Read Delphi Complete Works of the Brontes Charlotte, Emily, Anne Brontë (Illustrated) Online
Authors: CHARLOTTE BRONTE,EMILY BRONTE,ANNE BRONTE,PATRICK BRONTE,ELIZABETH GASKELL
Francis Leyland was a former bookseller and friend of Branwell Brontë’s, having been introduced to him by his brother, the Halifax sculptor J.B. Leyland, who was Branwell’s best friend.
After his brother’s death in 1851, Francis inherited his considerable collection of letters, sketches and poems by Branwell which he was keen on publishing. In 1886 he published this biographical work, which gives particular attention to the life of the troubled Branwell, rather than his sisters. In the biography, he advocates the idea that Emily had been particularly close to her brother and that
Wuthering Heights
was a work of joint authorship. Without Charlotte’s knowledge, Branwell had, Leyland claimed, handed over the unfinished manuscript for his favourite sister, the sympathetic Emily, to complete.
CONTENTS
EARLY CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE BRONTËS.
THE GIRLHOOD OF THE BRONTË SISTERS.
THE LITERARY TASTES OF THE CHILDREN.
BRANWELL BRONTË AND HIS SISTERS’ BIOGRAPHERS.
LITERARY INFLUENCES AND ASPIRATIONS.
BRANWELL AT BROUGHTON-IN-FURNESS.
BRANWELL AT SOWERBY BRIDGE. — CHARLOTTE’S EXERTIONS.
CHARLOTTE AND EMILY IN BRUSSELS.
‘BRANWELL’S FALL,’ AS SET FORTH IN THE BIOGRAPHIES OF HIS SISTERS.
THE SISTERS’ POEMS AND NOVELS. — BRANWELL’S LITERARY OCCUPATIONS.
DESPONDENCY. — BRANWELL’S LETTERS.
BRANWELL’S LETTERS AND LAST INTERVIEW WITH MR. GRUNDY.
BRANWELL BRONTË AND ‘WUTHERING HEIGHTS.’
BRANWELL BRONTË AND ‘THE TENANT OF WILDFELL HALL.’
BRANWELL’S FAILINGS. — PUBLICATION OF ‘JANE EYRE.’
BRANWELL’S LATER POETICAL WORKS.
It has long seemed to me that the history of the Brontë family is incomplete, and, in some senses, not well understood. Those who have written upon it — as I shall have occasion to point out in these pages — have had certain objects in view, which have, perhaps necessarily, led them to give undue weight to special points and to overlook others. Thus it happens that, though there are in the hands of the public several able works on the Brontës, there are many circumstances relating to them that are yet in comparative obscurity. Especially has injustice been done to one member of the family — Patrick Branwell Brontë — whose life has several times been treated by those who have had some other object in view; and, through a misunderstanding of the character of the brother, the sisters, Anne in particular, have been put, in some respects, in a false light also. This circumstance, coupled with the fact that I am in possession of much new information, and am able to print here a considerable quantity of unknown poetry from Branwell’s hand, has induced me to write this work. Those of his poems which are included in these volumes are placed in dealing with the periods of his life in which they were written, for I felt that, however great might be the advantages of putting them together in a complete form, much more would be lost both to the interest of the poems and the life of their author in doing so. Branwell’s poems, more, perhaps, than those of any other writer, are so clearly expressive of his feelings at the time of their writing, that a correct view of his character is only to be obtained by looking upon them as parts of his life-history, which indeed they are. And, moreover, when we consider the circumstances under which any of these were written, our understanding and appreciation of the subject must necessarily be much fuller and truer. It has not escaped the attention of writers on the Brontë story that Branwell had an important influence on his sisters; and, though I maintain it to have been essentially different from what others allege, it would not be possible to do justice either to him or to them without saying a good deal about his character.
I have felt it right, in these pages, to some extent also, to re-consider the character of the Rev. Patrick Brontë, which has, along with that of his son, suffered unfair treatment in the biographies of his daughters. I have likewise entered upon some account of the local circumstances of art and literature which surrounded the Brontës, an element in their history which has hitherto been unknown, but is especially necessary to a right understanding of the life and work of Branwell Brontë and his sisters. These circumstances, and the altered view I have taken of the tone of the lives of Mr. Brontë and his son, have obliged me to deal more fully than would otherwise have been necessary with the early years of the Brontës, but I venture to hope that this may be atoned for by the new light I have thus been enabled to throw on some important points. There are published here, for the first time, a series of letters which Branwell Brontë addressed to an intimate friend, J. B. Leyland, sculptor, who died in 1851, and it is with these that a fresh insight is obtained into an interesting period of Branwell’s life.
I am largely indebted in some parts of my work, especially those which deal with the lives of the sisters, to Mrs. Gaskell’s fascinating ‘Life of Charlotte Brontë’; and it is a source of sincere regret to me that I am compelled to differ from that writer on many points. I am likewise indebted in parts to Mr. T. Wemyss Reid’s admirable ‘Charlotte Brontë: a Monograph,’ a work which has corrected several errors and misconceptions into which Mrs. Gaskell had fallen. The reader will perceive that I am obliged in several places to combat the theories and question the statements of Miss A. Mary F. Robinson in her ‘Emily Brontë,’ a book which, nevertheless, so far as its special subject is concerned, is a worthy contribution to the history of the Brontës.
I have also found of much use, in writing this work, an article entitled ‘Branwell Brontë,’ which Mr. George Searle Phillips — ‘January Searle’ — published in the ‘Mirror’ in 1872. The chapter in Mr. Francis H. Grundy’s ‘Pictures of the Past’ on Branwell Brontë, has likewise been of the greatest service to me. Both these gentlemen were Branwell’s personal friends, and to them I gladly acknowledge my indebtedness.
Among many other sources of information respecting the Brontës, of which I have availed myself in writing these pages, I may mention
Hours at Home
, ‘Unpublished Letters of Charlotte Brontë’;
Scribner
, ‘Reminiscences of Charlotte Brontë’; the
Athenæum
, ‘Notices and Letters,’ by Mr. A. C. Swinburne, and ‘One of the Survivors of the Brontë-Branwell Family.’ To this lady I must also express my obligation for her very kind letter to me.
In the preparation of my work I have been greatly assisted by the information, and encouraged by the sympathy, of several who had personal knowledge of Patrick Branwell Brontë, and who have supported the view I have taken of his life and character, and also who had like knowledge of the other members of the Brontë family. Among these, I have to express my sincere thanks to Mr. H. Merrall and to Mr. William Wood, who were early acquaintances of Branwell; also to Mr. William Dearden. To Mr. J. H. Thompson and Mrs. Thornton I am greatly indebted for information respecting Branwell’s sojourn in Bradford. I have likewise derived much information from the family of the Browns, now all deceased, except Mrs. Brown, to whom I have to express my obligation. I have also gained much reliable information from Nancy Garrs, now Mrs. Wainwright, the nurse of the Brontës, and to her I must especially express my thanks. To these, I must not omit to add my deep and sincere thanks to those who will not permit me to mention them by name, for the unwearied assistance, counsel, and literary judgment which they have as cheerfully, as they have ably, rendered.
F. A. L.
Oakwood, Skircoat, Halifax,
October, 1885.