Monday 25 July 2011

Wuthering Heights - Emily's Bio and more.

Description



Emily Bronte
Emily had an unusual character, extremely unsocial and reserved, with few friends outside her family. She preferred the company of animals to people and rarely travelled, forever yearning for the freedom of Haworth and the moors. She had a will of iron – a well known story about her is that she was bitten by a (possibly) rabid dog which resulted in her walking calmly into the kitchen and cauterising the wound herself with a hot iron.
She had unconventional religious beliefs, rarely attending church services and, unlike the other children, never teaching in the Sunday School.
In appearance, she was lithesome and graceful, the tallest of the Brontë children (her coffin measured five feet seven inches – 1.7 meters) but ate sparingly and would starve herself when unhappy or unable to get her own way. As her literary works suggest, she was highly intelligent, teaching herself German while working in the kitchen (her favourite place outside of the moors) and playing the piano well enough to teach it in Brussels. Her stubbornness lasted to the end where she refused to see a doctor or rest while she was dying of tuberculosis.
In 1871, Ellen Nussey, a lifelong friend of the Brontës, wrote of her first impressions of the fifteen-year-old Emily in Reminiscences of Charlotte Brontë:
Interpretation of EmilyEmily Brontë had by this time acquired a lithesome, graceful figure. She was the tallest person in the house, except her father. Her hair, which was naturally as beautiful as Charlotte's, was in the same unbecoming tight curl and frizz, and there was the same want of complexion. She had very beautiful eyes – kind, kindling, liquid eyes; but she did not often look at you; she was too reserved. Their colour might be said to be dark grey, at other times dark blue, they varied so. She talked very little. She and Anne were like twins – inseparable companions, and in the very closest sympathy, which never had any interruption.
(The picture above is Rosemary McHale portraying Emily in the Brontes of Haworth.)
Charlotte famously said of her sister:
Stronger than a man, simpler than a child, her nature stood alone.
Bronte family tree

Genealogy







Timeline




Right hand column shows Emily's age at the time of the event.

30 July, 1818Emily Jane born at Thornton

April 1820The family moves to Haworth

20m
15 September 1821Maria, Emily's mother, dies

3
25 November 1824Emily joins her sisters, Maria, Elizabeth and Charlotte, at Cowan Bridge School

6
1 June 1825Emily and Charlotte return from Cowan Bridge School after typhoid strikes and the death of their two older sisters.

6
5 June 1826Mr Brontë brings home 12 wooden soldiers for Branwell and the children begin creating imaginary worlds

7
Before July 1831Creates the imaginary kingdom of Gondal with Anne

12
29 July 1835Becomes a pupil at Roe Head School where Charlotte is a teacher

17
October 1835Returns from Roe Head after starving herself

17
September 1838Begins work as teacher at Law Hill, Halifax, probably for about six months

20
February 1842Charlotte and Emily travel to a school in Brussels (Emily stays for about nine months)

23
Autumn 1845Charlotte finds Emily's poetry. Probably began Wuthering Heightsabout now

27
May 1846Poems by Currer, Ellis and Acton Bell published

27
December 1847Wuthering Heights published with Agnes Grey

29
28 September, 1848Branwell's funeral at which Emily catches a severe cold leading to tuberculosis.

30
19 December, 1848Dies at Haworth Parsonage at about two in the afternoon

30
22 December, 1848Interred in family vault at St Michael and All Angels Church, Howarth

30


History



Irish-born Patrick Brontë (who changed his surname from Brunty) and his Cornish wife Maria Branwell, moved to Thornton in Yorkshire where Emily was born on 30 July 1818 , 192 years ago. She was the fifth of six children. In 1820, the family moved to Haworth, where Emily's father was to be perpetual curate. Haworth was an unhealthy, poor town and the children spent much of their time either roaming on the nearby moors or in the parsonage, creating stories and poems about imaginary lands.
EJB logoThe four eldest Brontë daughters were enrolled as pupils at the Clergy Daughter's School at Cowan Bridge in 1824. The following year Maria and Elizabeth, the two eldest daughters, became ill, left the school and died; Charlotte and Emily returned home.
For a poor clergyman's daughter, there was little hope of a career beyond a governess or teacher and Emily began work as the latter at Law Hill school, near Halifax in 1838 but hated the job, starving herself and returning home about six months later. In February 1842,with her sister Charlotte, she attended a private school in Brussels with the intention of preparing themselves to open their own teaching establishment. Emily again found herself unsuited to the life and the sisters returned home in November. They tried to open up a school at their home in 1844 but had no pupils and Emily eventually accepted a domestic life in the parsonage, cooking and looking after her father.

Portrait of the sisters
Memorial plaque
The Brontë sisters (Anne, Emily and Charlotte, aged about 15, 17 and 19 respectively) painted by Branwell in 1834
The plaque marking their vault in St Michael Church


Charlotte, Emily and Anne published a joint collection of their poetry in 1846 under the pen-names Currer, *Ellis and Acton Bell. In 1847, "Wuthering Heights" and Anne's "Agnes Grey" were published in a three volume set to mixed reviews ("Wuthering Heights" comprising two of the volumes, "Agnes Grey" the other). Wuthering Heights was republished in 1850 under Emily's real name.
Her brother Branwell died in September 1848 and Emily caught a chill during the funeral. This brought on the tuberculosis that she had probably caught when nursing Branwell. Refusing all medical help until too late, she died 162 years ago, surrounded by her family on 19 December, 1848, about two in the afternoon. She was interred in the family vault of the church opposite her Haworth home three days later.



Works



Title page of PoemsEmily (and her sisters') first published work was the book Poems by Currer, Ellis and Acton Bell, published in 1846 with their own money. It was not a success, selling only two copies (although it did better as a reprint after the success of the novels). The sisters and Branwell had written poetry from childhood and the venture came about when Charlotte discovered a book of Emily's poetry in 1845 and persuaded her (with difficulty) to combine them with Charlotte's and Anne's. Despite the failure of the book, the sisters continued their literary career, turning to prose.
Emily only wrote the one novel, Wuthering Heights, although she was working on a second when she died. However, no trace of this book remains. We only know she was writing it because her publisher, T C Newby, sent her a letter dated 15 February 1848 which said:
I am much obliged by your kind note and shall have great pleasure in making arrangements for your next novel. I would not hurry its completion, for I think you are quite right not to let it go before the world until well satisfied with it, for much depends on your new work. If it be an improvement on your first, you will have established yourself as a first rate novelist, but if it fall short the Critics will be too apt to say that you have expended your talent in your first novel. I shall therefore have pleasure in accepting it upon the understanding that its completion be in your own time.



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