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Emily Jane Brontë (30 July 1818 – 19 December 1848)
Emily Brontë was an English novelist and poet, best remembered for her only
novel, Wuthering Heights, now considered a classic of English literature.
Emily was the third eldest of the four surviving Brontë siblings, between the
youngest Anne and her brother Branwell. She published under the pen name
Ellis Bell.
Biography
Emily Brontë was born on 30 July 1818 in Thornton, near Bradford in
Yorkshire, to Maria Branwell and Patrick Brontë. She was the younger sister
of Charlotte Brontë and the fifth of six children. In 1824, the family moved to
Haworth, where Emily's father was perpetual curate, and it was in these
surroundings that their literary gifts flourished.
Early Life and Education
After the death of their mother in 1821, when Emily was three years old, the
older sisters Maria, Elizabeth and Charlotte were sent to the Clergy
Daughters' School at Cowan Bridge, where they encountered abuse and
privations later described by Charlotte in Jane Eyre. Emily joined the school
for a brief period. When a typhus epidemic swept the school, Maria and
Elizabeth caught it. Maria, who may actually have had tuberculosis, was sent
home, where she died. Emily was subsequently removed from the school
along with Charlotte and Elizabeth. Elizabeth died soon after their return
home.
The three remaining sisters and their brother Patrick Branwell were
thereafter educated at home by their father and aunt Elizabeth Branwell,
their mother's sister. In their leisure time the children created a number of
paracosms, which were featured in stories they wrote and enacted about the
imaginary adventures of their toy soldiers along with the Duke of Wellington
and his sons, Charles and Arthur Wellesley. Little of Emily's work from this
period survives, except for poems spoken by characters (The Brontës' Web of
Childhood, Fannie Ratchford, 1941). When Emily was 13, she and Anne
withdrew from participation in the Angria story and began a new one about
Gondal, a large island in the North Pacific. With the exception of Emily's
Gondal poems and Anne's lists of Gondal's characters and place-names, their
writings on Gondal were not preserved. Some "diary papers" of Emily's have
survived in which she describes current events in Gondal, some of which
were written, others enacted with Anne. One dates from 1841, when Emily
was twenty-three: another from 1845, when she was twenty-seven.
At seventeen, Emily attended the Roe Head girls' school, where Charlotte
was a teacher, but managed to stay only three months before being
overcome by extreme homesickness. She returned home and Anne took her
place. At this time, the girls' objective was to obtain sufficient education to
open a small school of their own.
Adulthood
Emily became a teacher at Law Hill School in Halifax beginning in September
1838, when she was twenty. Her health broke under the stress of the
17-hour work day and she returned home in April 1839. Thereafter she
became the stay-at-home daughter, doing most of the cooking and cleaning
and teaching Sunday school. She taught herself German out of books and
practised piano.
In 1842, Emily accompanied Charlotte to Brussels, Belgium, where they
attended a girls' academy run by Constantin Heger. They planned to perfect
their French and German in anticipation of opening their school. Nine of
Emily's French essays survive from this period. The sisters returned home
upon the death of their aunt. They did try to open a school at their home,
but were unable to attract students to the remote area.
In 1844, Emily began going through all the poems she had written,
recopying them neatly into two notebooks. One was labelled "Gondal
Poems"; the other was unlabelled. Scholars such as Fannie Ratchford and
Derek Roper have attempted to piece together a Gondal storyline and
chronology from these poems. In the autumn of 1845, Charlotte discovered
the notebooks and insisted that the poems be published. Emily, furious at
the invasion of her privacy, at first refused, but relented when Anne brought
out her own manuscripts and revealed she had been writing poems in secret
as well.
In 1846, the sisters' poems were published in one volume as Poems by
Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell. The Brontë sisters had adopted pseudonyms for
publication: Charlotte was Currer Bell, Emily was Ellis Bell and Anne was
Acton Bell. Charlotte wrote in the "Biographical Notice of Ellis and Acton Bell"
that their "ambiguous choice" was "dictated by a sort of conscientious
scruple at assuming Christian names positively masculine, while we did not
like to declare ourselves women, because... we had a vague impression that
authoresses are liable to be looked on with prejudice[.]" Charlotte
contributed 20 poems, and Emily and Anne each contributed 21. Although
the sisters were told several months after publication that only two copies
had sold, they were not discouraged. The Athenaeum reviewer praised Ellis
Bell's work for its music and power, and the Critic reviewer recognized "the
presence of more genius than it was supposed this utilitarian age had
devoted to the loftier exercises of the intellect."
Wuthering Heights
In 1847, Emily published her novel, Wuthering Heights, as two volumes of a
three-volume set (the last volume being Agnes Grey by her sister Anne). Its
innovative structure somewhat puzzled critics.
Although it received mixed reviews when it first came out, and was often
condemned for its portrayal of amoral passion, the book subsequently
became an English literary classic. In 1850, Charlotte edited and published
Wuthering Heights as a stand-alone novel and under Emily's real name.
Although a letter from her publisher indicates that Emily was finalizing a
second novel, the manuscript has never been found.
Death
Emily's health, like her sisters', had been weakened by unsanitary conditions
at home, the source of water being contaminated by runoff from the church's
graveyard. She became sick during her brother's funeral in September 1848.
Though her condition worsened steadily, she rejected medical help and all
proffered remedies, saying that she would have "no poisoning doctor" near
her. She eventually died of tuberculosis, on 19 December 1848 at about two
in the afternoon. She was interred in the Church of St. Michael and All Angels
family vault, Haworth, West Yorkshire.
Eserleri:
Novels
Wuthering Heights (1847)
Poetry
Poems by Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell (1846)
Selections from the literary remains of Emily and Anne Brontë (1850)
Privately published by Dodd, Mead and Company of New York (1902)
The Complete Poems of Emily Brontë (1908)
"A little while, a little while..."
A little while, a little while,
The weary task is put away,
And I can sing and I can smile,
Alike, while I have holiday.
Why wilt thou go, my harassed heart,
What thought, what scene invites thee now?
What spot, or near or far,
Has rest for thee, my weary brow?
There is a spot, mid barren hills,
Where winter howls, and driving rain;
But if the dreary tempest chills,
There is a light that warms again.
The house is old, the trees are bare,
Moonless above bends twilight's dome;
But what on earth is half so dear,
So longed for, as the hearth of home?
The mute bird sitting on the stone,
The dank moss dripping from the wall,
The thorn-trees gaunt, the walks o'ergrown,
I love them, how I love them all!
Still, as I mused, the naked room,
The alien firelight died away,
And from the midst of cheerless gloom
I passed to bright unclouded day.
A little and a lone green lane
That opened on a common wide;
A distant, dreamy, dim blue chain
Of mountains circling every side;
A heaven so clear, an earth so calm,
So sweet, so soft, so hushed an air;
And, deepening still the dream-like charm,
Wild moor-sheep feeding everywhere.
That was the scene, I knew it well;
I knew the turfy pathway's sweep
That, winding o'er each billowy swell,
Marked out the tracks of wandering sheep.
Could I have lingered but an hour,
It well had paid a week of toil;
But Truth has banished Fancy's power:
Restraint and heavy task recoil.
Even as I stood with raptured eye,
Absorbed in bliss so deep and dear,
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