1839,
Anne began to work as a governess with the Ingham family at Blake
Hall, near Mirfield.[35]
The children in Anne's charge were spoilt and wild, and
persistently disobeyed and tormented her.[36]
She experienced great difficulty controlling them, and had almost
no success in instilling any education. She was not empowered to
inflict any punishment, and when she complained of their behaviour
to their parents, she received no support, but was merely
criticized for not being capable of her job. The Inghams,
unsatisfied with their children's progress, dismissed Anne at the
end of the year.[37]
She returned home at Christmas, 1839, joining Charlotte and Emily,
who had left their positions, and Branwell. The whole episode at
Blake Hall was so traumatic for Anne, that she reproduced it in
almost perfect detail in her later novel, Agnes Grey.
William
Weightman
At Anne's return to Haworth, she met William Weightman,
Patrick's new curate, who began work in the parish in August 1839.
Twenty-six years old, he had obtained a two-year licentiate in
theology from the University of
Durham. He quickly became welcome at the parsonage. Anne's
acquaintance with William Weightman parallels the writing of a
number of poems, which may suggest that she fell in love with
him.[38][39]
There is considerable disagreement over this point.[40]
Not much outside evidence exists beyond a teasing anecdote of
Charlotte's to Ellen Nussey in January 1842.
It may or may not be relevant that the source of Agnes
Grey 's renewed interest in poetry is the curate to whom she
is attracted. As the person to whom Anne Brontë may have been
attracted, William Weightman has aroused much curiosity. It seems
clear that he was a good-looking, engaging young man, whose easy
humour and kindness towards the Brontë sisters made a considerable
impression. It is such a character that she portrays in Edward
Weston, and that her heroine Agnes Grey finds deeply appealing.[41]
If Anne did form an attachment to Weightman, that does not imply
that he, in turn, was attracted to her. Indeed, it is entirely
possible that Weightman was no more aware of her than of her
sisters or their friend Ellen Nussey. Nor does it follow that Anne
believed him to be interested in her. If anything, her poems
suggest just the opposite–they speak of quietly experienced but
intensely felt emotions, intentionally hidden from others, without
any indication of their being requited. It is also possible that an
initially mild attraction to Weightman assumed increasing
importance to Anne over time, in the absence of other opportunities
for love, marriage, and children. Anne would have seen William
Weightman on her holidays at home, particularly during the summer
of 1842, when her sisters were away. He died of cholera in the same
year.[42]
Governess
Anne soon obtained a second post: this time as a governess to
the children of the Reverend Edmund Robinson and his wife Lydia, at
Thorp Green, a wealthy country house near York.[43]
Thorp Green appeared later as Horton Lodge in her novel Agnes
Grey. Anne was to have four pupils: Lydia, age 15, Elizabeth,
age 13, Mary, age 12, and Edmund, age 8.[44]
Initially, she encountered the same problems with the unruly
children that she had experienced at Blake Hall. Anne missed her
home and family, commenting in a diary paper in 1841 that she did
not like her situation and wished to leave it. Her own quiet,
gentle disposition did not help matters.[45]
However, despite her outwardly placid appearance, Anne was
determined and with the experience she gradually gained, she
eventually made a success of her position, becoming well liked by
her new employers. Her charges, the Robinson girls, ultimately
became her lifelong friends.
For the next five years, Anne spent no more than five or six
weeks a year with her family, during holidays at Christmas and in
June. The rest of her time she was with the Robinsons at their home
Thorp Green. She was also obliged to accompany the family on their
annual holidays to Scarborough. Between 1840
and 1844, Anne spent around five weeks each summer at the resort,
and loved the place.[46]
A number of locations in Scarborough formed the setting for
Agnes Grey 's final scenes.
During the time working for the Robinsons, Anne and her sisters
considered the possibility of setting-up their own school. Various
locations, including their own home, the parsonage, were considered
as places to establish it. The project never materialized and Anne
chose repeatedly to return to Thorp Green. She came home at the
death of her aunt in early November 1842, while her sisters were
away in Brussels.[47]
Elizabeth Branwell left a £350 legacy for each of her nieces.[48]
Anne returned to Thorp Green in January 1843. She secured a
position for Branwell with her employers: he was to take over from
her as tutor to the Robinsons' son, Edmund, the only boy in the
family, who was growing too old to be under Anne's care. However
Branwell did not live in the house with the Robinson family, as
Anne did. Anne's vaunted calm appears to have been the result of
hard-fought battles, balancing deeply felt emotions with careful
thought, a sense of responsibility, and resolute determination.[49]
All three Brontë sisters had spent time working as governesses or
teachers, and all had experienced problems controlling their
charges, gaining support from their employers, and coping with
homesickness—but Anne was the only one who persevered and made a
success of her work.[50]
Back at
the parsonage
Anne and Branwell continued to teach at Thorp Green for the next
two years. However, Branwell was enticed into a secret relationship
with his employer's wife, Lydia Robinson. When Anne and her brother
returned home for the holidays in June 1845, she resigned her
position.[51]
While Anne gave no reason for leaving Thorp Green, it is generally
believed that she chose to leave upon becoming aware of the
relationship between her brother and Mrs. Robinson. Branwell was
sternly dismissed when his employer found out about his
relationship with his wife. In spite of her brother's behaviour,
Anne retained close ties to Elizabeth and Mary Robinson, exchanging
frequent letters with them even after Branwell's disgrace. The
Robinson sisters came to visit Anne in December 1848.[52]
Once free of her position as a governess, Anne took Emily to
visit some of the places she had come to know and love in the past
five years. An initial plan of going to the sea at Scarborough fell through,
and the sisters went instead to York, where Anne showed her sister the York Minster.[53]
A book of
poems
The
Brontë sisters, painted by their
brother,
Branwell c. 1834. From left to right,
Anne, Emily and Charlotte (there still remains a shadow of
Branwell, which appeared after he painted himself out).
In the summer of 1845, all four of the Brontës were at home with
their father Patrick. None of the four had any immediate prospect
of employment. It was at this point that Charlotte came across
Emily's poems. They had been shared only with Anne, her partner in
the world of Gondal. Charlotte proposed that they be published.
Anne also revealed her own poems. Charlotte's reaction was
characteristically patronizing: "I thought that these verses too
had a sweet sincere pathos of their own".[54]
Eventually, though not easily, the sisters reached an agreement.
They told neither Branwell, nor their father, nor their friends
about what they were doing. Anne and Emily each contributed 21
poems and Charlotte with nineteen. With Aunt Branwell's money, the
Brontë sisters paid to have the collection published.[50]
Afraid that their work would be judged differently if they
revealed their identity as women, the book appeared under their
three chosen pseudonyms—or pen-names, the initials of which were
the same as their own.[55]
Charlotte became Currer Bell, Emily became Ellis Bell and Anne
became Acton Bell. Poems by Currer,
Ellis, and Acton Bell was available for sale in May 1846.
The cost of publication was about 3/4 of Anne's annual salary at
Thorp Green. On 7 May 1846, the first three copies of the book were
delivered to Haworth Parsonage.[56]
The volume achieved three somewhat favourable reviews, but was a
dismal failure, with only two copies being sold during the first
year. Anne, however, began to find a market for her more recent
poetry. Both the Leeds Intelligencer and Fraser's Magazine
published her poem "The Narrow Way" under her pseudonym, Acton
Bell. Four months earlier, in August, Fraser's Magazine had also
published her poem "The Three Guides".
Novelist
Even before the fate of the book of poems became apparent, the
three sisters were working on a new project. They began to work on
their first novels. Charlotte wrote The
Professor, Emily Wuthering Heights and Anne
Agnes Grey. By July 1846, a package with the three
manuscripts was making the rounds of London publishers.
After a number of rejections, Emily's Wuthering Heights
and Anne's Agnes Grey were accepted by a publisher in
London, but Charlotte's novel was rejected by every other publisher
to whom it was sent.[57]
However, Charlotte was not long in completing her second novel, the
now famous Jane Eyre, and this was immediately accepted by
Smith, Elder & Co., a
different publisher from Anne's and Emily's though also located in
London. However, Jane Eyre was the first to appear in
print. While Anne and Emily's novels 'lingered in the press',
Charlotte's second novel became an immediate and resounding
success. Meanwhile, Anne and Emily were obliged to pay fifty pounds
to help meet the publishing costs. Their publisher, urged on by the
success of Jane Eyre, finally published Emily's
Wuthering Heights and Anne's Agnes Grey in
December 1847.[58]
These too sold exceptionally well, but Agnes Grey was
distinctly outshone by Emily's much more dramatic Wuthering
Heights.[59]
The Tenant of Wildfell
Hall
Anne's second novel, The Tenant of Wildfell
Hall, was published in the last week of June 1848.[60]
It was an instant phenomenal success; within six weeks it was sold
out.
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall is perhaps the most
shocking of the Brontës' novels. In seeking to present the truth in
literature, Anne's depiction of alcoholism and debauchery were
profoundly disturbing to nineteenth century readers. Helen Graham,
the tenant of the title, intrigues Gilbert Markham and gradually
she reveals her mysterious past as an artist and wife of the
dissipated Arthur Huntingdon. The book's brilliance lies in its
revelation of the position of women at the time, and its
multi-layered plot.[61]
It is easy today to underestimate the extent to which the novel
challenged existing social and legal structures. May Sinclair, in
1913, said that the slamming of Helen Huntingdon's bedroom door
against her husband reverberated throughout Victorian England.
Anne's heroine eventually leaves her husband to protect their young
son from his influence. She supports herself and her son by
painting, while living in hiding, fearful of discovery. In doing
so, she violates not only social conventions, but also English law.
At the time, a married woman had no independent legal existence,
apart from her husband; could not own her own property, sue for
divorce, or control custody of her children. If she attempted to
live apart from him, her husband had the right to reclaim her. If
she took their child with her, she was liable for kidnapping. In
living off her own earnings, she was held to be stealing her
husband's property, since any income she made was legally his.[50]
London
visit
In July 1848, in order to dispel the rumour that the three "Bell
brothers" were all the same person, Charlotte and Anne went to
London to reveal their identities to the publisher George Smith.
The women spent several days in his company. Many years after
Anne's death, he wrote in the Cornhill Magazine his impressions of
her, describing her as: "...a gentle, quiet, rather subdued person,
by no means pretty, yet of a pleasing appearance. Her manner was
curiously expressive of a wish for protection and encouragement, a
kind of constant appeal which invited sympathy."[62]
In the second edition of The Tenant of Wildfell Hall,
which appeared in August 1848, Anne clearly stated her intentions
in writing it. She presented a forceful rebuttal to critics who
considered her portrayal of Huntingdon overly graphic and
disturbing. (Charlotte was among them.)
When we have to do with vice and vicious characters, I
maintain it is better to depict them as they really are than as
they would wish to appear. To represent a bad thing in its least
offensive light, is doubtless the most agreeable course for a
writer of fiction to pursue; but is it the most honest, or the
safest? Is it better to reveal the snares and pitfalls of life to
the young and thoughtless traveller, or to cover them with branches
and flowers? O Reader! if there were less of this delicate
concealment of facts–this whispering 'Peace, peace', when there is
no peace,
[63] there
would be less of sin and misery to the young of both sexes who are
left to wring their bitter knowledge from experience."
[64]
Anne also sharply castigated reviewers who speculated on the sex
of the authors, and the appropriateness of their writing to their
sex, in words that do little to reinforce the stereotype of Anne as
meek and gentle.
I am satisfied that if a book is a good one, it is so whatever
the sex of the author may be. All novels are or should be written
for both men and women to read, and I am at a loss to conceive how
a man should permit himself to write anything that would be really
disgraceful to a woman, or why a woman should be censured for
writing anything that would be proper and becoming for a man."
[65]
The increasing popularity of the Bells' work led to renewed
interest in the Poems by Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell,
originally published by Aylott and Jones. The remaining print run
was purchased by Smith and Elder, and reissued under new covers in
November 1848. It still sold poorly.
Family
tragedies
Only in their late twenties, a highly successful literary career
appeared a certainty for Anne and her sisters. However, an
impending tragedy was to engulf the family.[65]
Within the next ten months, three of the siblings, including Anne,
would be dead.
Branwell's health had gradually deteriorated over the previous
two years, but its seriousness was half disguised by his persistent
drunkenness. He died on the morning of 24 September 1848.[66]
His sudden death came as a shock to the family. He was aged just
thirty-one. The cause was recorded as chronic bronchitis - marasmus; though, through his
recorded symptoms, it is now believed that he was also suffering
from tuberculosis.[67
]
The whole family had suffered from coughs and colds during the
winter of 1848 and it was Emily who next became severely ill. She
deteriorated rapidly over a two month period, persistently refusing
all medical aid until the morning of 19 December, when, being so
weak, she declared: "if you will send for a doctor, I will see him
now".[68]
It was far too late. At about two o'clock that afternoon, after a
hard, short conflict in which she struggled desperately to hang on
to life, she died, aged just thirty.[68]
Emily's death deeply affected Anne and her grief further
undermined her physical health. Over Christmas, Anne caught
influenza. Her symptoms intensified, and in early January, her
father sent for a Leeds
physician, who diagnosed her condition as consumption, and
intimated that it was quite advanced leaving little hope of a
recovery. Anne met the news with characteristic determination and
self-control.[69]
Unlike Emily, Anne took all the recommended medicines, and
responded to all the advice she was given. Her health fluctuated as
the months passed, but she progressively grew thinner and
weaker.
Death
Anne Brontë's grave at Scarborough
In February 1849, Anne seemed somewhat better.[70]
By this time, she had decided to make a return visit to Scarborough in the hope
that the change of location and fresh sea air might initiate a
recovery, and give her a chance to live.[71]
On 24 May 1849, Anne said her good-byes to her father and the
servants at Haworth, and set off for Scarborough with Charlotte and
their friend Ellen
Nussey. En route, the three spent a day and a night in York,
where, escorting Anne around in a wheelchair, they did some
shopping, and at Anne's request, visited the colossal York Minster.
However, it was clear that Anne had little strength left.
On Sunday, 27 May, Anne asked Charlotte whether it would be
easier for her if she return home to die instead of remaining at
Scarborough. A doctor, consulted the next day, indicated that death
was already close. Anne received the news quietly. She expressed
her love and concern for Ellen and Charlotte, and seeing
Charlotte's distress, whispered to her to "take courage".[72]
Conscious and calm, Anne died at about two o'clock in the
afternoon, Monday, 28 May 1849.
Over the following few days, Charlotte made the decision to "lay
the flower where it had fallen".[67
] Anne was buried not in Haworth with the rest of
her family, but in Scarborough. The funeral was held on Wednesday,
30 May, which did not allow time for Patrick Brontë to make the
70-mile (110 km) trip to Scarborough, had he wished to do so.
The former schoolmistress at Roe Head, Miss Wooler, was also in
Scarborough at this time, and she was the only other mourner at
Anne's funeral.[73]
She was buried in St. Mary's churchyard; beneath the castle walls,
and overlooking the bay. Charlotte commissioned a stone to be
placed over her grave, with the simple inscription "Here lie the
remains of Anne Brontë, daughter of the Revd. P. Brontë, Incumbent
of Haworth, Yorkshire. She died, Aged 28, May 28th, 1849". Anne was
actually twenty-nine at her death.
Reputation
A year after Anne's death, further editions of her novels were
required; however, Charlotte prevented re-publication of Anne's
second novel, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall.[74]
In 1850, Charlotte wrote damningly "Wildfell Hall it
hardly appears to me desirable to preserve. The choice of subject
in that work is a mistake, it was too little consonant with the
character, tastes and ideas of the gentle, retiring inexperienced
writer."[75]
This act was the predominant cause of Anne's relegation to the back
seat of the Brontë bandwagon. Anne's novel was daring for the
Victorian era with its depiction of scenes of mental and physical
cruelty and approach to divorce. The consequence was that
Charlotte's novels, along with Emily's Wuthering Heights,
continued to be published, firmly launching these two sisters into
literary stardom, while Anne's work was consigned to oblivion.
Further, Anne was only twenty-eight when she wrote The Tenant
of Wildfell Hall; at a comparable age, Charlotte had produced
only The Professor.
The general view has been that Anne is a mere shadow compared
with Charlotte, the family's most prolific writer, and Emily, the
genius. This has occurred to a large extent because Anne was very
different, as a person and as a writer, from Charlotte and Emily.
The controlled, reflective camera eye of Agnes Grey is
closer to Jane
Austen's Persuasion than to Charlotte
Brontë's Jane Eyre. The painstaking realism and social
criticism of The Tenant of Wildfell Hall directly counters
the romanticized violence of Wuthering Heights. Anne's
religious concerns, reflected in her books and expressed directly
in her poems, were not concerns shared by her sisters. Anne's
subtle prose has a fine ironic edge; her novels also reveal Anne to
be the most socially radical of the three. Now, with increasing
critical interest in women authors, her life is being reexamined,
and her work reevaluated. A re-appraisal of Anne's work has begun,
gradually leading to her acceptance, not as a minor Brontë, but as
a major literary figure in her own right.[76]
Notes
- ^
forvo.com Anne Brontë
- ^ a
b
Fraser, The Brontës, p. 4
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 3
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 2
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 14
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 41
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 43
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 36
- ^ Fraser, The
Brontës, pp. 12–13
- ^ Fraser, The
Brontës, p. 15
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 48
- ^ Fraser, The
Brontës, p. 16
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 61
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 86
- ^ Barker,
The Brontës, pp. 102–104
- ^ Fraser, The
Brontës, p. 28
- ^ Fraser, The
Brontës, p. 30
- ^ Fraser, The
Brontës, p. 29
- ^ Gérin, Anne
Brontë, p. 35
- ^ a
b
Fraser, The Brontës, p. 31
- ^ Fraser, The
Brontës, p. 35
- ^ Fraser, The
Brontës, pp. 44–45
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 150
- ^ Fraser, The
Brontës, p. 45
- ^ Fraser, The
Brontës, pp. 45–48
- ^
The soldiers appear in The Twelve and the Genii,
a 1962 children's fantasy novel by Pauline Clarke.
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, pp. 154–155
- ^ Fraser, The
Brontës, pp. 48–58
- ^ Fraser, The
Brontës, pp. 52–53
- ^ Fraser, A Life
of Anne Brontë, p. 39
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 195
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, pp. 237–238
- ^ Fraser, The
Brontës, p. 84
- ^ Fraser, The
Brontës, p. 113
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 307
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 308
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 318
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 341
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 407
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 344
- ^ Gérin, Anne
Brontë, p. 138
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 403
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 329
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 330
- ^ Gérin, Anne
Brontë, p. 135
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, pp. 358–359
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 404
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 409
- ^ Gérin, Anne
Brontë, p. 134
- ^ a
b
c
Alexander, Christine; Margaret Smith
(2003). The Oxford Companion to the Brontes. Oxford:
Oxford University Press. ISBN
0-19-866218-1.
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 450
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 574
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 451
- ^
"About Emily Bronte and Anne
Bronte, by Charlotte Bronte". about.com. http://womenshistory.about.com/od/writers19th/a/brontes_by_char.htm. Retrieved
2009-10-08.
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 480
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 491
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 525
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 539
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 540
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 557
- ^
"The Critics of Wildfell
Hall". www.victorianweb.org. http://www.victorianweb.org/authors/bronte/abronte/downey2.html. Retrieved
2009-10-08.
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 559
- ^
Jeremiah 6:14
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 532
- ^ a
b
Barker, The Brontës, p. 564
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 568
- ^
a
b "Biography of Anne
Brontë". www.mick-armitage.staff.shef.ac.uk. http://www.mick-armitage.staff.shef.ac.uk/anne/annebiog.html. Retrieved
2009-10-08.
- ^ a
b
Barker, The Brontës, p. 576
- ^
"Ann Brontë Remembered in
Scarborough". www.annebronte.scarborough.co.uk. http://www.annebronte.scarborough.co.uk/. Retrieved
2009-10-08.
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 588
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 587
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 594
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 575
- ^ Fraser, The
Brontës, p. 387
- ^ Barker, The
Brontës, p. 654
- ^
See, for instance, Glen Downey's "The Critics of
Wildfell Hall" [1]
References
- Barker,
Juliet, The Brontës, St. Martin's Pr., ISBN
0-312-14555-1
- Chitham, Edward, A Life of Anne Brontë, Oxford:
Blackwell Publishers, 1991, ISBN 0-631-18944-0
- Fraser, Rebeca, The Brontës: Charlotte Brontë and her
family, Crown Publishers,1988, ISBN 0-517-56438-6
- Gérin, Winifred, Anne Brontë, Allen Lane, 1976, ISBN
0-713-90977-3
External
links