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Back home, Anne’s literary career was initiated by Charlotte’s enthusiastic discovery of Emily’s Gondal poems. The sisters each agreed to contribute poems to a collection for publication. Under the pseudonyms Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell (Charlotte, Emily, and Anne, respectively), the Brontës published the collection in 1846 at their own expense, to positive criticism but dismal sales. Undaunted, the sisters turned their attentions to novel writing, each bringing a unique and highly inventive style to the effort. In 1847 Anne’s labors produced
Agnes Grey,
published jointly with Emily’s
Wuthering
Heights in December of that year by Thomas Cautley Newby. Charlotte’s
Jane Eyre
had been published two months earlier by a more prestigious house, Smith, Elder and Co., to great success, overshadowing her sisters’ novels and surpassing them in acclaim. Less sensational in its subject matter than either
Jane Eyre
or
Wuthering Heights,
Anne’s
Agnes Grey
received relatively little attention. Nonetheless, Anne began work immediately on her second novel,
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
(published by Newby in 1848), which was a commercial and critical success. The novel’s frank depictions of alcoholism and violence shocked readers but fueled its popularity. Wild speculation about its mysterious authorship prompted Charlotte and Anne to disclose to their publishers their true identities.
In September 1848, Branwell Brontë died, his body destroyed by illness and alcohol. In December, Emily Brontë died of tuberculosis, following a rapid decline. Anne herself became ill with influenza, then tuberculosis. Though weak and frail, she determined to travel once more to her beloved Scarborough, ostensibly for the curative powers of the sea air. The trip proved her last; Anne Brontë died on May 28, 1849, and was buried in Scarborough.
The World of Anne Brontë and
Agnes Grey
1820
Anne Brontë is born on January 17, in Thornton, York- shire. She is the sixth and last child of Patrick and Maria Branwell Brontë; her father is a curate. The family moves from Thornton to Haworth. Percy Bysshe Shelley’s
Prometheus Unbound
and Walter Scott’s
Ivanhoe
are published. George III dies, and George IV is crowned king.
1821
Maria Branwell Brontë dies of cancer. Elizabeth Branwell , her sister, comes to Haworth to care for the family. She and Anne become particularly close.
1824
Maria, Elizabeth, Charlotte, and Emily Brontë attend Clergy Daughters’ School at Cowan Bridge. The Athenaeum Club is founded in London; the National Gallery opens.
1825
In May, Anne’s oldest sister, Maria, dies of tuberculosis. The second oldest, Elizabeth, dies shortly thereafter. Charlotte and Emily are withdrawn from school. Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony is first performed in England .
1830
George IV dies and is succeeded by William IV. Alfred, Lord Tennyson’s
Poems, Chiefly Lyrical
is published. American poet Emily Dickinson is born.
1831
Charlotte attends Miss Wooler’s school at Roe Head, Mirfield. A cholera epidemic begins in eastern Europe and spreads throughout the continent.
1832
Lewis Carroll is born. Charlotte leaves Roe Head to teach her sisters at home.
1835
Charlotte returns to Roe Head as a teacher, taking
Emily along as a student; the latter stays only briefly, and Anne replaces her.
1836
Anne writes a poem, “Verses by Lady Geralda,” set in the imaginative world of Gondal. Charles Dickens’s
The Pickwick Papers
- is published.
1837
While at Roe Head School, Anne becomes very ill, sparking the concern of her sister Charlotte. William IV dies; Queen Victoria is crowned.
1838
Branwell establishes himself as a portrait painter in Bradford but returns home less than a year later. Emily works briefly as a teacher at Miss Patchett’s School at Law Hill, near Halifax. Charlotte leaves her teaching post at Roe Head.
1839
Anne becomes employed as a governess at Blake Hall, home of the Ingham family in Mirfield; her duties include the education of the Ingham’s eldest children. William Weightman becomes an assistant curate to Patrick Brontë. In December Anne leaves her position with the Inghams and returns to Haworth. Charlotte works as a governess in Lothersdale and later in Rawdon. In Britain 18,000 people die of pneumonia, 25,000 of typhus, and 60,000 of tuberculosis.
1840
In May, Anne moves to Thorp Green, near York, to work as a governess for the family of Reverend Edmund Robinson. She visits York Minster and, in the summer, travels with the Robinsons on holiday to Scarborough, a seaside resort. Branwell works as a clerk on the new Leeds-Manchester railway. Thomas Hardy is born.
1842
Charlotte and Emily travel to Brussels to study. Once again, Anne accompanies the Robinsons on their yearly holiday at Scarborough, spending six weeks at their resort accommodations. In September, William Weightman (a possible love interest of Anne’s) dies of cholera and is buried at Haworth. Aunt Elizabeth Branwell dies in October at age sixty-six, leaving an inheritance to each of her nieces; she too is buried at Haworth. Upon her death, Charlotte and Emily return from Brussels.
1843
Charlotte resumes her studies in Brussels. Anne secures
Branwell a position as tutor at Thorp Green. They return there together following the Christmas holiday. Anne writes the poems “A Word to the Calvinists,” “A Hymn,” and “The Consolation.”
1844
Anne writes the poem “Yes, Thou Art Gone.” Charlotte returns home and formally advertises for a new school to be run by the Brontë sisters at Haworth; lack of enrollment scuttles the effort.
1845
Anne begins writing
Passages in the Life of an Individual
and composes the poem “Night.” In June she resigns from her position with the Robinsons. Branwell is dismissed from Thorp Green. Anne and Emily travel to York. Charlotte discovers poems written by Emily; despite Emily’s protestations, the discovery prompts an effort to publish the poetry of the three sisters.
1846
Under the pseudonyms Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell, the Brontë sisters’ poems are submitted for publication by Aylott and Jones at the Brontës’ expense.
Poems by Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell
is published, but only two copies are sold. Anne completes
Agnes
Grey, her first novel. Edward Lear’s
Book of Nonsense
is published.
1847
Charlotte’s novel
The Professor
is rejected for publication. Her second novel,
Jane Eyre,
is published in October by Smith, Elder and Co. under her pseudonym, Currer Bell, to immediate success. Emily’s
Wuthering Heights
and Anne’s
Agnes Grey
are published in December by Thomas Cautley Newby under their respective pseudonyms, Ellis and Acton Bell. Anne begins work on
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
and the poem “Self-Communion.”
1848
Anne finishes “Self-Communion.”
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
is published by Newby, under the name Acton Bell. Its immense popularity triggers speculation about the novel’s mysterious authorship, prompting Charlotte and Anne to travel to London to disclose to the former’s publisher their true identities. A second edition of
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall,
with an added preface, is published. Following years of alcohol abuse and illness, Branwell Brontë dies in September at age thirty-one. In
December, Emily Brontë dies of tuberculosis after a short illness; she and her brother are buried at Haworth. Elizabeth Gaskell’s
Mary Barton
and William Makepeace Thackeray’s
Vanity Fair
are published.
1849
Weakened and ill, Anne is diagnosed with advanced tuberculosis. Despite Charlotte’s protestations, she arranges to visit Scarborough. Accompanied by Charlotte and family friend Ellen Nussey, Anne uses her inheritance to lodge at the resort hotel and spa she first visited with the Robinsons. On May 28, Anne Brontë dies at age twenty-nine. She is buried in St. Mary’s graveyard in her beloved Scarborough rather than at Haworth, where the rest of her family is interred. In October Charlotte’s novel
Shirley
is published.
Introduction
It is impossible for any of us to approach the Brontës without calling up the Brontë myth. We are all familiar with its outlines. The isolated family house on the edge of a bleak Yorkshire moor. The four young children, Charlotte, Branwell, Emily, and Anne, their mother and elder sisters all dead, now in the care of a stern Calvinist aunt. The Reverend Patrick Brontë, a failed writer himself, reclusive, brooding, and subject to periods of dark rage. Then, through the agency of a present of toy soldiers, the children begin writing sagas in which the soldiers come to life. All four are gifted, though Branwell drinks himself to an early death, while the three young women precociously develop writing careers—Emily dying young of the family curse of tuberculosis, and Charlotte living longer, only to die shortly after her marriage. Anne, the youngest, is also the quietest and least talented; modest, religious, and industrious, she too dies of TB at an early age.
The narrative, like any myth, partakes of some truths but embodies a great deal of fantasy—and a great deal of that linked to the famous Wyler-Olivier-Oberon film of
Wuthering
Heights (1939). To begin: The parsonage was at the edge of a large, bustling mill town; the aunt appears to have been loving and kind and an evangelical Methodist, a far cry from Calvinism; Patrick Brontë was actively engaged in the affairs of the parish and the community, and clearly much concerned with the education and welfare of his children; and so on. But the myth is probably most unfair in its relegation of Anne Brontë to a bit player in the family drama—in fact, she was, though the youngest, probably the most precocious of them all as a writer, producing two novels and a substantial body of poems by the time she died at twenty-nine.
Anne’s relegation to a minor role within the family happened not long after her death. Her second novel,
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall—
the story of a wife who abandons her husband to live under an assumed name and who commits the even greater moral crime of falling in love with another man while her husband lives—was nothing short of scandalous in its subject matter. By contemporary standards, no young woman could write about immoral acts without either knowing of them firsthand or by being tainted by having imagined them—in either case, her reputation was tarnished beyond repair. After Anne died, Charlotte tried to defend her sister against charges of moral impropriety by controlling the public representation of Anne’s character (and, similarly, that of Emily, whose reputation suffered from her authorship of
Wuthering Heights),
and it was she who began constructing the image of a quiet, passive, deeply religious (and by implication not as talented) Anne. Deeply religious she was, but far from quiet and passive—
and
she was very talented.
A useful starting point will be the facts of her life, which shed some considerable light on her character and her interests. The circumstances of the family are somewhat exceptional: Anne’s father was very much a self-made man, even making of his humble Irish surname (Prunty or Brunty) the rather more impressive, aristocratic, and vaguely French-sounding Brontë. The son of a farmer, and at first a blacksmith’s assistant, he was by age seventeen a village schoolmaster, but in 1802 his prospects changed dramatically when he managed to secure a scholarship to St. John’s College, Cambridge, where he prepared for a clerical career. He rose through the ranks of the church, acquiring along the way, in 1812, a respectable and mature wife, Maria Branwell. By 1820 they were settled in Haworth, where Reverend Brontë was perpetual curate (that is, he held the office for life) of a large, populous parish. Anne, the sixth and last child, was born on January 17, 1820, three months before the move to Haworth.
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