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+<title>The Life of Charlotte Bronte - Volume 1</title>
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+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">The Life of Charlotte Bronte - Volume 1, by Elizabeth Gaskell</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Life of Charlotte Bronte - Volume 1, by
+Elizabeth Gaskell
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Life of Charlotte Bronte - Volume 1
+
+
+Author: Elizabeth Gaskell
+
+Release Date: April 12, 2005 [eBook #1827]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE OF CHARLOTTE BRONTE -
+VOLUME 1***
+</pre>
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1906 Smith, Elder, and Co. edition by David
+Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk</p>
+<h1>THE LIFE OF CHARLOTTE BRONT&Euml;&mdash;VOLUME 1</h1>
+<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
+<p>The Leeds and Skipton railway runs along a deep valley of the Aire;
+a slow and sluggish stream, compared to the neighbouring river of Wharfe.&nbsp;
+Keighley station is on this line of railway, about a quarter of a mile
+from the town of the same name.&nbsp; The number of inhabitants and
+the importance of Keighley have been very greatly increased during the
+last twenty years, owing to the rapidly extended market for worsted
+manufactures, a branch of industry that mainly employs the factory population
+of this part of Yorkshire, which has Bradford for its centre and metropolis.</p>
+<p>Keighley is in process of transformation from a populous, old-fashioned
+village, into a still more populous and flourishing town.&nbsp; It is
+evident to the stranger, that as the gable-ended houses, which obtrude
+themselves corner-wise on the widening street, fall vacant, they are
+pulled down to allow of greater space for traffic, and a more modern
+style of architecture.&nbsp; The quaint and narrow shop-windows of fifty
+years ago, are giving way to large panes and plate-glass.&nbsp; Nearly
+every dwelling seems devoted to some branch of commerce.&nbsp; In passing
+hastily through the town, one hardly perceives where the necessary lawyer
+and doctor can live, so little appearance is there of any dwellings
+of the professional middle-class, such as abound in our old cathedral
+towns.&nbsp; In fact, nothing can be more opposed than the state of
+society, the modes of thinking, the standards of reference on all points
+of morality, manners, and even politics and religion, in such a new
+manufacturing place as Keighley in the north, and any stately, sleepy,
+picturesque cathedral town in the south.&nbsp; Yet the aspect of Keighley
+promises well for future stateliness, if not picturesqueness.&nbsp;
+Grey stone abounds; and the rows of houses built of it have a kind of
+solid grandeur connected with their uniform and enduring lines.&nbsp;
+The frame-work of the doors, and the lintels of the windows, even in
+the smallest dwellings, are made of blocks of stone.&nbsp; There is
+no painted wood to require continual beautifying, or else present a
+shabby aspect; and the stone is kept scrupulously clean by the notable
+Yorkshire housewives.&nbsp; Such glimpses into the interior as a passer-by
+obtains, reveal a rough abundance of the means of living, and diligent
+and active habits in the women.&nbsp; But the voices of the people are
+hard, and their tones discordant, promising little of the musical taste
+that distinguishes the district, and which has already furnished a Carrodus
+to the musical world.&nbsp; The names over the shops (of which the one
+just given is a sample) seem strange even to an inhabitant of the neighbouring
+county, and have a peculiar smack and flavour of the place.</p>
+<p>The town of Keighley never quite melts into country on the road to
+Haworth, although the houses become more sparse as the traveller journeys
+upwards to the grey round hills that seem to bound his journey in a
+westerly direction.&nbsp; First come some villas; just sufficiently
+retired from the road to show that they can scarcely belong to any one
+liable to be summoned in a hurry, at the call of suffering or danger,
+from his comfortable fireside; the lawyer, the doctor, and the clergyman,
+live at hand, and hardly in the suburbs, with a screen of shrubs for
+concealment.</p>
+<p>In a town one does not look for vivid colouring; what there may be
+of this is furnished by the wares in the shops, not by foliage or atmospheric
+effects; but in the country some brilliancy and vividness seems to be
+instinctively expected, and there is consequently a slight feeling of
+disappointment at the grey neutral tint of every object, near or far
+off, on the way from Keighley to Haworth.&nbsp; The distance is about
+four miles; and, as I have said, what with villas, great worsted factories,
+rows of workmen&rsquo;s houses, with here and there an old-fashioned
+farmhouse and out-buildings, it can hardly be called &ldquo;country&rdquo;
+any part of the way.&nbsp; For two miles the road passes over tolerably
+level ground, distant hills on the left, a &ldquo;beck&rdquo; flowing
+through meadows on the right, and furnishing water power, at certain
+points, to the factories built on its banks.&nbsp; The air is dim and
+lightless with the smoke from all these habitations and places of business.&nbsp;
+The soil in the valley (or &ldquo;bottom,&rdquo; to use the local term)
+is rich; but, as the road begins to ascend, the vegetation becomes poorer;
+it does not flourish, it merely exists; and, instead of trees, there
+are only bushes and shrubs about the dwellings.&nbsp; Stone dykes are
+everywhere used in place of hedges; and what crops there are, on the
+patches of arable land, consist of pale, hungry-looking, grey green
+oats.&nbsp; Right before the traveller on this road rises Haworth village;
+he can see it for two miles before he arrives, for it is situated on
+the side of a pretty steep hill, with a back-ground of dun and purple
+moors, rising and sweeping away yet higher than the church, which is
+built at the very summit of the long narrow street.&nbsp; All round
+the horizon there is this same line of sinuous wave-like hills; the
+scoops into which they fall only revealing other hills beyond, of similar
+colour and shape, crowned with wild, bleak moors&mdash;grand, from the
+ideas of solitude and loneliness which they suggest, or oppressive from
+the feeling which they give of being pent-up by some monotonous and
+illimitable barrier, according to the mood of mind in which the spectator
+may be.</p>
+<p>For a short distance the road appears to turn away from Haworth,
+as it winds round the base of the shoulder of a hill; but then it crosses
+a bridge over the &ldquo;beck,&rdquo; and the ascent through the village
+begins.&nbsp; The flag-stones with which it is paved are placed end-ways,
+in order to give a better hold to the horses&rsquo; feet; and, even
+with this help, they seem to be in constant danger of slipping backwards.&nbsp;
+The old stone houses are high compared to the width of the street, which
+makes an abrupt turn before reaching the more level ground at the head
+of the village, so that the steep aspect of the place, in one part,
+is almost like that of a wall.&nbsp; But this surmounted, the church
+lies a little off the main road on the left; a hundred yards, or so,
+and the driver relaxes his care, and the horse breathes more easily,
+as they pass into the quite little by-street that leads to Haworth Parsonage.&nbsp;
+The churchyard is on one side of this lane, the school-house and the
+sexton&rsquo;s dwelling (where the curates formerly lodged) on the other.</p>
+<p>The parsonage stands at right angles to the road, facing down upon
+the church; so that, in fact, parsonage, church, and belfried school-house,
+form three sides of an irregular oblong, of which the fourth is open
+to the fields and moors that lie beyond.&nbsp; The area of this oblong
+is filled up by a crowded churchyard, and a small garden or court in
+front of the clergyman&rsquo;s house.&nbsp; As the entrance to this
+from the road is at the side, the path goes round the corner into the
+little plot of ground.&nbsp; Underneath the windows is a narrow flower-border,
+carefully tended in days of yore, although only the most hardy plants
+could be made to grow there.&nbsp; Within the stone wall, which keeps
+out the surrounding churchyard, are bushes of elder and lilac; the rest
+of the ground is occupied by a square grass-plot and a gravel walk.&nbsp;
+The house is of grey stone, two stories high, heavily roofed with flags,
+in order to resist the winds that might strip off a lighter covering.&nbsp;
+It appears to have been built about a hundred years ago, and to consist
+of four rooms on each story; the two windows on the right (as the visitor
+stands with his back to the church, ready to enter in at the front door)
+belonging to Mr. Bront&euml;&rsquo;s study, the two on the left to the
+family sitting-room.&nbsp; Everything about the place tells of the most
+dainty order, the most exquisite cleanliness.&nbsp; The door-steps are
+spotless; the small old-fashioned window-panes glitter like looking-glass.&nbsp;
+Inside and outside of that house cleanliness goes up into its essence,
+purity.</p>
+<p>The little church lies, as I mentioned, above most of the houses
+in the village; and the graveyard rises above the church, and is terribly
+full of upright tombstones.&nbsp; The chapel or church claims greater
+antiquity than any other in that part of the kingdom; but there is no
+appearance of this in the external aspect of the present edifice, unless
+it be in the two eastern windows, which remain unmodernized, and in
+the lower part of the steeple.&nbsp; Inside, the character of the pillars
+shows that they were constructed before the reign of Henry VII.&nbsp;
+It is probable that there existed on this ground, a &ldquo;field-kirk,&rdquo;
+or oratory, in the earliest times; and, from the Archbishop&rsquo;s
+registry at York, it is ascertained that there was a chapel at Haworth
+in 1317.&nbsp; The inhabitants refer inquirers concerning the date to
+the following inscription on a stone in the church tower:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Hic fecit C&aelig;nobium Monachorum Auteste fundator.&nbsp;
+A. D. sexcentissimo.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>That is to say, before the preaching of Christianity in Northumbria.&nbsp;
+Whitaker says that this mistake originated in the illiterate copying
+out, by some modern stone-cutter, of an inscription in the character
+of Henry the Eighth&rsquo;s time on an adjoining stone:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Orate pro bono statu Eutest Tod.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now every antiquary knows that the formula of prayer &lsquo;bono
+statu&rsquo; always refers to the living.&nbsp; I suspect this singular
+Christian name has been mistaken by the stone-cutter for Austet, a contraction
+of Eustatius, but the word Tod, which has been mis-read for the Arabic
+figures 600, is perfectly fair and legible.&nbsp; On the presumption
+of this foolish claim to antiquity, the people would needs set up for
+independence, and contest the right of the Vicar of Bradford to nominate
+a curate at Haworth.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I have given this extract, in order to explain the imaginary groundwork
+of a commotion which took place in Haworth about five and thirty years
+ago, to which I shall have occasion to allude again more particularly.</p>
+<p>The interior of the church is commonplace; it is neither old enough
+nor modern enough to compel notice.&nbsp; The pews are of black oak,
+with high divisions; and the names of those to whom they belong are
+painted in white letters on the doors.&nbsp; There are neither brasses,
+nor altar-tombs, nor monuments, but there is a mural tablet on the right-hand
+side of the communion-table, bearing the following inscription:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>HERE<br />
+LIE THE REMAINS OF<br />
+MARIA BRONT&Euml;, WIFE<br />
+OF THE<br />
+REV. P. BRONT&Euml;, A.B., MINISTER OF HAWORTH.<br />
+HER SOUL<br />
+DEPARTED TO THE SAVIOUR, SEPT. 15TH, 1821,<br />
+IN THE 39TH YEAR OF HER AGE.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be ye also ready: for in such an hour as ye think not the
+Son of Man cometh.&rdquo;&nbsp; MATTHEW xxiv. 44.</p>
+<p>ALSO HERE LIE THE REMAINS OF<br />
+MARIA BRONT&Euml;, DAUGHTER OF THE AFORESAID;<br />
+SHE DIED ON THE<br />
+6TH OF MAY, 1825, IN THE 12TH YEAR OF HER AGE;<br />
+AND OF<br />
+ELIZABETH BRONT&Euml;, HER SISTER,<br />
+WHO DIED JUNE 15TH, 1825, IN THE 11TH YEAR OF HER AGE.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Verily I say unto you, Except ye be converted, and become
+as little children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven.&rdquo;&mdash;MATTHEW
+xviii. 3.</p>
+<p>HERE ALSO LIE THE REMAINS OF<br />
+PATRICK BRANWELL BRONT&Euml;,<br />
+WHO DIED SEPT. 24TH, 1848, AGED 30 YEARS;<br />
+AND OF<br />
+EMILY JANE BRONT&Euml;,<br />
+WHO DIED DEC. 19TH, 1848, AGED 29 YEARS,<br />
+SON AND DAUGHTER OF THE<br />
+REV. P. BRONT&Euml;, INCUMBENT.</p>
+<p>THIS STONE IS ALSO DEDICATED TO THE<br />
+MEMORY OF ANNE BRONT&Euml;, <a name="citation1"></a><a href="#footnote1">{1}</a><br />
+YOUNGEST DAUGHTER OF THE REV. P. BRONT&Euml;, A.B.<br />
+SHE DIED, AGED 27 YEARS, MAY 28TH, 1849,<br />
+AND WAS BURIED AT THE OLD CHURCH, SCARBORO.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>At the upper part of this tablet ample space is allowed between the
+lines of the inscription; when the first memorials were written down,
+the survivors, in their fond affection, thought little of the margin
+and verge they were leaving for those who were still living.&nbsp; But
+as one dead member of the household follows another fast to the grave,
+the lines are pressed together, and the letters become small and cramped.&nbsp;
+After the record of Anne&rsquo;s death, there is room for no other.</p>
+<p>But one more of that generation&mdash;the last of that nursery of
+six little motherless children&mdash;was yet to follow, before the survivor,
+the childless and widowed father, found his rest.&nbsp; On another tablet,
+below the first, the following record has been added to that mournful
+list:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>ADJOINING LIE THE REMAINS OF<br />
+CHARLOTTE, WIFE<br />
+OF THE<br />
+REV. ARTHUR BELL NICHOLLS, A.B.,<br />
+AND DAUGHTER OF THE REV. P.&nbsp; BRONT&Euml;, A.B., INCUMBENT<br />
+SHE DIED MARCH 31ST, 1855, IN THE 39TH<br />
+YEAR OF HER AGE. <a name="citation2"></a><a href="#footnote2">{2}</a></p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>This tablet, which corrects the error in the former tablet as to
+the age of Anne Bront&euml;, bears the following inscription in Roman
+letters; the initials, however, being in old English.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
+<p>For a right understanding of the life of my dear friend, Charlotte
+Bront&euml;, it appears to me more necessary in her case than in most
+others, that the reader should be made acquainted with the peculiar
+forms of population and society amidst which her earliest years were
+passed, and from which both her own and her sisters&rsquo; first impressions
+of human life must have been received.&nbsp; I shall endeavour, therefore,
+before proceeding further with my work, to present some idea of the
+character of the people of Haworth, and the surrounding districts.</p>
+<p>Even an inhabitant of the neighbouring county of Lancaster is struck
+by the peculiar force of character which the Yorkshiremen display.&nbsp;
+This makes them interesting as a race; while, at the same time, as individuals,
+the remarkable degree of self-sufficiency they possess gives them an
+air of independence rather apt to repel a stranger.&nbsp; I use this
+expression &ldquo;self-sufficiency&rdquo; in the largest sense.&nbsp;
+Conscious of the strong sagacity and the dogged power of will which
+seem almost the birthright of the natives of the West Riding, each man
+relies upon himself, and seeks no help at the hands of his neighbour.&nbsp;
+From rarely requiring the assistance of others, he comes to doubt the
+power of bestowing it: from the general success of his efforts, he grows
+to depend upon them, and to over-esteem his own energy and power.&nbsp;
+He belongs to that keen, yet short-sighted class, who consider suspicion
+of all whose honesty is not proved as a sign of wisdom.&nbsp; The practical
+qualities of a man are held in great respect; but the want of faith
+in strangers and untried modes of action, extends itself even to the
+manner in which the virtues are regarded; and if they produce no immediate
+and tangible result, they are rather put aside as unfit for this busy,
+striving world; especially if they are more of a passive than an active
+character.&nbsp; The affections are strong and their foundations lie
+deep: but they are not&mdash;such affections seldom are&mdash;wide-spreading;
+nor do they show themselves on the surface.&nbsp; Indeed, there is little
+display of any of the amenities of life among this wild, rough population.&nbsp;
+Their accost is curt; their accent and tone of speech blunt and harsh.&nbsp;
+Something of this may, probably, be attributed to the freedom of mountain
+air and of isolated hill-side life; something be derived from their
+rough Norse ancestry.&nbsp; They have a quick perception of character,
+and a keen sense of humour; the dwellers among them must be prepared
+for certain uncomplimentary, though most likely true, observations,
+pithily expressed.&nbsp; Their feelings are not easily roused, but their
+duration is lasting.&nbsp; Hence there is much close friendship and
+faithful service; and for a correct exemplification of the form in which
+the latter frequently appears, I need only refer the reader of &ldquo;Wuthering
+Heights&rdquo; to the character of &ldquo;Joseph.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>From the same cause come also enduring grudges, in some cases amounting
+to hatred, which occasionally has been bequeathed from generation to
+generation.&nbsp; I remember Miss Bront&euml; once telling me that it
+was a saying round about Haworth, &ldquo;Keep a stone in thy pocket
+seven year; turn it, and keep it seven year longer, that it may be ever
+ready to thine hand when thine enemy draws near.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The West Riding men are sleuth-hounds in pursuit of money.&nbsp;
+Miss Bront&euml; related to my husband a curious instance illustrative
+of this eager desire for riches.&nbsp; A man that she knew, who was
+a small manufacturer, had engaged in many local speculations which had
+always turned out well, and thereby rendered him a person of some wealth.&nbsp;
+He was rather past middle age, when he bethought him of insuring his
+life; and he had only just taken out his policy, when he fell ill of
+an acute disease which was certain to end fatally in a very few days.&nbsp;
+The doctor, half-hesitatingly, revealed to him his hopeless state.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;By jingo!&rdquo; cried he, rousing up at once into the old energy,
+&ldquo;I shall <i>do</i> the insurance company!&nbsp; I always was a
+lucky fellow!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>These men are keen and shrewd; faithful and persevering in following
+out a good purpose, fell in tracking an evil one.&nbsp; They are not
+emotional; they are not easily made into either friends or enemies;
+but once lovers or haters, it is difficult to change their feeling.&nbsp;
+They are a powerful race both in mind and body, both for good and for
+evil.</p>
+<p>The woollen manufacture was introduced into this district in the
+days of Edward III.&nbsp; It is traditionally said that a colony of
+Flemings came over and settled in the West Riding to teach the inhabitants
+what to do with their wool.&nbsp; The mixture of agricultural with manufacturing
+labour that ensued and prevailed in the West Riding up to a very recent
+period, sounds pleasant enough at this distance of time, when the classical
+impression is left, and the details forgotten, or only brought to light
+by those who explore the few remote parts of England where the custom
+still lingers.&nbsp; The idea of the mistress and her maidens spinning
+at the great wheels while the master was abroad ploughing his fields,
+or seeing after his flocks on the purple moors, is very poetical to
+look back upon; but when such life actually touches on our own days,
+and we can hear particulars from the lips of those now living, there
+come out details of coarseness&mdash;of the uncouthness of the rustic
+mingled with the sharpness of the tradesman&mdash;of irregularity and
+fierce lawlessness&mdash;that rather mar the vision of pastoral innocence
+and simplicity.&nbsp; Still, as it is the exceptional and exaggerated
+characteristics of any period that leave the most vivid memory behind
+them, it would be wrong, and in my opinion faithless, to conclude that
+such and such forms of society and modes of living were not best for
+the period when they prevailed, although the abuses they may have led
+into, and the gradual progress of the world, have made it well that
+such ways and manners should pass away for ever, and as preposterous
+to attempt to return to them, as it would be for a man to return to
+the clothes of his childhood.</p>
+<p>The patent granted to Alderman Cockayne, and the further restrictions
+imposed by James I. on the export of undyed woollen cloths (met by a
+prohibition on the part of the States of Holland of the import of English-dyed
+cloths), injured the trade of the West Riding manufacturers considerably.&nbsp;
+Their independence of character, their dislike of authority, and their
+strong powers of thought, predisposed them to rebellion against the
+religious dictation of such men as Laud, and the arbitrary rule of the
+Stuarts; and the injury done by James and Charles to the trade by which
+they gained their bread, made the great majority of them Commonwealth
+men.&nbsp; I shall have occasion afterwards to give one or two instances
+of the warm feelings and extensive knowledge on subjects of both home
+and foreign politics existing at the present day in the villages lying
+west and east of the mountainous ridge that separates Yorkshire and
+Lancashire; the inhabitants of which are of the same race and possess
+the same quality of character.</p>
+<p>The descendants of many who served under Cromwell at Dunbar, live
+on the same lands as their ancestors occupied then; and perhaps there
+is no part of England where the traditional and fond recollections of
+the Commonwealth have lingered so long as in that inhabited by the woollen
+manufacturing population of the West Riding, who had the restrictions
+taken off their trade by the Protector&rsquo;s admirable commercial
+policy.&nbsp; I have it on good authority that, not thirty years ago,
+the phrase, &ldquo;in Oliver&rsquo;s days,&rdquo; was in common use
+to denote a time of unusual prosperity.&nbsp; The class of Christian
+names prevalent in a district is one indication of the direction in
+which its tide of hero-worship sets.&nbsp; Grave enthusiasts in politics
+or religion perceive not the ludicrous side of those which they give
+to their children; and some are to be found, still in their infancy,
+not a dozen miles from Haworth, that will have to go through life as
+Lamartine, Kossuth, and Dembinsky.&nbsp; And so there is a testimony
+to what I have said, of the traditional feeling of the district, in
+the fact that the Old Testament names in general use among the Puritans
+are yet the prevalent appellations in most Yorkshire families of middle
+or humble rank, whatever their religious persuasion may be.&nbsp; There
+are numerous records, too, that show the kindly way in which the ejected
+ministers were received by the gentry, as well as by the poorer part
+of the inhabitants, during the persecuting days of Charles II.&nbsp;
+These little facts all testify to the old hereditary spirit of independence,
+ready ever to resist authority which was conceived to be unjustly exercised,
+that distinguishes the people of the West Riding to the present day.</p>
+<p>The parish of Halifax touches that of Bradford, in which the chapelry
+of Haworth is included; and the nature of the ground in the two parishes
+is much the of the same wild and hilly description.&nbsp; The abundance
+of coal, and the number of mountain streams in the district, make it
+highly favourable to manufactures; and accordingly, as I stated, the
+inhabitants have for centuries been engaged in making cloth, as well
+as in agricultural pursuits.&nbsp; But the intercourse of trade failed,
+for a long time, to bring amenity and civilization into these outlying
+hamlets, or widely scattered dwellings.&nbsp; Mr. Hunter, in his &ldquo;Life
+of Oliver Heywood,&rdquo; quotes a sentence out of a memorial of one
+James Rither, living in the reign of Elizabeth, which is partially true
+to this day:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They have no superior to court, no civilities to practise:
+a sour and sturdy humour is the consequence, so that a stranger is shocked
+by a tone of defiance in every voice, and an air of fierceness in every
+countenance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Even now, a stranger can hardly ask a question without receiving
+some crusty reply, if, indeed, he receive any at all.&nbsp; Sometimes
+the sour rudeness amounts to positive insult.&nbsp; Yet, if the &ldquo;foreigner&rdquo;
+takes all this churlishness good-humouredly, or as a matter of course,
+and makes good any claim upon their latent kindliness and hospitality,
+they are faithful and generous, and thoroughly to be relied upon.&nbsp;
+As a slight illustration of the roughness that pervades all classes
+in these out-of-the-way villages, I may relate a little adventure which
+happened to my husband and myself, three years ago, at Addingham&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>From Penigent to Pendle Hill,<br />
+From Linton to Long-<i>Addingham</i><br />
+And all that Craven coasts did tell, &amp;c.&mdash;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>one of the places that sent forth its fighting men to the famous
+old battle of Flodden Field, and a village not many miles from Haworth.</p>
+<p>We were driving along the street, when one of those ne&rsquo;er-do-weel
+lads who seem to have a kind of magnetic power for misfortunes, having
+jumped into the stream that runs through the place, just where all the
+broken glass and bottles are thrown, staggered naked and nearly covered
+with blood into a cottage before us.&nbsp; Besides receiving another
+bad cut in the arm, he had completely laid open the artery, and was
+in a fair way of bleeding to death&mdash;which, one of his relations
+comforted him by saying, would be likely to &ldquo;save a deal o&rsquo;
+trouble.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When my husband had checked the effusion of blood with a strap that
+one of the bystanders unbuckled from his leg, he asked if a surgeon
+had been sent for.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yoi,&rdquo; was the answer; &ldquo;but we dunna think he&rsquo;ll
+come.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s owd, yo seen, and asthmatic, and it&rsquo;s up-hill.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>My husband taking a boy for his guide, drove as fast as he could
+to the surgeon&rsquo;s house, which was about three-quarters of a mile
+off, and met the aunt of the wounded lad leaving it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is he coming?&rdquo; inquired my husband.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, he didna&rsquo; say he wouldna&rsquo; come.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, tell him the lad may bleed to death.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I did.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what did he say?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, only, &lsquo;D-n him; what do I care?&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It ended, however, in his sending one of his sons, who, though not
+brought up to &ldquo;the surgering trade,&rdquo; was able to do what
+was necessary in the way of bandages and plasters.&nbsp; The excuse
+made for the surgeon was, that &ldquo;he was near eighty, and getting
+a bit doited, and had had a matter o&rsquo; twenty childer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Among the most unmoved of the lookers-on was the brother of the boy
+so badly hurt; and while he was lying in a pool of blood on the flag
+floor, and crying out how much his arm was &ldquo;warching,&rdquo; his
+stoical relation stood coolly smoking his bit of black pipe, and uttered
+not a single word of either sympathy or sorrow.</p>
+<p>Forest customs, existing in the fringes of dark wood, which clothed
+the declivity of the hills on either side, tended to brutalize the population
+until the middle of the seventeenth century.&nbsp; Execution by beheading
+was performed in a summary way upon either men or women who were guilty
+of but very slight crimes; and a dogged, yet in some cases fine, indifference
+to human life was thus generated.&nbsp; The roads were so notoriously
+bad, even up to the last thirty years, that there was little communication
+between one village and another; if the produce of industry could be
+conveyed at stated times to the cloth market of the district, it was
+all that could be done; and, in lonely houses on the distant hill-side,
+or by the small magnates of secluded hamlets, crimes might be committed
+almost unknown, certainly without any great uprising of popular indignation
+calculated to bring down the strong arm of the law.&nbsp; It must be
+remembered that in those days there was no rural constabulary; and the
+few magistrates left to themselves, and generally related to one another,
+were most of them inclined to tolerate eccentricity, and to wink at
+faults too much like their own.</p>
+<p>Men hardly past middle life talk of the days of their youth, spent
+in this part of the country, when, during the winter months, they rode
+up to the saddle-girths in mud; when absolute business was the only
+reason for stirring beyond the precincts of home, and when that business
+was conducted under a pressure of difficulties which they themselves,
+borne along to Bradford market in a swift first-class carriage, can
+hardly believe to have been possible.&nbsp; For instance, one woollen
+manufacturer says that, not five and twenty years ago, he had to rise
+betimes to set off on a winter&rsquo;s-morning in order to be at Bradford
+with the great waggon-load of goods manufactured by his father; this
+load was packed over-night, but in the morning there was a great gathering
+around it, and flashing of lanterns, and examination of horses&rsquo;
+feet, before the ponderous waggon got under way; and then some one had
+to go groping here and there, on hands and knees, and always sounding
+with a staff down the long, steep, slippery brow, to find where the
+horses might tread safely, until they reached the comparative easy-going
+of the deep-rutted main road.&nbsp; People went on horseback over the
+upland moors, following the tracks of the pack-horses that carried the
+parcels, baggage, or goods from one town to another, between which there
+did not happen to be a highway.</p>
+<p>But in winter, all such communication was impossible, by reason of
+the snow which lay long and late on the bleak high ground.&nbsp; I have
+known people who, travelling by the mail-coach over Blackstone Edge,
+had been snowed up for a week or ten days at the little inn near the
+summit, and obliged to spend both Christmas and New Year&rsquo;s Day
+there, till the store of provisions laid in for the use of the landlord
+and his family falling short before the inroads of the unexpected visitors,
+they had recourse to the turkeys, geese, and Yorkshire pies with which
+the coach was laden; and even these were beginning to fail, when a fortunate
+thaw released them from their prison.</p>
+<p>Isolated as the hill villages may be, they are in the world, compared
+with the loneliness of the grey ancestral houses to be seen here and
+there in the dense hollows of the moors.&nbsp; These dwellings are not
+large, yet they are solid and roomy enough for the accommodation of
+those who live in them, and to whom the surrounding estates belong.&nbsp;
+The land has often been held by one family since the days of the Tudors;
+the owners are, in fact, the remains of the old yeomanry&mdash;small
+squires&mdash;who are rapidly becoming extinct as a class, from one
+of two causes.&nbsp; Either the possessor falls into idle, drinking
+habits, and so is obliged eventually to sell his property: or he finds,
+if more shrewd and adventurous, that the &ldquo;beck&rdquo; running
+down the mountain-side, or the minerals beneath his feet, can be turned
+into a new source of wealth; and leaving the old plodding life of a
+landowner with small capital, he turns manufacturer, or digs for coal,
+or quarries for stone.</p>
+<p>Still there are those remaining of this class&mdash;dwellers in the
+lonely houses far away in the upland districts&mdash;even at the present
+day, who sufficiently indicate what strange eccentricity&mdash;what
+wild strength of will&mdash;nay, even what unnatural power of crime
+was fostered by a mode of living in which a man seldom met his fellows,
+and where public opinion was only a distant and inarticulate echo of
+some clearer voice sounding behind the sweeping horizon.</p>
+<p>A solitary life cherishes mere fancies until they become manias.&nbsp;
+And the powerful Yorkshire character, which was scarcely tamed into
+subjection by all the contact it met with in &ldquo;busy town or crowded
+mart,&rdquo; has before now broken out into strange wilfulness in the
+remoter districts.&nbsp; A singular account was recently given me of
+a landowner (living, it is true, on the Lancashire side of the hills,
+but of the same blood and nature as the dwellers on the other,) who
+was supposed to be in the receipt of seven or eight hundred a year,
+and whose house bore marks of handsome antiquity, as if his forefathers
+had been for a long time people of consideration.&nbsp; My informant
+was struck with the appearance of the place, and proposed to the countryman
+who was accompanying him, to go up to it and take a nearer inspection.&nbsp;
+The reply was, &ldquo;Yo&rsquo;d better not; he&rsquo;d threap yo&rsquo;
+down th&rsquo; loan.&nbsp; He&rsquo;s let fly at some folk&rsquo;s legs,
+and let shot lodge in &lsquo;em afore now, for going too near to his
+house.&rdquo;&nbsp; And finding, on closer inquiry, that such was really
+the inhospitable custom of this moorland squire, the gentleman gave
+up his purpose.&nbsp; I believe that the savage yeoman is still living.</p>
+<p>Another squire, of more distinguished family and larger property&mdash;one
+is thence led to imagine of better education, but that does not always
+follow&mdash;died at his house, not many miles from Haworth, only a
+few years ago.&nbsp; His great amusement and occupation had been cock-fighting.&nbsp;
+When he was confined to his chamber with what he knew would be his last
+illness, he had his cocks brought up there, and watched the bloody battle
+from his bed.&nbsp; As his mortal disease increased, and it became impossible
+for him to turn so as to follow the combat, he had looking-glasses arranged
+in such a manner, around and above him, as he lay, that he could still
+see the cocks fighting.&nbsp; And in this manner he died.</p>
+<p>These are merely instances of eccentricity compared to the tales
+of positive violence and crime that have occurred in these isolated
+dwellings, which still linger in the memories of the old people of the
+district, and some of which were doubtless familiar to the authors of
+&ldquo;Wuthering Heights&rdquo; and &ldquo;The Tenant of Wildfell Hall.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The amusements of the lower classes could hardly be expected to be
+more humane than those of the wealthy and better educated.&nbsp; The
+gentleman, who has kindly furnished me with some of the particulars
+I have given, remembers the bull-baitings at Rochdale, not thirty years
+ago.&nbsp; The bull was fastened by a chain or rope to a post in the
+river.&nbsp; To increase the amount of water, as well as to give their
+workpeople the opportunity of savage delight, the masters were accustomed
+to stop their mills on the day when the sport took place.&nbsp; The
+bull would sometimes wheel suddenly round, so that the rope by which
+he was fastened swept those who had been careless enough to come within
+its range down into the water, and the good people of Rochdale had the
+excitement of seeing one or two of their neighbours drowned, as well
+as of witnessing the bull baited, and the dogs torn and tossed.</p>
+<p>The people of Haworth were not less strong and full of character
+than their neighbours on either side of the hills.&nbsp; The village
+lies embedded in the moors, between the two counties, on the old road
+between Keighley and Colne.&nbsp; About the middle of the last century,
+it became famous in the religious world as the scene of the ministrations
+of the Rev. William Grimshaw, curate of Haworth for twenty years.&nbsp;
+Before this time, it is probable that the curates were of the same order
+as one Mr. Nicholls, a Yorkshire clergyman, in the days immediately
+succeeding the Reformation, who was &ldquo;much addicted to drinking
+and company-keeping,&rdquo; and used to say to his companions, &ldquo;You
+must not heed me but when I am got three feet above the earth,&rdquo;
+that was, into the pulpit.</p>
+<p>Mr. Grimshaw&rsquo;s life was written by Newton, Cowper&rsquo;s friend;
+and from it may be gathered some curious particulars of the manner in
+which a rough population were swayed and governed by a man of deep convictions,
+and strong earnestness of purpose.&nbsp; It seems that he had not been
+in any way remarkable for religious zeal, though he had led a moral
+life, and been conscientious in fulfilling his parochial duties, until
+a certain Sunday in September, 1744, when the servant, rising at five,
+found her master already engaged in prayer; she stated that, after remaining
+in his chamber for some time, he went to engage in religious exercises
+in the house of a parishioner, then home again to pray; thence, still
+fasting, to the church, where, as he was reading the second lesson,
+he fell down, and, on his partial recovery, had to be led from the church.&nbsp;
+As he went out, he spoke to the congregation, and told them not to disperse,
+as he had something to say to them, and would return presently.&nbsp;
+He was taken to the clerk&rsquo;s house, and again became insensible.&nbsp;
+His servant rubbed him, to restore the circulation; and when he was
+brought to himself &ldquo;he seemed in a great rapture,&rdquo; and the
+first words he uttered were, &ldquo;I have had a glorious vision from
+the third heaven.&rdquo;&nbsp; He did not say what he had seen, but
+returned into the church, and began the service again, at two in the
+afternoon, and went on until seven.</p>
+<p>From this time he devoted himself, with the fervour of a Wesley,
+and something of the fanaticism of a Whitfield, to calling out a religious
+life among his parishioners.&nbsp; They had been in the habit of playing
+at foot-ball on Sunday, using stones for this purpose; and giving and
+receiving challenges from other parishes.&nbsp; There were horse-races
+held on the moors just above the village, which were periodical sources
+of drunkenness and profligacy.&nbsp; Scarcely a wedding took place without
+the rough amusement of foot-races, where the half-naked runners were
+a scandal to all decent strangers.&nbsp; The old custom of &ldquo;arvills,&rdquo;
+or funeral feasts, led to frequent pitched battles between the drunken
+mourners.&nbsp; Such customs were the outward signs of the kind of people
+with whom Mr. Grimshaw had to deal.&nbsp; But, by various means, some
+of the most practical kind, he wrought a great change in his parish.&nbsp;
+In his preaching he was occasionally assisted by Wesley and Whitfield,
+and at such times the little church proved much too small to hold the
+throng that poured in from distant villages, or lonely moorland hamlets;
+and frequently they were obliged to meet in the open air; indeed, there
+was not room enough in the church even for the communicants.&nbsp; Mr.
+Whitfield was once preaching in Haworth, and made use of some such expression,
+as that he hoped there was no need to say much to this congregation,
+as they had sat under so pious and godly a minister for so many years;
+&ldquo;whereupon Mr. Grimshaw stood up in his place, and said with a
+loud voice, &lsquo;Oh, sir! for God&rsquo;s sake do not speak so.&nbsp;
+I pray you do not flatter them.&nbsp; I fear the greater part of them
+are going to hell with their eyes open.&rsquo;&rdquo;&nbsp; But if they
+were so bound, it was not for want of exertion on Mr. Grimshaw&rsquo;s
+part to prevent them.&nbsp; He used to preach twenty or thirty times
+a week in private houses.&nbsp; If he perceived any one inattentive
+to his prayers, he would stop and rebuke the offender, and not go on
+till he saw every one on their knees.&nbsp; He was very earnest in enforcing
+the strict observance of Sunday; and would not even allow his parishioners
+to walk in the fields between services.&nbsp; He sometimes gave out
+a very long Psalm (tradition says the 119th), and while it was being
+sung, he left the reading-desk, and taking a horsewhip went into the
+public-houses, and flogged the loiterers into church.&nbsp; They were
+swift who could escape the lash of the parson by sneaking out the back
+way.&nbsp; He had strong health and an active body, and rode far and
+wide over the hills, &ldquo;awakening&rdquo; those who had previously
+had no sense of religion.&nbsp; To save time, and be no charge to the
+families at whose houses he held his prayer-meetings, he carried his
+provisions with him; all the food he took in the day on such occasions
+consisting simply of a piece of bread and butter, or dry bread and a
+raw onion.</p>
+<p>The horse-races were justly objectionable to Mr. Grimshaw; they attracted
+numbers of profligate people to Haworth, and brought a match to the
+combustible materials of the place, only too ready to blaze out into
+wickedness.&nbsp; The story is, that he tried all means of persuasion,
+and even intimidation, to have the races discontinued, but in vain.&nbsp;
+At length, in despair, he prayed with such fervour of earnestness that
+the rain came down in torrents, and deluged the ground, so that there
+was no footing for man or beast, even if the multitude had been willing
+to stand such a flood let down from above.&nbsp; And so Haworth races
+were stopped, and have never been resumed to this day.&nbsp; Even now
+the memory of this good man is held in reverence, and his faithful ministrations
+and real virtues are one of the boasts of the parish.</p>
+<p>But after his time, I fear there was a falling back into the wild
+rough heathen ways, from which he had pulled them up, as it were, by
+the passionate force of his individual character.&nbsp; He had built
+a chapel for the Wesleyan Methodists, and not very long after the Baptists
+established themselves in a place of worship.&nbsp; Indeed, as Dr. Whitaker
+says, the people of this district are &ldquo;strong religionists;&rdquo;
+only, fifty years ago, their religion did not work down into their lives.&nbsp;
+Half that length of time back, the code of morals seemed to be formed
+upon that of their Norse ancestors.&nbsp; Revenge was handed down from
+father to son as an hereditary duty; and a great capability for drinking
+without the head being affected was considered as one of the manly virtues.&nbsp;
+The games of foot-ball on Sundays, with the challenges to the neighbouring
+parishes, were resumed, bringing in an influx of riotous strangers to
+fill the public-houses, and make the more sober-minded inhabitants long
+for good Mr. Grimshaw&rsquo;s stout arm, and ready horsewhip.&nbsp;
+The old custom of &ldquo;arvills&rdquo; was as prevalent as ever.&nbsp;
+The sexton, standing at the foot of the open grave, announced that the
+&ldquo;arvill&rdquo; would be held at the Black Bull, or whatever public-house
+might be fixed upon by the friends of the dead; and thither the mourners
+and their acquaintances repaired.&nbsp; The origin of the custom had
+been the necessity of furnishing some refreshment for those who came
+from a distance, to pay the last mark of respect to a friend.&nbsp;
+In the life of Oliver Heywood there are two quotations, which show what
+sort of food was provided for &ldquo;arvills&rdquo; in quiet Nonconformist
+connections in the seventeenth century; the first (from Thoresby) tells
+of &ldquo;cold possets, stewed prunes, cake, and cheese,&rdquo; as being
+the arvill after Oliver Heywood&rsquo;s funeral.&nbsp; The second gives,
+as rather shabby, according to the notion of the times (1673), &ldquo;nothing
+but a bit of cake, draught of wine, piece of rosemary, and pair of gloves.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But the arvills at Haworth were often far more jovial doings.&nbsp;
+Among the poor, the mourners were only expected to provide a kind of
+spiced roll for each person; and the expense of the liquors&mdash;rum,
+or ale, or a mixture of both called &ldquo;dog&rsquo;s nose&rdquo;&mdash;was
+generally defrayed by each guest placing some money on a plate, set
+in the middle of the table.&nbsp; Richer people would order a dinner
+for their friends.&nbsp; At the funeral of Mr. Charnock (the next successor
+but one to Mr. Grimshaw in the incumbency), above eighty people were
+bid to the arvill, and the price of the feast was 4s. 6d. per head,
+all of which was defrayed by the friends of the deceased.&nbsp; As few
+&ldquo;shirked their liquor,&rdquo; there were very frequently &ldquo;up-and-down
+fights&rdquo; before the close of the day; sometimes with the horrid
+additions of &ldquo;pawsing&rdquo; and &ldquo;gouging,&rdquo; and biting.</p>
+<p>Although I have dwelt on the exceptional traits in the characteristics
+of these stalwart West-Ridingers, such as they were in the first quarter
+of this century, if not a few years later, I have little doubt that
+in the everyday life of the people so independent, wilful, and full
+of grim humour, there would be much found even at present that would
+shock those accustomed only to the local manners of the south; and,
+in return, I suspect the shrewd, sagacious, energetic Yorkshireman would
+hold such &ldquo;foreigners&rdquo; in no small contempt.</p>
+<p>I have said, it is most probable that where Haworth Church now stands,
+there was once an ancient &ldquo;field-kirk,&rdquo; or oratory.&nbsp;
+It occupied the third or lowest class of ecclesiastical structures,
+according to the Saxon law, and had no right of sepulture, or administration
+of sacraments.&nbsp; It was so called because it was built without enclosure,
+and open to the adjoining fields or moors.&nbsp; The founder, according
+to the laws of Edgar, was bound, without subtracting from his tithes,
+to maintain the ministering priest out of the remaining nine parts of
+his income.&nbsp; After the Reformation, the right of choosing their
+clergyman, at any of those chapels of ease which had formerly been field-kirks,
+was vested in the freeholders and trustees, subject to the approval
+of the vicar of the parish.&nbsp; But owing to some negligence, this
+right has been lost to the freeholders and trustees at Haworth, ever
+since the days of Archbishop Sharp; and the power of choosing a minister
+has lapsed into the hands of the Vicar of Bradford.&nbsp; So runs the
+account, according to one authority.</p>
+<p>Mr. Bront&euml; says,&mdash;&ldquo;This living has for its patrons
+the Vicar of Bradford and certain trustees.&nbsp; My predecessor took
+the living with the consent of the Vicar of Bradford, but in opposition
+to the trustees; in consequence of which he was so opposed that, after
+only three weeks&rsquo; possession, he was compelled to resign.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+A Yorkshire gentleman, who has kindly sent me some additional information
+on this subject since the second edition of my work was published, write,
+thus:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;The sole right of presentation to the incumbency
+of Haworth is vested in the Vicar of Bradford.&nbsp; He only can present.&nbsp;
+The funds, however, from which the clergyman&rsquo;s stipend mainly
+proceeds, are vested in the hands of trustees, who have the power to
+withhold them, if a nominee is sent of whom they disapprove.&nbsp; On
+the decease of Mr. Charnock, the Vicar first tendered the preferment
+to Mr. Bront&euml;, and he went over to his expected cure.&nbsp; He
+was told that towards himself they had no personal objection; but as
+a nominee of the Vicar he would not be received.&nbsp; He therefore
+retired, with the declaration that if he could not come with the approval
+of the parish, his ministry could not be useful.&nbsp; Upon this the
+attempt was made to introduce Mr. Redhead.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When Mr. Redhead was repelled, a fresh difficulty arose.&nbsp;
+Some one must first move towards a settlement, but a spirit being evoked
+which could not be allayed, action became perplexing.&nbsp; The matter
+had to be referred to some independent arbitrator, and my father was
+the gentleman to whom each party turned its eye.&nbsp; A meeting was
+convened, and the business settled by the Vicar&rsquo;s conceding the
+choice to the trustees, and the acceptance of the Vicar&rsquo;s presentation.&nbsp;
+That choice forthwith fell on Mr. Bront&euml;, whose promptness and
+prudence had won their hearts.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In conversing on the character of the inhabitants of the West Riding
+with Dr. Scoresby, who had been for some time Vicar of Bradford, he
+alluded to certain riotous transactions which had taken place at Haworth
+on the presentation of the living to Mr. Redhead, and said that there
+had been so much in the particulars indicative of the character of the
+people, that he advised me to inquire into them.&nbsp; I have accordingly
+done so, and, from the lips of some of the survivors among the actors
+and spectators, I have learnt the means taken to eject the nominee of
+the Vicar.</p>
+<p>The previous incumbent had been the Mr. Charnock whom I have mentioned
+as next but one in succession to Mr. Grimshaw.&nbsp; He had a long illness
+which rendered him unable to discharge his duties without assistance,
+and Mr. Redhead gave him occasional help, to the great satisfaction
+of the parishioners, and was highly respected by them during Mr. Charnock&rsquo;s
+lifetime.&nbsp; But the case was entirely altered when, at Mr. Charnock&rsquo;s
+death in 1819, they conceived that the trustees had been unjustly deprived
+of their rights by the Vicar of Bradford, who appointed Mr. Redhead
+as perpetual curate.</p>
+<p>The first Sunday he officiated, Haworth Church was filled even to
+the aisles; most of the people wearing the wooden clogs of the district.&nbsp;
+But while Mr. Redhead was reading the second lesson, the whole congregation,
+as by one impulse, began to leave the church, making all the noise they
+could with clattering and clumping of clogs, till, at length, Mr. Redhead
+and the clerk were the only two left to continue the service.&nbsp;
+This was bad enough, but the next Sunday the proceedings were far worse.&nbsp;
+Then, as before, the church was well filled, but the aisles were left
+clear; not a creature, not an obstacle was in the way.&nbsp; The reason
+for this was made evident about the same time in the reading of the
+service as the disturbances had begun the previous week.&nbsp; A man
+rode into the church upon an ass, with his face turned towards the tail,
+and as many old hats piled on his head as he could possibly carry.&nbsp;
+He began urging his beast round the aisles, and the screams, and cries,
+and laughter of the congregation entirely drowned all sound of Mr. Redhead&rsquo;s
+voice, and, I believe, he was obliged to desist.</p>
+<p>Hitherto they had not proceeded to anything like personal violence;
+but on the third Sunday they must have been greatly irritated at seeing
+Mr. Redhead, determined to brave their will, ride up the village street,
+accompanied by several gentlemen from Bradford.&nbsp; They put up their
+horses at the Black Bull&mdash;the little inn close upon the churchyard,
+for the convenience of arvills as well as for other purposes&mdash;and
+went into church.&nbsp; On this the people followed, with a chimney-sweeper,
+whom they had employed to clean the chimneys of some out-buildings belonging
+to the church that very morning, and afterward plied with drink till
+he was in a state of solemn intoxication.&nbsp; They placed him right
+before the reading-desk, where his blackened face nodded a drunken,
+stupid assent to all that Mr. Redhead said.&nbsp; At last, either prompted
+by some mischief-maker, or from some tipsy impulse, he clambered up
+the pulpit stairs, and attempted to embrace Mr. Redhead.&nbsp; Then
+the profane fun grew fast and furious.&nbsp; Some of the more riotous,
+pushed the soot-covered chimney-sweeper against Mr. Redhead, as he tried
+to escape.&nbsp; They threw both him and his tormentor down on the ground
+in the churchyard where the soot-bag had been emptied, and, though,
+at last, Mr. Redhead escaped into the Black Bull, the doors of which
+were immediately barred, the people raged without, threatening to stone
+him and his friends.&nbsp; One of my informants is an old man, who was
+the landlord of the inn at the time, and he stands to it that such was
+the temper of the irritated mob, that Mr. Redhead was in real danger
+of his life.&nbsp; This man, however, planned an escape for his unpopular
+inmates.&nbsp; The Black Bull is near the top of the long, steep Haworth
+street, and at the bottom, close by the bridge, on the road to Keighley,
+is a turnpike.&nbsp; Giving directions to his hunted guests to steal
+out at the back door (through which, probably, many a ne&rsquo;er-do-weel
+has escaped from good Mr. Grimshaw&rsquo;s horsewhip), the landlord
+and some of the stable-boys rode the horses belonging to the party from
+Bradford backwards and forwards before his front door, among the fiercely-expectant
+crowd.&nbsp; Through some opening between the houses, those on the horses
+saw Mr. Redhead and his friends creeping along behind the street; and
+then, striking spurs, they dashed quickly down to the turnpike; the
+obnoxious clergyman and his friends mounted in haste, and had sped some
+distance before the people found out that their prey had escaped, and
+came running to the closed turnpike gate.</p>
+<p>This was Mr. Redhead&rsquo;s last appearance at Haworth for many
+years.&nbsp; Long afterwards, he came to preach, and in his sermon to
+a large and attentive congregation he good-humouredly reminded them
+of the circumstances which I have described.&nbsp; They gave him a hearty
+welcome, for they owed him no grudge; although before they had been
+ready enough to stone him, in order to maintain what they considered
+to be their rights.</p>
+<p>The foregoing account, which I heard from two of the survivors, in
+the presence of a friend who can vouch for the accuracy of my repetition,
+has to a certain degree been confirmed by a letter from the Yorkshire
+gentleman, whose words I have already quoted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am not surprised at your difficulty in authenticating matter-of-fact.&nbsp;
+I find this in recalling what I have heard, and the authority on which
+I have heard anything.&nbsp; As to the donkey tale, I believe you are
+right.&nbsp; Mr. Redhead and Dr. Ramsbotham, his son-in-law, are no
+strangers to me.&nbsp; Each of them has a niche in my affections.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have asked, this day, two persons who lived in Haworth at
+the time to which you allude, the son and daughter of an acting trustee,
+and each of them between sixty and seventy years of age, and they assure
+me that the donkey was introduced.&nbsp; One of them says it was mounted
+by a half-witted man, seated with his face towards the tail of the beast,
+and having several hats piled on his head.&nbsp; Neither of my informants
+was, however, present at these edifying services.&nbsp; I believe that
+no movement was made in the church on either Sunday, until the whole
+of the authorised reading-service was gone through, and I am sure that
+nothing was more remote from the more respectable party than any personal
+antagonism toward Mr. Redhead.&nbsp; He was one of the most amiable
+and worthy of men, a man to myself endeared by many ties and obligations.&nbsp;
+I never heard before your book that the sweep ascended the pulpit steps.&nbsp;
+He was present, however, in the clerical habiliments of his order .
+. . I may also add that among the many who were present at those sad
+Sunday orgies the majority were non-residents, and came from those moorland
+fastnesses on the outskirts of the parish locally designated as &lsquo;ovver
+th&rsquo; steyres,&rsquo; one stage more remote than Haworth from modern
+civilization.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To an instance or two more of the rusticity of the inhabitants
+of the chapelry of Haworth, I may introduce you.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A Haworth carrier called at the office of a friend of mine
+to deliver a parcel on a cold winter&rsquo;s day, and stood with the
+door open.&nbsp; &lsquo;Robin! shut the door!&rsquo; said the recipient.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Have you no doors in your country?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Yoi,&rsquo;
+responded Robin, &lsquo;we hev, but we nivver steik &lsquo;em.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+I have frequently remarked the number of doors open even in winter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When well directed, the indomitable and independent energies
+of the natives of this part of the country are invaluable; dangerous
+when perverted.&nbsp; I shall never forget the fierce actions and utterances
+of one suffering from delirium tremens.&nbsp; Whether in its wrath,
+disdain, or its dismay, the countenance was infernal.&nbsp; I called
+once upon a time on a most respectable yeoman, and I was, in language
+earnest and homely, pressed to accept the hospitality of the house.&nbsp;
+I consented.&nbsp; The word to me was, &lsquo;Nah, Maister, yah mun
+stop an hev sum te-ah, yah mun, eah, yah mun.&rsquo;&nbsp; A bountiful
+table was soon spread; at all events, time soon went while I scaled
+the hills to see &lsquo;t&rsquo; maire at wor thretty year owd, an&rsquo;t&rsquo;
+feil at wor fewer.&rsquo;&nbsp; On sitting down to the table, a venerable
+woman officiated, and after filling the cups, she thus addressed me:
+&lsquo;Nah, Maister, yah mun loawze th&rsquo;taible&rsquo; (loose the
+table).&nbsp; The master said, &lsquo;Shah meeans yah mun sey t&rsquo;
+greyce.&rsquo;&nbsp; I took the hint, and uttered the blessing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I spoke with an aged and tried woman at one time, who, after
+recording her mercies, stated, among others, her powers of speech, by
+asserting &lsquo;Thank the Lord, ah nivver wor a meilly-meouthed wumman.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+I feel particularly at fault in attempting the orthography of the dialect,
+but must excuse myself by telling you that I once saw a letter in which
+the word I have just now used (excuse) was written &lsquo;ecksqueaize!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There are some things, however, which rather tend to soften
+the idea of the rudeness of Haworth.&nbsp; No rural district has been
+more markedly the abode of musical taste and acquirement, and this at
+a period when it was difficult to find them to the same extent apart
+from towns in advance of their times.&nbsp; I have gone to Haworth and
+found an orchestra to meet me, filled with local performers, vocal and
+instrumental, to whom the best works of Handel, Haydn, Mozart, Marcello,
+&amp;c. &amp;c., were familiar as household words.&nbsp; By knowledge,
+taste, and voice, they were markedly separate from ordinary village
+choirs, and have been put in extensive requisition for the solo and
+chorus of many an imposing festival.&nbsp; One man still survives, who,
+for fifty years, has had one of the finest tenor voices I ever heard,
+and with it a refined and cultivated taste.&nbsp; To him and to others
+many inducements have been offered to migrate; but the loom, the association,
+the mountain air have had charms enow to secure their continuance at
+home.&nbsp; I love the recollection of their performance; that recollection
+extends over more than sixty years.&nbsp; The attachments, the antipathies
+and the hospitalities of the district are ardent, hearty, and homely.&nbsp;
+Cordiality in each is the prominent characteristic.&nbsp; As a people,
+these mountaineers have ever been accessible to gentleness and truth,
+so far as I have known them; but excite suspicion or resentment, and
+they give emphatic and not impotent resistance.&nbsp; Compulsion they
+defy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I accompanied Mr. Heap on his first visit to Haworth after
+his accession to the vicarage of Bradford.&nbsp; It was on Easter day,
+either 1816 or 1817.&nbsp; His predecessor, the venerable John Crosse,
+known as the &lsquo;blind vicar,&rsquo; had been inattentive to the
+vicarial claims.&nbsp; A searching investigation had to be made and
+enforced, and as it proceeded stout and sturdy utterances were not lacking
+on the part of the parishioners.&nbsp; To a spectator, though rude,
+they were amusing, and significant, foretelling what might be expected,
+and what was afterwards realised, on the advent of a new incumbent,
+if they deemed him an intruder.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;From their peculiar parochial position and circumstances,
+the inhabitants of the chapelry have been prompt, earnest, and persevering
+in their opposition to church-rates.&nbsp; Although ten miles from the
+mother-church, they were called upon to defray a large proportion of
+this obnoxious tax,&mdash;I believe one fifth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Besides this, they had to maintain their own edifice, &amp;c.,
+&amp;c.&nbsp; They resisted, therefore, with energy, that which they
+deemed to be oppression and injustice.&nbsp; By scores would they wend
+their way from the hills to attend a vestry meeting at Bradford, and
+in such service failed not to show less of the <i>suaviter in modo</i>
+than the <i>fortiter in re</i>.&nbsp; Happily such occasion for their
+action has not occurred for many years.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The use of patronymics has been common in this locality.&nbsp;
+Inquire for a man by his Christian name and surname, and you may have
+some difficulty in finding him: ask, however, for &lsquo;George o&rsquo;
+Ned&rsquo;s,&rsquo; or &lsquo;Dick o&rsquo; Bob&rsquo;s,&rsquo; or &lsquo;Tom
+o&rsquo; Jack&rsquo;s,&rsquo; as the case may be, and your difficulty
+is at an end.&nbsp; In many instances the person is designated by his
+residence.&nbsp; In my early years I had occasion to inquire for Jonathan
+Whitaker, who owned a considerable farm in the township.&nbsp; I was
+sent hither and thither, until it occurred to me to ask for &lsquo;Jonathan
+o&rsquo; th&rsquo; Gate.&rsquo;&nbsp; My difficulties were then at an
+end.&nbsp; Such circumstances arise out of the settled character and
+isolation of the natives.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Those who have witnessed a Haworth wedding when the parties
+were above the rank of labourers, will not easily forget the scene.&nbsp;
+A levy was made on the horses of the neighbourhood, and a merry cavalcade
+of mounted men and women, single or double, traversed the way to Bradford
+church.&nbsp; The inn and church appeared to be in natural connection,
+and as the labours of the Temperance Society had then to begin, the
+interests of sobriety were not always consulted.&nbsp; On remounting
+their steeds they commenced with a race, and not unfrequently an inebriate
+or unskilful horseman or woman was put <i>hors de combat</i>.&nbsp;
+A race also was frequent at the end. of these wedding expeditions, from
+the bridge to the toll-bar at Haworth.&nbsp; The race-course you will
+know to be anything but level.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Into the midst of this lawless, yet not unkindly population, Mr.
+Bront&euml; brought his wife and six little children, in February, 1820.&nbsp;
+There are those yet alive who remember seven heavily-laden carts lumbering
+slowly up the long stone street, bearing the &ldquo;new parson&rsquo;s&rdquo;
+household goods to his future abode.</p>
+<p>One wonders how the bleak aspect of her new home&mdash;the low, oblong,
+stone parsonage, high up, yet with a still higher back-ground of sweeping
+moors&mdash;struck on the gentle, delicate wife, whose health even then
+was failing.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
+<p>The Rev. Patrick Bront&euml; is a native of the County Down in Ireland.&nbsp;
+His father Hugh Bront&euml;, was left an orphan at an early age.&nbsp;
+He came from the south to the north of the island, and settled in the
+parish of Ahaderg, near Loughbrickland.&nbsp; There was some family
+tradition that, humble as Hugh Bront&euml;&rsquo;s circumstances were,
+he was the descendant of an ancient family.&nbsp; But about this neither
+he nor his descendants have cared to inquire.&nbsp; He made an early
+marriage, and reared and educated ten children on the proceeds of the
+few acres of land which he farmed.&nbsp; This large family were remarkable
+for great physical strength, and much personal beauty.&nbsp; Even in
+his old age, Mr. Bront&euml; is a striking-looking man, above the common
+height, with a nobly-shaped head, and erect carriage.&nbsp; In his youth
+he must have been unusually handsome.</p>
+<p>He was born on Patrickmas day (March 17), 1777, and early gave tokens
+of extraordinary quickness and intelligence.&nbsp; He had also his full
+share of ambition; and of his strong sense and forethought there is
+a proof in the fact, that, knowing that his father could afford him
+no pecuniary aid, and that he must depend upon his own exertions, he
+opened a public school at the early age of sixteen; and this mode of
+living he continued to follow for five or six years.&nbsp; He then became
+a tutor in the family of the Rev. Mr. Tighe, rector of Drumgooland parish.&nbsp;
+Thence he proceeded to St. John&rsquo;s College, Cambridge, where he
+was entered in July, 1802, being at the time five-and-twenty years of
+age.&nbsp; After nearly four years&rsquo; residence, he obtained his
+B.A. degree, and was ordained to a curacy in Essex, whence he removed
+into Yorkshire.&nbsp; The course of life of which this is the outline,
+shows a powerful and remarkable character, originating and pursuing
+a purpose in a resolute and independent manner.&nbsp; Here is a youth&mdash;a
+boy of sixteen&mdash;separating himself from his family, and determining
+to maintain himself; and that, not in the hereditary manner by agricultural
+pursuits, but by the labour of his brain.</p>
+<p>I suppose, from what I have heard, that Mr. Tighe became strongly
+interested in his children&rsquo;s tutor, and may have aided him, not
+only in the direction of his studies, but in the suggestion of an English
+university education, and in advice as to the mode in which he should
+obtain entrance there.&nbsp; Mr. Bront&euml; has now no trace of his
+Irish origin remaining in his speech; he never could have shown his
+Celtic descent in the straight Greek lines and long oval of his face;
+but at five-and-twenty, fresh from the only life he had ever known,
+to present himself at the gates of St. John&rsquo;s proved no little
+determination of will, and scorn of ridicule.</p>
+<p>While at Cambridge, he became one of a corps of volunteers, who were
+then being called out all over the country to resist the apprehended
+invasion by the French.&nbsp; I have heard him allude, in late years,
+to Lord Palmerston as one who had often been associated with him then
+in the mimic military duties which they had to perform.</p>
+<p>We take him up now settled as a curate at Hartshead, in Yorkshire&mdash;far
+removed from his birth-place and all his Irish connections; with whom,
+indeed, he cared little to keep up any intercourse, and whom he never,
+I believe, revisited after becoming a student at Cambridge.</p>
+<p>Hartshead is a very small village, lying to the east of Huddersfield
+and Halifax; and, from its high situation&mdash;on a mound, as it were,
+surrounded by a circular basin&mdash;commanding a magnificent view.&nbsp;
+Mr. Bront&euml; resided here for five years; and, while the incumbent
+of Hartshead, he wooed and married Maria Branwell.</p>
+<p>She was the third daughter of Mr. Thomas Branwell, merchant, of Penzance.&nbsp;
+Her mother&rsquo;s maiden name was Carne: and, both on father&rsquo;s
+and mother&rsquo;s side, the Branwell family were sufficiently well
+descended to enable them to mix in the best society that Penzance then
+afforded.&nbsp; Mr. and Mrs. Branwell would be living&mdash;their family
+of four daughters and one son, still children&mdash;during the existence
+of that primitive state of society which is well described by Dr. Davy
+in the life of his brother.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In the same town, when the population was about 2,000 persons,
+there was only one carpet, the floors of rooms were sprinkled with sea-sand,
+and there was not a single silver fork.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At that time, when our colonial possessions were very limited,
+our army and navy on a small scale, and there was comparatively little
+demand for intellect, the younger sons of gentlemen were often of necessity
+brought up to some trade or mechanical art, to which no discredit, or
+loss of caste, as it were, was attached.&nbsp; The eldest son, if not
+allowed to remain an idle country squire, was sent to Oxford or Cambridge,
+preparatory to his engaging in one of the three liberal professions
+of divinity, law, or physic; the second son was perhaps apprenticed
+to a surgeon or apothecary, or a solicitor; the third to a pewterer
+or watchmaker; the fourth to a packer or mercer, and so on, were there
+more to be provided for.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;After their apprenticeships were finished, the young men almost
+invariably went to London to perfect themselves in their respective
+trade or art: and on their return into the country, when settled in
+business, they were not excluded from what would now be considered genteel
+society.&nbsp; Visiting then was conducted differently from what it
+is at present.&nbsp; Dinner-parties were almost unknown, excepting at
+the annual feast-time.&nbsp; Christmas, too, was then a season of peculiar
+indulgence and conviviality, and a round of entertainments was given,
+consisting of tea and supper.&nbsp; Excepting at these two periods,
+visiting was almost entirely confined to tea-parties, which assembled
+at three o&rsquo;clock, broke up at nine, and the amusement of the evening
+was commonly some round game at cards, as Pope Joan, or Commerce.&nbsp;
+The lower class was then extremely ignorant, and all classes were very
+superstitious; even the belief in witches maintained its ground, and
+there was an almost unbounded credulity respecting the supernatural
+and monstrous.&nbsp; There was scarcely a parish in the Mount&rsquo;s
+Bay that was without a haunted house, or a spot to which some story
+of supernatural horror was not attached.&nbsp; Even when I was a boy,
+I remember a house in the best street of Penzance which was uninhabited
+because it was believed to be haunted, and which young people walked
+by at night at a quickened pace, and with a beating heart.&nbsp; Amongst
+the middle and higher classes there was little taste for literature,
+and still less for science, and their pursuits were rarely of a dignified
+or intellectual kind.&nbsp; Hunting, shooting, wrestling, cock-fighting,
+generally ending in drunkenness, were what they most delighted in.&nbsp;
+Smuggling was carried on to a great extent; and drunkenness, and a low
+state of morals, were naturally associated with it.&nbsp; Whilst smuggling
+was the means of acquiring wealth to bold and reckless adventurers,
+drunkenness and dissipation occasioned the ruin of many respectable
+families.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I have given this extract because I conceive it bears some reference
+to the life of Miss Bront&euml;, whose strong mind and vivid imagination
+must have received their first impressions either from the servants
+(in that simple household, almost friendly companions during the greater
+part of the day,) retailing the traditions or the news of Haworth village;
+or from Mr. Bront&euml;, whose intercourse with his children appears
+to have been considerably restrained, and whose life, both in Ireland
+and at Cambridge, had been spent under peculiar circumstances; or from
+her aunt, Miss Branwell, who came to the parsonage, when Charlotte was
+only six or seven years old, to take charge of her dead sister&rsquo;s
+family.&nbsp; This aunt was older than Mrs. Bront&euml;, and had lived
+longer among the Penzance society, which Dr. Davy describes.&nbsp; But
+in the Branwell family itself, the violence and irregularity of nature
+did not exist.&nbsp; They were Methodists, and, as far as I can gather,
+a gentle and sincere piety gave refinement and purity of character.&nbsp;
+Mr. Branwell, the father, according to his descendants&rsquo; account,
+was a man of musical talent.&nbsp; He and his wife lived to see all
+their children grown up, and died within a year of each other&mdash;he
+in 1808, she in 1809, when their daughter Maria was twenty-five or twenty-six
+years of age.&nbsp; I have been permitted to look over a series of nine
+letters, which were addressed by her to Mr. Bront&euml;, during the
+brief term of their engagement in 1812.&nbsp; They are full of tender
+grace of expression and feminine modesty; pervaded by the deep piety
+to which I have alluded as a family characteristic.&nbsp; I shall make
+one or two extracts from them, to show what sort of a person was the
+mother of Charlotte Bront&euml;: but first, I must state the circumstances
+under which this Cornish lady met the scholar from Ahaderg, near Loughbrickland.&nbsp;
+In the early summer of 1812, when she would be twenty-nine, she came
+to visit her uncle, the Reverend John Fennel, who was at that time a
+clergyman of the Church of England, living near Leeds, but who had previously
+been a Methodist minister.&nbsp; Mr. Bront&euml; was the incumbent of
+Hartshead; and had the reputation in the neighbourhood of being a very
+handsome fellow, full of Irish enthusiasm, and with something of an
+Irishman&rsquo;s capability of falling easily in love.&nbsp; Miss Branwell
+was extremely small in person; not pretty, but very elegant, and always
+dressed with a quiet simplicity of taste, which accorded well with her
+general character, and of which some of the details call to mind the
+style of dress preferred by her daughter for her favourite heroines.&nbsp;
+Mr. Bront&euml; was soon captivated by the little, gentle creature,
+and this time declared that it was for life.&nbsp; In her first letter
+to him, dated August 26th, she seems almost surprised to find herself
+engaged, and alludes to the short time which she has known him.&nbsp;
+In the rest there are touches reminding one of Juliet&rsquo;s&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;But trust me, gentleman, I&rsquo;ll prove more
+true,<br />
+Than those that have more cunning to be strange.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>There are plans for happy pic-nic parties to Kirkstall Abbey, in
+the glowing September days, when &ldquo;Uncle, Aunt, and Cousin Jane,&rdquo;&mdash;the
+last engaged to a Mr. Morgan, another clergyman&mdash;were of the party;
+all since dead, except Mr. Bront&euml;.&nbsp; There was no opposition
+on the part of any of her friends to her engagement.&nbsp; Mr. and Mrs.
+Fennel sanctioned it, and her brother and sisters in far-away Penzance
+appear fully to have approved of it.&nbsp; In a letter dated September
+18th, she says:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For some years I have been perfectly my own mistress, subject
+to no control whatever; so far from it, that my sisters, who are many
+years older than myself, and even my dear mother, used to consult me
+on every occasion of importance, and scarcely ever doubted the propriety
+of my opinions and actions: perhaps you will be ready to accuse me of
+vanity in mentioning this, but you must consider that I do not boast
+of it.&nbsp; I have many times felt it a disadvantage, and although,
+I thank God, it has never led me into error, yet, in circumstances of
+uncertainty and doubt, I have deeply felt the want of a guide and instructor.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+In the same letter she tells Mr. Bront&euml;, that she has informed
+her sisters of her engagement, and that she should not see them again
+so soon as she had intended.&nbsp; Mr. Fennel, her uncle, also writes
+to them by the same post in praise of Mr. Bront&euml;.</p>
+<p>The journey from Penzance to Leeds in those days was both very long
+and very expensive; the lovers had not much money to spend in unnecessary
+travelling, and, as Miss Branwell had neither father nor mother living,
+it appeared both a discreet and seemly arrangement that the marriage
+should take place from her uncle&rsquo;s house.&nbsp; There was no reason
+either why the engagement should be prolonged.&nbsp; They were past
+their first youth; they had means sufficient for their unambitious wants;
+the living of Hartshead is rated in the Clergy List at 202<i>l</i>.
+per annum, and she was in the receipt of a small annuity (50<i>l</i>.
+I have been told) by the will of her father.&nbsp; So, at the end of
+September, the lovers began to talk about taking a house, for I suppose
+that Mr. Bront&euml; up to that time had been in lodgings; and all went
+smoothly and successfully with a view to their marriage in the ensuing
+winter, until November, when a misfortune happened, which she thus patiently
+and prettily describes:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose you never expected to be much the richer for me,
+but I am sorry to inform you that I am still poorer than I thought myself.&nbsp;
+I mentioned having sent for my books, clothes, &amp;c.&nbsp; On Saturday
+evening, about the time when you were writing the description of your
+imaginary shipwreck, I was reading and feeling the effects of a real
+one, having then received a letter from my sister giving me an account
+of the vessel in which she had sent my box being stranded on the coast
+of Devonshire, in consequence of which the box was dashed to pieces
+with the violence of the sea, and all my little property, with the exception
+of a very few articles, being swallowed up in the mighty deep.&nbsp;
+If this should not prove the prelude to something worse I shall think
+little of it, as it is the first disastrous circumstance which has occurred
+since I left my home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The last of these letters is dated December the 5th.&nbsp; Miss Branwell
+and her cousin intended to set about making the wedding-cake in the
+following week, so the marriage could not be far off.&nbsp; She had
+been learning by heart a &ldquo;pretty little hymn&rdquo; of Mr. Bront&euml;&rsquo;s
+composing; and reading Lord Lyttelton&rsquo;s &ldquo;Advice to a Lady,&rdquo;
+on which she makes some pertinent and just remarks, showing that she
+thought as well as read.&nbsp; And so Maria Branwell fades out of sight;
+we have no more direct intercourse with her; we hear of her as Mrs.
+Bront&euml;, but it is as an invalid, not far from death; still patient,
+cheerful, and pious.&nbsp; The writing of these letters is elegant and
+neat; while there are allusions to household occupations&mdash;such
+as making the wedding-cake; there are also allusions to the books she
+has read, or is reading, showing a well-cultivated mind.&nbsp; Without
+having anything of her daughter&rsquo;s rare talents, Mrs. Bront&euml;
+must have been, I imagine, that unusual character, a well-balanced and
+consistent woman.&nbsp; The style of the letters is easy and good; as
+is also that of a paper from the same hand, entitled &ldquo;The Advantages
+of Poverty in Religious Concerns,&rdquo; which was written rather later,
+with a view to publication in some periodical.</p>
+<p>She was married from her uncle&rsquo;s house in Yorkshire, on the
+29th of December, 1812; the same day was also the wedding-day of her
+younger sister, Charlotte Branwell, in distant Penzance.&nbsp; I do
+not think that Mrs. Bront&euml; ever revisited Cornwall, but she has
+left a very pleasant impression on the minds of those relations who
+yet survive; they speak of her as &ldquo;their favourite aunt, and one
+to whom they, as well as all the family, looked up, as a person of talent
+and great amiability of disposition;&rdquo; and, again, as &ldquo;meek
+and retiring, while possessing more than ordinary talents, which she
+inherited from her father, and her piety was genuine and unobtrusive.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bront&euml; remained for five years at Hartshead, in the parish
+of Dewsbury.&nbsp; There he was married, and his two children, Maria
+and Elizabeth, were born.&nbsp; At the expiration of that period, he
+had the living of Thornton, in Bradford Parish.&nbsp; Some of those
+great West Riding parishes are almost like bishoprics for their amount
+of population and number of churches.&nbsp; Thornton church is a little
+episcopal chapel of ease, rich in Nonconformist monuments, as of Accepted
+Lister and his friend Dr. Hall.&nbsp; The neighbourhood is desolate
+and wild; great tracts of bleak land, enclosed by stone dykes, sweeping
+up Clayton heights.&nbsp; The church itself looks ancient and solitary,
+and as if left behind by the great stone mills of a flourishing Independent
+firm, and the solid square chapel built by the members of that denomination.&nbsp;
+Altogether not so pleasant a place as Hartshead, with its ample outlook
+over cloud-shadowed, sun-flecked plain, and hill rising beyond hill
+to form the distant horizon.</p>
+<p>Here, at Thornton, Charlotte Bront&euml; was born, on the 21st of
+April, 1816.&nbsp; Fast on her heels followed Patrick Branwell, Emily
+Jane, and Anne.&nbsp; After the birth of this last daughter, Mrs. Bront&euml;&rsquo;s
+health began to decline.&nbsp; It is hard work to provide for the little
+tender wants of many young children where the means are but limited.&nbsp;
+The necessaries of food and clothing are much more easily supplied than
+the almost equal necessaries of attendance, care, soothing, amusement,
+and sympathy.&nbsp; Maria Bront&euml;, the eldest of six, could only
+have been a few months more than six years old, when Mr. Bront&euml;
+removed to Haworth, on February the 25th, 1820.&nbsp; Those who knew
+her then, describe her as grave, thoughtful, and quiet, to a degree
+far beyond her years.&nbsp; Her childhood was no childhood; the cases
+are rare in which the possessors of great gifts have known the blessings
+of that careless happy time; <i>their</i> unusual powers stir within
+them, and, instead of the natural life of perception&mdash;the objective,
+as the Germans call it&mdash;they begin the deeper life of reflection&mdash;the
+subjective.</p>
+<p>Little Maria Bront&euml; was delicate and small in appearance, which
+seemed to give greater effect to her wonderful precocity of intellect.&nbsp;
+She must have been her mother&rsquo;s companion and helpmate in many
+a household and nursery experience, for Mr. Bront&euml; was, of course,
+much engaged in his study; and besides, he was not naturally fond of
+children, and felt their frequent appearance on the scene as a drag
+both on his wife&rsquo;s strength, and as an interruption to the comfort
+of the household.</p>
+<p>Haworth Parsonage is&mdash;as I mentioned in the first chapter&mdash;an
+oblong stone house, facing down the hill on which the village stands,
+and with the front door right opposite to the western door of the church,
+distant about a hundred yards.&nbsp; Of this space twenty yards or so
+in depth are occupied by the grassy garden, which is scarcely wider
+than the house.&nbsp; The graveyard lies on two sides of the house and
+garden.&nbsp; The house consists of four rooms on each floor, and is
+two stories high.&nbsp; When the Bront&euml;s took possession, they
+made the larger parlour, to the left of the entrance, the family sitting-room,
+while that on the right was appropriated to Mr. Bront&euml; as a study.&nbsp;
+Behind this was the kitchen; behind the former, a sort of flagged store-room.&nbsp;
+Upstairs were four bed-chambers of similar size, with the addition of
+a small apartment over the passage, or &ldquo;lobby&rdquo; as we call
+it in the north.&nbsp; This was to the front, the staircase going up
+right opposite to the entrance.&nbsp; There is the pleasant old fashion
+of window seats all through the house; and one can see that the parsonage
+was built in the days when wood was plentiful, as the massive stair-banisters,
+and the wainscots, and the heavy window-frames testify.</p>
+<p>This little extra upstairs room was appropriated to the children.&nbsp;
+Small as it was, it was not called a nursery; indeed, it had not the
+comfort of a fire-place in it; the servants&mdash;two affectionate,
+warm-hearted sisters, who cannot now speak of the family without tears&mdash;called
+the room the &ldquo;children&rsquo;s study.&rdquo;&nbsp; The age of
+the eldest student was perhaps by this time seven.</p>
+<p>The people in Haworth were none of them very poor.&nbsp; Many of
+them were employed in the neighbouring worsted mills; a few were mill-owners
+and manufacturers in a small way; there were also some shopkeepers for
+the humbler and everyday wants; but for medical advice, for stationery,
+books, law, dress, or dainties, the inhabitants had to go to Keighley.&nbsp;
+There were several Sunday-schools; the Baptists had taken the lead in
+instituting them, the Wesleyans had followed, the Church of England
+had brought up the rear.&nbsp; Good Mr. Grimshaw, Wesley&rsquo;s friend,
+had built a humble Methodist chapel, but it stood close to the road
+leading on to the moor; the Baptists then raised a place of worship,
+with the distinction of being a few yards back from the highway; and
+the Methodists have since thought it well to erect another and a larger
+chapel, still more retired from the road.&nbsp; Mr. Bront&euml; was
+ever on kind and friendly terms with each denomination as a body; but
+from individuals in the village the family stood aloof, unless some
+direct service was required, from the first.&nbsp; &ldquo;They kept
+themselves very close,&rdquo; is the account given by those who remember
+Mr. and Mrs. Bront&euml;&rsquo;s coming amongst them.&nbsp; I believe
+many of the Yorkshiremen would object to the system of parochial visiting;
+their surly independence would revolt from the idea of any one having
+a right, from his office, to inquire into their condition, to counsel,
+or to admonish them.&nbsp; The old hill-spirit lingers in them, which
+coined the rhyme, inscribed on the under part of one of the seats in
+the Sedilia of Whalley Abbey, not many miles from Haworth,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Who mells wi&rsquo; what another does<br />
+Had best go home and shoe his goose.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I asked an inhabitant of a district close to Haworth what sort of
+a clergyman they had at the church which he attended.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A rare good one,&rdquo; said he: &ldquo;he minds his own business,
+and ne&rsquo;er troubles himself with ours.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bront&euml; was faithful in visiting the sick and all those who
+sent for him, and diligent in attendance at the schools; and so was
+his daughter Charlotte too; but, cherishing and valuing privacy themselves,
+they were perhaps over-delicate in not intruding upon the privacy of
+others.</p>
+<p>From their first going to Haworth, their walks were directed rather
+out towards the heathery moors, sloping upwards behind the parsonage,
+than towards the long descending village street.&nbsp; A good old woman,
+who came to nurse Mrs. Bront&euml; in the illness&mdash;an internal
+cancer&mdash;which grew and gathered upon her, not many months after
+her arrival at Haworth, tells me that at that time the six little creatures
+used to walk out, hand in hand, towards the glorious wild moors, which
+in after days they loved so passionately; the elder ones taking thoughtful
+care for the toddling wee things.</p>
+<p>They were grave and silent beyond their years; subdued, probably,
+by the presence of serious illness in the house; for, at the time which
+my informant speaks of, Mrs. Bront&euml; was confined to the bedroom
+from which she never came forth alive.&nbsp; &ldquo;You would not have
+known there was a child in the house, they were such still, noiseless,
+good little creatures.&nbsp; Maria would shut herself up&rdquo; (Maria,
+but seven!) &ldquo;in the children&rsquo;s study with a newspaper, and
+be able to tell one everything when she came out; debates in Parliament,
+and I don&rsquo;t know what all.&nbsp; She was as good as a mother to
+her sisters and brother.&nbsp; But there never were such good children.&nbsp;
+I used to think them spiritless, they were so different to any children
+I had ever seen.&nbsp; They were good little creatures.&nbsp; Emily
+was the prettiest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Bront&euml; was the same patient, cheerful person as we have
+seen her formerly; very ill, suffering great pain, but seldom if ever
+complaining; at her better times begging her nurse to raise her in bed
+to let her see her clean the grate, &ldquo;because she did it as it
+was done in Cornwall;&rdquo; devotedly fond of her husband, who warmly
+repaid her affection, and suffered no one else to take the night-nursing;
+but, according to my informant, the mother was not very anxious to see
+much of her children, probably because the sight of them, knowing how
+soon they were to be left motherless, would have agitated her too much.&nbsp;
+So the little things clung quietly together, for their father was busy
+in his study and in his parish, or with their mother, and they took
+their meals alone; sat reading, or whispering low, in the &ldquo;children&rsquo;s
+study,&rdquo; or wandered out on the hill-side, hand in hand.</p>
+<p>The ideas of Rousseau and Mr. Day on education had filtered down
+through many classes, and spread themselves widely out.&nbsp; I imagine,
+Mr. Bront&euml; must have formed some of his opinions on the management
+of children from these two theorists.&nbsp; His practice was not half
+so wild or extraordinary as that to which an aunt of mine was subjected
+by a disciple of Mr. Day&rsquo;s.&nbsp; She had been taken by this gentleman
+and his wife, to live with them as their adopted child, perhaps about
+five-and-twenty years before the time of which I am writing.&nbsp; They
+were wealthy people and kind hearted, but her food and clothing were
+of the very simplest and rudest description, on Spartan principles.&nbsp;
+A healthy, merry child, she did not much care for dress or eating; but
+the treatment which she felt as a real cruelty was this.&nbsp; They
+had a carriage, in which she and the favourite dog were taken an airing
+on alternate days; the creature whose turn it was to be left at home
+being tossed in a blanket&mdash;an operation which my aunt especially
+dreaded.&nbsp; Her affright at the tossing was probably the reason why
+it was persevered in.&nbsp; Dressed-up ghosts had become common, and
+she did not care for them, so the blanket exercise was to be the next
+mode of hardening her nerves.&nbsp; It is well known that Mr. Day broke
+off his intention of marrying Sabrina, the girl whom he had educated
+for this purpose, because, within a few weeks of the time fixed for
+the wedding, she was guilty of the frivolity, while on a visit from
+home, of wearing thin sleeves.&nbsp; Yet Mr. Day and my aunt&rsquo;s
+relations were benevolent people, only strongly imbued with the crotchet
+that by a system of training might be educed the hardihood and simplicity
+of the ideal savage, forgetting the terrible isolation of feelings and
+habits which their pupils would experience in the future life which
+they must pass among the corruptions and refinements of civilization.</p>
+<p>Mr. Bront&euml; wished to make his children hardy, and indifferent
+to the pleasures of eating and dress.&nbsp; In the latter he succeeded,
+as far as regarded his daughters.</p>
+<p>His strong, passionate, Irish nature was, in general, compressed
+down with resolute stoicism; but it was there notwithstanding all his
+philosophic calm and dignity of demeanour; though he did not speak when
+he was annoyed or displeased.&nbsp; Mrs. Bront&euml;, whose sweet nature
+thought invariably of the bright side, would say, &ldquo;Ought I not
+to be thankful that he never gave me an angry word?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bront&euml; was an active walker, stretching away over the moors
+for many miles, noting in his mind all natural signs of wind and weather,
+and keenly observing all the wild creatures that came and went in the
+loneliest sweeps of the hills.&nbsp; He has seen eagles stooping low
+in search of food for their young; no eagle is ever seen on those mountain
+slopes now.</p>
+<p>He fearlessly took whatever side in local or national politics appeared
+to him right.&nbsp; In the days of the Luddites, he had been for the
+peremptory interference of the law, at a time when no magistrate could
+be found to act, and all the property of the West Riding was in terrible
+danger.&nbsp; He became unpopular then among the millworkers, and he
+esteemed his life unsafe if he took his long and lonely walks unarmed;
+so he began the habit, which has continued to this day, of invariably
+carrying a loaded pistol about with him.&nbsp; It lay on his dressing-table
+with his watch; with his watch it was put on in the morning; with his
+watch it was taken off at night.</p>
+<p>Many years later, during his residence at Haworth, there was a strike;
+the hands in the neighbourhood felt themselves aggrieved by the masters,
+and refused to work: Mr. Bront&euml; thought that they had been unjustly
+and unfairly treated, and he assisted them by all the means in his power
+to &ldquo;keep the wolf from their doors,&rdquo; and avoid the incubus
+of debt.&nbsp; Several of the more influential inhabitants of Haworth
+and the neighbourhood were mill-owners; they remonstrated pretty sharply
+with him, but he believed that his conduct was right and persevered
+in it.</p>
+<p>His opinions might be often both wild and erroneous, his principles
+of action eccentric and strange, his views of life partial, and almost
+misanthropical; but not one opinion that he held could be stirred or
+modified by any worldly motive: he acted up to his principles of action;
+and, if any touch of misanthropy mingled with his view of mankind in
+general, his conduct to the individuals who came in personal contact
+with him did not agree with such view.&nbsp; It is true that he had
+strong and vehement prejudices, and was obstinate in maintaining them,
+and that he was not dramatic enough in his perceptions to see how miserable
+others might be in a life that to him was all-sufficient.&nbsp; But
+I do not pretend to be able to harmonize points of character, and account
+for them, and bring them all into one consistent and intelligible whole.&nbsp;
+The family with whom I have now to do shot their roots down deeper than
+I can penetrate.&nbsp; I cannot measure them, much less is it for me
+to judge them.&nbsp; I have named these instances of eccentricity in
+the father because I hold the knowledge of them to be necessary for
+a right understanding of the life of his daughter.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Bront&euml; died in September, 1821, and the lives of those
+quiet children must have become quieter and lonelier still.&nbsp; Charlotte
+tried hard, in after years, to recall the remembrance of her mother,
+and could bring back two or three pictures of her.&nbsp; One was when,
+sometime in the evening light, she had been playing with her little
+boy, Patrick Branwell, in the parlour of Haworth Parsonage.&nbsp; But
+the recollections of four or five years old are of a very fragmentary
+character.</p>
+<p>Owing to some illness of the digestive organs, Mr. Bront&euml; was
+obliged to be very careful about his diet; and, in order to avoid temptation,
+and possibly to have the quiet necessary for digestion, he had begun,
+before his wife&rsquo;s death, to take his dinner alone&mdash;a habit
+which he always retained.&nbsp; He did not require companionship, therefore
+he did not seek it, either in his walks, or in his daily life.&nbsp;
+The quiet regularity of his domestic hours was only broken in upon by
+church-wardens, and visitors on parochial business; and sometimes by
+a neighbouring clergyman, who came down the hills, across the moors,
+to mount up again to Haworth Parsonage, and spend an evening there.&nbsp;
+But, owing to Mrs. Bront&euml;&rsquo;s death so soon after her husband
+had removed into the district, and also to the distances, and the bleak
+country to be traversed, the wives of these clerical friends did not
+accompany their husbands; and the daughters grew up out of childhood
+into girlhood bereft, in a singular manner, of all such society as would
+have been natural to their age, sex, and station.</p>
+<p>But the children did not want society.&nbsp; To small infantine gaieties
+they were unaccustomed.&nbsp; They were all in all to each other.&nbsp;
+I do not suppose that there ever was a family more tenderly bound to
+each other.&nbsp; Maria read the newspapers, and reported intelligence
+to her younger sisters which it is wonderful they could take an interest
+in.&nbsp; But I suspect that they had no &ldquo;children&rsquo;s books,&rdquo;
+and that their eager minds &ldquo;browzed undisturbed among the wholesome
+pasturage of English literature,&rdquo; as Charles Lamb expresses it.&nbsp;
+The servants of the household appear to have been much impressed with
+the little Bront&euml;s&rsquo; extraordinary cleverness.&nbsp; In a
+letter which I had from him on this subject, their father writes:&mdash;&ldquo;The
+servants often said that they had never seen such a clever little child&rdquo;
+(as Charlotte), &ldquo;and that they were obliged to be on their guard
+as to what they said and did before her.&nbsp; Yet she and the servants
+always lived on good terms with each other.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>These servants are yet alive; elderly women residing in Bradford.&nbsp;
+They retain a faithful and fond recollection of Charlotte, and speak
+of her unvarying kindness from the &ldquo;time when she was ever such
+a little child!&rdquo; when she would not rest till she had got the
+old disused cradle sent from the parsonage to the house where the parents
+of one of them lived, to serve for a little infant sister.&nbsp; They
+tell of one long series of kind and thoughtful actions from this early
+period to the last weeks of Charlotte Bront&euml;&rsquo;s life; and,
+though she had left her place many years ago, one of these former servants
+went over from Bradford to Haworth on purpose to see Mr. Bront&euml;,
+and offer him her true sympathy, when his last child died.&nbsp; I may
+add a little anecdote as a testimony to the admirable character of the
+likeness of Miss Bront&euml; prefixed to this volume.&nbsp; A gentleman
+who had kindly interested himself in the preparation of this memoir
+took the first volume, shortly after the publication, to the house of
+this old servant, in order to show her the portrait.&nbsp; The moment
+she caught a glimpse of the frontispiece, &ldquo;There she is,&rdquo;
+in a minute she exclaimed.&nbsp; &ldquo;Come, John, look!&rdquo; (to
+her husband); and her daughter was equally struck by the resemblance.&nbsp;
+There might not be many to regard the Bront&euml;s with affection, but
+those who once loved them, loved them long and well.</p>
+<p>I return to the father&rsquo;s letter.&nbsp; He says:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When mere children, as soon as they could read and write,
+Charlotte and her brothers and sisters used to invent and act little
+plays of their own, in which the Duke of Wellington, my daughter Charlotte&rsquo;s
+hero, was sure to come off conqueror; when a dispute would not unfrequently
+arise amongst them regarding the comparative merits of him, Buonaparte,
+Hannibal, and C&aelig;sar.&nbsp; When the argument got warm, and rose
+to its height, as their mother was then dead, I had sometimes to come
+in as arbitrator, and settle the dispute according to the best of my
+judgment.&nbsp; Generally, in the management of these concerns, I frequently
+thought that I discovered signs of rising talent, which I had seldom
+or never before seen in any of their age . . . A circumstance now occurs
+to my mind which I may as well mention.&nbsp; When my children were
+very young, when, as far as I can remember, the oldest was about ten
+years of age, and the youngest about four, thinking that they knew more
+than I had yet discovered, in order to make them speak with less timidity,
+I deemed that if they were put under a sort of cover I might gain my
+end; and happening to have a mask in the house, I told them all to stand
+and speak boldly from under cover of the mask.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I began with the youngest (Anne, afterwards Acton Bell), and
+asked what a child like her most wanted; she answered, &lsquo;Age and
+experience.&rsquo;&nbsp; I asked the next (Emily, afterwards Ellis Bell),
+what I had best do with her brother Branwell, who was sometimes a naughty
+boy; she answered, &lsquo;Reason with him, and when he won&rsquo;t listen
+to reason, whip him.&rsquo;&nbsp; I asked Branwell what was the best
+way of knowing the difference between the intellects of man and woman;
+he answered, &lsquo;By considering the difference between them as to
+their bodies.&rsquo;&nbsp; I then asked Charlotte what was the best
+book in the world; she answered, &lsquo;The Bible.&rsquo;&nbsp; And
+what was the next best; she answered, &lsquo;The Book of Nature.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+I then asked the next what was the best mode of education for a woman;
+she answered, &lsquo;That which would make her rule her house well.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Lastly, I asked the oldest what was the best mode of spending time;
+she answered, &lsquo;By laying it out in preparation for a happy eternity.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+I may not have given precisely their words, but I have nearly done so,
+as they made a deep and lasting impression on my memory.&nbsp; The substance,
+however, was exactly what I have stated.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The strange and quaint simplicity of the mode taken by the father
+to ascertain the hidden characters of his children, and the tone and
+character of these questions and answers, show the curious education
+which was made by the circumstances surrounding the Bront&euml;s.&nbsp;
+They knew no other children.&nbsp; They knew no other modes of thought
+than what were suggested to them by the fragments of clerical conversation
+which they overheard in the parlour, or the subjects of village and
+local interest which they heard discussed in the kitchen.&nbsp; Each
+had their own strong characteristic flavour.</p>
+<p>They took a vivid interest in the public characters, and the local
+and the foreign as well as home politics discussed in the newspapers.&nbsp;
+Long before Maria Bront&euml; died, at the age of eleven, her father
+used to say he could converse with her on any of the leading topics
+of the day with as much freedom and pleasure as with any grown-up person.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+<p>About a year after Mrs. Bront&euml;&rsquo;s death, an elder sister,
+as I have before mentioned, came from Penzance to superintend her brother-in-law&rsquo;s
+household, and look after his children.&nbsp; Miss Branwell was, I believe,
+a kindly and conscientious woman, with a good deal of character, but
+with the somewhat narrow ideas natural to one who had spent nearly all
+her life in the same place.&nbsp; She had strong prejudices, and soon
+took a distaste to Yorkshire.&nbsp; From Penzance, where plants which
+we in the north call greenhouse flowers grow in great profusion, and
+without any shelter even in the winter, and where the soft warm climate
+allows the inhabitants, if so disposed, to live pretty constantly in
+the open air, it was a great change for a lady considerably past forty
+to come and take up her abode in a place where neither flowers nor vegetables
+would flourish, and where a tree of even moderate dimensions might be
+hunted for far and wide; where the snow lay long and late on the moors,
+stretching bleakly and barely far up from the dwelling which was henceforward
+to be her home; and where often, on autumnal or winter nights, the four
+winds of heaven seemed to meet and rage together, tearing round the
+house as if they were wild beasts striving to find an entrance.&nbsp;
+She missed the small round of cheerful, social visiting perpetually
+going on in a country town; she missed the friends she had known from
+her childhood, some of whom had been her parents&rsquo; friends before
+they were hers; she disliked many of the customs of the place, and particularly
+dreaded the cold damp arising from the flag floors in the passages and
+parlours of Haworth Parsonage.&nbsp; The stairs, too, I believe, are
+made of stone; and no wonder, when stone quarries are near, and trees
+are far to seek.&nbsp; I have heard that Miss Branwell always went about
+the house in pattens, clicking up and down the stairs, from her dread
+of catching cold.&nbsp; For the same reason, in the latter years of
+her life, she passed nearly all her time, and took most of her meals,
+in her bedroom.&nbsp; The children respected her, and had that sort
+of affection for her which is generated by esteem; but I do not think
+they ever freely loved her.&nbsp; It was a severe trial for any one
+at her time of life to change neighbourhood and habitation so entirely
+as she did; and the greater her merit.</p>
+<p>I do not know whether Miss Branwell taught her nieces anything besides
+sewing, and the household arts in which Charlotte afterwards was such
+an adept.&nbsp; Their regular lessons were said to their father; and
+they were always in the habit of picking up an immense amount of miscellaneous
+information for themselves.&nbsp; But a year or so before this time,
+a school had been begun in the North of England for the daughters of
+clergymen.&nbsp; The place was Cowan Bridge, a small hamlet on the coach-road
+between Leeds and Kendal, and thus easy of access from Haworth, as the
+coach ran daily, and one of its stages was at Keighley.&nbsp; The yearly
+expense for each pupil (according to the entrance-rules given in the
+Report for 1842, and I believe they had not been increased since the
+establishment of the schools in 1823) was as follows:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Rule 11.&nbsp; The terms for clothing, lodging, boarding,
+and educating, are 14<i>l</i>. a year; half to be paid in advance, when
+the pupils are sent; and also 1<i>l</i>. entrance-money, for the use
+of books, &amp;c.&nbsp; The system of education comprehends history,
+geography, the use of the globes, grammar, writing and arithmetic, all
+kinds of needlework, and the nicer kinds of household work&mdash;such
+as getting up fine linen, ironing, &amp;c.&nbsp; If accomplishments
+are required, an additional charge of 3<i>l</i>. a year is made for
+music or drawing, each.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Rule 3rd requests that the friends will state the line of education
+desired in the case of every pupil, having a regard to her future prospects.</p>
+<p>Rule 4th states the clothing and toilette articles which a girl is
+expected to bring with her; and thus concludes: &ldquo;The pupils all
+appear in the same dress.&nbsp; They wear plain straw cottage bonnets;
+in summer white frocks on Sundays, and nankeen on other days; in winter,
+purple stuff frocks, and purple cloth cloaks.&nbsp; For the sake of
+uniformity, therefore, they are required to bring 3<i>l</i>. in lieu
+of frocks, pelisse, bonnet, tippet, and frills; making the whole sum
+which each pupil brings with her to the school&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>7<i>l</i>. half-year in advance.<br />
+1<i>l</i>. entrance for books.<br />
+1<i>l</i>. entrance for clothes.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The 8th rule is,&mdash;&ldquo;All letters and parcels are inspected
+by the superintendent;&rdquo; but this is a very prevalent regulation
+in all young ladies&rsquo; schools, where I think it is generally understood
+that the schoolmistress may exercise this privilege, although it is
+certainly unwise in her to insist too frequently upon it.</p>
+<p>There is nothing at all remarkable in any of the other regulations,
+a copy of which was doubtless in Mr. Bront&euml;&rsquo;s hands when
+he formed the determination to send his daughters to Cowan Bridge School;
+and he accordingly took Maria and Elizabeth thither in July, 1824.</p>
+<p>I now come to a part of my subject which I find great difficulty
+in treating, because the evidence relating to it on each side is so
+conflicting that it seems almost impossible to arrive at the truth.&nbsp;
+Miss Bront&euml; more than once said to me, that she should not have
+written what she did of Lowood in &ldquo;Jane Eyre,&rdquo; if she had
+thought the place would have been so immediately identified with Cowan
+Bridge, although there was not a word in her account of the institution
+but what was true at the time when she knew it; she also said that she
+had not considered it necessary, in a work of fiction, to state every
+particular with the impartiality that might be required in a court of
+justice, nor to seek out motives, and make allowances for human failings,
+as she might have done, if dispassionately analysing the conduct of
+those who had the superintendence of the institution.&nbsp; I believe
+she herself would have been glad of an opportunity to correct the over-strong
+impression which was made upon the public mind by her vivid picture,
+though even she, suffering her whole life long, both in heart and body,
+from the consequences of what happened there, might have been apt, to
+the last, to take her deep belief in facts for the facts themselves&mdash;her
+conception of truth for the absolute truth.</p>
+<p>In some of the notices of the previous editions of this work, it
+is assumed that I derived the greater part of my information with regard
+to her sojourn at Cowan Bridge from Charlotte Bront&euml; herself.&nbsp;
+I never heard her speak of the place but once, and that was on the second
+day of my acquaintance with her.&nbsp; A little child on that occasion
+expressed some reluctance to finish eating his piece of bread at dinner;
+and she, stooping down, and addressing him in a low voice, told him
+how thankful she should have been at his age for a piece of bread; and
+when we&mdash;though I am not sure if I myself spoke&mdash;asked her
+some question as to the occasion she alluded to, she replied with reserve
+and hesitation, evidently shying away from what she imagined might lead
+to too much conversation on one of her books.&nbsp; She spoke of the
+oat-cake at Cowan Bridge (the clap-bread of Westmorland) as being different
+to the leaven-raised oat-cake of Yorkshire, and of her childish distaste
+for it.&nbsp; Some one present made an allusion to a similar childish
+dislike in the true tale of &ldquo;The terrible knitters o&rsquo; Dent&rdquo;
+given in Southey&rsquo;s &ldquo;Common-place Book:&rdquo; and she smiled
+faintly, but said that the mere difference in food was not all: that
+the food itself was spoilt by the dirty carelessness of the cook, so
+that she and her sisters disliked their meals exceedingly; and she named
+her relief and gladness when the doctor condemned the meat, and spoke
+of having seen him spit it out.&nbsp; These are all the details I ever
+heard from her.&nbsp; She so avoided particularizing, that I think Mr.
+Carus Wilson&rsquo;s name never passed between us.</p>
+<p>I do not doubt the general accuracy of my informants,&mdash;of those
+who have given, and solemnly repeated, the details that follow,&mdash;but
+it is only just to Miss Bront&euml; to say that I have stated above
+pretty nearly all that I ever heard on the subject from her.</p>
+<p>A clergyman, living near Kirby Lonsdale, the Reverend William Carus
+Wilson, was the prime mover in the establishment of this school.&nbsp;
+He was an energetic man, sparing no labour for the accomplishment of
+his ends.&nbsp; He saw that it was an extremely difficult task for clergymen
+with limited incomes to provide for the education of their children;
+and he devised a scheme, by which a certain sum was raised annually
+by subscription, to complete the amount required to furnish a solid
+and sufficient English education, for which the parent&rsquo;s payment
+of 14<i>l</i>. a year would not have been sufficient.&nbsp; Indeed,
+that made by the parents was considered to be exclusively appropriated
+to the expenses of lodging and boarding, and the education provided
+for by the subscriptions.&nbsp; Twelve trustees were appointed; Mr.
+Wilson being not only a trustee, but the treasurer and secretary; in
+fact, taking most of the business arrangements upon himself; a responsibility
+which appropriately fell to him, as he lived nearer the school than
+any one else who was interested in it.&nbsp; So his character for prudence
+and judgment was to a certain degree implicated in the success or failure
+of Cowan Bridge School; and the working of it was for many years the
+great object and interest of his life.&nbsp; But he was apparently unacquainted
+with the prime element in good administration&mdash;seeking out thoroughly
+competent persons to fill each department, and then making them responsible
+for, and judging them by, the result, without perpetual interference
+with the details.</p>
+<p>So great was the amount of good which Mr. Wilson did, by his constant,
+unwearied superintendence, that I cannot help feeling sorry that, in
+his old age and declining health, the errors which he was believed to
+have committed, should have been brought up against him in a form which
+received such wonderful force from the touch of Miss Bront&euml;&rsquo;s
+great genius.&nbsp; No doubt whatever can be entertained of the deep
+interest which he felt in the success of the school.&nbsp; As I write,
+I have before me his last words on giving up the secretaryship in 1850:
+he speaks of the &ldquo;withdrawal, from declining health, of an eye,
+which, at all events, has loved to watch over the schools with an honest
+and anxious interest;&rdquo;&mdash;and again he adds, &ldquo;that he
+resigns, therefore, with a desire to be thankful for all that God has
+been pleased to accomplish through his instrumentality (the infirmities
+and unworthinesses of which he deeply feels and deplores).&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Cowan Bridge is a cluster of some six or seven cottages, gathered
+together at both ends of a bridge, over which the high road from Leeds
+to Kendal crosses a little stream, called the Leck.&nbsp; This high
+road is nearly disused now; but formerly, when the buyers from the West
+Riding manufacturing districts had frequent occasion to go up into the
+North to purchase the wool of the Westmorland and Cumberland farmers,
+it was doubtless much travelled; and perhaps the hamlet of Cowan Bridge
+had a more prosperous look than it bears at present.&nbsp; It is prettily
+situated; just where the Leck-fells swoop into the plain; and by the
+course of the beck alder-trees and willows and hazel bushes grow.&nbsp;
+The current of the stream is interrupted by broken pieces of grey rock;
+and the waters flow over a bed of large round white pebbles, which a
+flood heaves up and moves on either side out of its impetuous way till
+in some parts they almost form a wall.&nbsp; By the side of the little,
+shallow, sparkling, vigorous Leck, run long pasture fields, of the fine
+short grass common in high land; for though Cowan Bridge is situated
+on a plain, it is a plain from which there is many a fall and long descent
+before you and the Leck reach the valley of the Lune.&nbsp; I can hardly
+understand how the school there came to be so unhealthy, the air all
+round about was so sweet and thyme-scented, when I visited it last summer.&nbsp;
+But at this day, every one knows that the site of a building intended
+for numbers should be chosen with far greater care than that of a private
+dwelling, from the tendency to illness, both infectious and otherwise,
+produced by the congregation of people in close proximity.</p>
+<p>The house is still remaining that formed part of that occupied by
+the school.&nbsp; It is a long, bow-windowed cottage, now divided into
+two dwellings.&nbsp; It stands facing the Leck, between which and it
+intervenes a space, about seventy yards deep, that was once the school
+garden.&nbsp; This original house was an old dwelling of the Picard
+family, which they had inhabited for two generations.&nbsp; They sold
+it for school purposes, and an additional building was erected, running
+at right angles from the older part.&nbsp; This new part was devoted
+expressly to schoolrooms, dormitories, &amp;c.; and after the school
+was removed to Casterton, it was used for a bobbin-mill connected with
+the stream, where wooden reels were made out of the alders, which grow
+profusely in such ground as that surrounding Cowan Bridge.&nbsp; This
+mill is now destroyed.&nbsp; The present cottage was, at the time of
+which I write, occupied by the teachers&rsquo; rooms, the dinner-room
+and kitchens, and some smaller bedrooms.&nbsp; On going into this building,
+I found one part, that nearest to the high road, converted into a poor
+kind of public-house, then to let, and having all the squalid appearance
+of a deserted place, which rendered it difficult to judge what it would
+look like when neatly kept up, the broken panes replaced in the windows,
+and the rough-cast (now cracked and discoloured) made white and whole.&nbsp;
+The other end forms a cottage, with the low ceilings and stone floors
+of a hundred years ago; the windows do not open freely and widely; and
+the passage upstairs, leading to the bedrooms, is narrow and tortuous:
+altogether, smells would linger about the house, and damp cling to it.&nbsp;
+But sanitary matters were little understood thirty years ago; and it
+was a great thing to get a roomy building close to the high road, and
+not too far from the habitation of Mr. Wilson, the originator of the
+educational scheme.&nbsp; There was much need of such an institution;
+numbers of ill-paid clergymen hailed the prospect with joy, and eagerly
+put down the names of their children as pupils when the establishment
+should be ready to receive them.&nbsp; Mr. Wilson was, no doubt, pleased
+by the impatience with which the realisation of his idea was anticipated,
+and opened the school with less than a hundred pounds in hand, and with
+pupils, the number of whom varies according to different accounts; Mr.
+W. W. Carus Wilson, the son of the founder, giving it as seventy; while
+Mr. Shepheard, the son-in-law, states it to have been only sixteen.</p>
+<p>Mr. Wilson felt, most probably, that the responsibility of the whole
+plan rested upon him.&nbsp; The payment made by the parents was barely
+enough for food and lodging; the subscriptions did not flow very freely
+into an untried scheme; and great economy was necessary in all the domestic
+arrangements.&nbsp; He determined to enforce this by frequent personal
+inspection; carried perhaps to an unnecessary extent, and leading occasionally
+to a meddling with little matters, which had sometimes the effect of
+producing irritation of feeling.&nbsp; Yet, although there was economy
+in providing for the household, there does not appear to have been any
+parsimony.&nbsp; The meat, flour, milk, &amp;c., were contracted for,
+but were of very fair quality; and the dietary, which has been shown
+to me in manuscript, was neither bad nor unwholesome; nor, on the whole,
+was it wanting in variety.&nbsp; Oatmeal porridge for breakfast; a piece
+of oat-cake for those who required luncheon; baked and boiled beef,
+and mutton, potato-pie, and plain homely puddings of different kinds
+for dinner.&nbsp; At five o&rsquo;clock, bread and milk for the younger
+ones; and one piece of bread (this was the only time at which the food
+was limited) for the elder pupils, who sat up till a later meal of the
+same description.</p>
+<p>Mr. Wilson himself ordered in the food, and was anxious that it should
+be of good quality.&nbsp; But the cook, who had much of his confidence,
+and against whom for a long time no one durst utter a complaint, was
+careless, dirty, and wasteful.&nbsp; To some children oatmeal porridge
+is distasteful, and consequently unwholesome, even when properly made;
+at Cowan Bridge School it was too often sent up, not merely burnt, but
+with offensive fragments of other substances discoverable in it.&nbsp;
+The beef, that should have been carefully salted before it was dressed,
+had often become tainted from neglect; and girls, who were school-fellows
+with the Bront&euml;s, during the reign of the cook of whom I am speaking,
+tell me that the house seemed to be pervaded, morning, noon, and night,
+by the odour of rancid fat that steamed out of the oven in which much
+of their food was prepared.&nbsp; There was the same carelessness in
+making the puddings; one of those ordered was rice boiled in water,
+and eaten with a sauce of treacle and sugar; but it was often uneatable,
+because the water had been taken out of the rain tub, and was strongly
+impregnated with the dust lodging on the roof, whence it had trickled
+down into the old wooden cask, which also added its own flavour to that
+of the original rain water.&nbsp; The milk, too, was often &ldquo;bingy,&rdquo;
+to use a country expression for a kind of taint that is far worse than
+sourness, and suggests the idea that it is caused by want of cleanliness
+about the milk pans, rather than by the heat of the weather.&nbsp; On
+Saturdays, a kind of pie, or mixture of potatoes and meat, was served
+up, which was made of all the fragments accumulated during the week.&nbsp;
+Scraps of meat from a dirty and disorderly larder, could never be very
+appetizing; and, I believe, that this dinner was more loathed than any
+in the early days of Cowan Bridge School.&nbsp; One may fancy how repulsive
+such fare would be to children whose appetites were small, and who had
+been accustomed to food, far simpler perhaps, but prepared with a delicate
+cleanliness that made it both tempting and wholesome.&nbsp; At many
+a meal the little Bront&euml;s went without food, although craving with
+hunger.&nbsp; They were not strong when they came, having only just
+recovered from a complication of measles and hooping-cough: indeed,
+I suspect they had scarcely recovered; for there was some consultation
+on the part of the school authorities whether Maria and Elizabeth should
+be received or not, in July 1824.&nbsp; Mr. Bront&euml; came again,
+in the September of that year, bringing with him Charlotte and Emily
+to be admitted as pupils.</p>
+<p>It appears strange that Mr. Wilson should not have been informed
+by the teachers of the way in which the food was served up; but we must
+remember that the cook had been known for some time to the Wilson family,
+while the teachers were brought together for an entirely different work&mdash;that
+of education.&nbsp; They were expressly given to understand that such
+was their department; the buying in and management of the provisions
+rested with Mr. Wilson and the cook.&nbsp; The teachers would, of course,
+be unwilling to lay any complaints on the subject before him.</p>
+<p>There was another trial of health common to all the girls.&nbsp;
+The path from Cowan Bridge to Tunstall Church, where Mr. Wilson preached,
+and where they all attended on the Sunday, is more than two miles in
+length, and goes sweeping along the rise and fall of the unsheltered
+country, in a way to make it a fresh and exhilarating walk in summer,
+but a bitter cold one in winter, especially to children like the delicate
+little Bront&euml;s, whose thin blood flowed languidly in consequence
+of their feeble appetites rejecting the food prepared for them, and
+thus inducing a half-starved condition.&nbsp; The church was not warmed,
+there being no means for this purpose.&nbsp; It stands in the midst
+of fields, and the damp mist must have gathered round the walls, and
+crept in at the windows.&nbsp; The girls took their cold dinner with
+them, and ate it between the services, in a chamber over the entrance,
+opening out of the former galleries.&nbsp; The arrangements for this
+day were peculiarly trying to delicate children, particularly to those
+who were spiritless and longing for home, as poor Maria Bront&euml;
+must have been; for her ill health was increasing, and the old cough,
+the remains of the hooping-cough, lingered about her.</p>
+<p>She was far superior in mind to any of her play-fellows and companions,
+and was lonely amongst them from that very cause; and yet she had faults
+so annoying that she was in constant disgrace with her teachers, and
+an object of merciless dislike to one of them, who is depicted as &ldquo;Miss
+Scatcherd&rdquo; in &ldquo;Jane Eyre,&rdquo; and whose real name I will
+be merciful enough not to disclose.&nbsp; I need hardly say, that Helen
+Burns is as exact a transcript of Maria Bront&euml; as Charlotte&rsquo;s
+wonderful power of reproducing character could give.&nbsp; Her heart,
+to the latest day on which we met, still beat with unavailing indignation
+at the worrying and the cruelty to which her gentle, patient, dying
+sister had been subjected by this woman.&nbsp; Not a word of that part
+of &ldquo;Jane Eyre&rdquo; but is a literal repetition of scenes between
+the pupil and the teacher.&nbsp; Those who had been pupils at the same
+time knew who must have written the book from the force with which Helen
+Burns&rsquo; sufferings are described.&nbsp; They had, before that,
+recognised the description of the sweet dignity and benevolence of Miss
+Temple as only a just tribute to the merits of one whom all that knew
+her appear to hold in honour; but when Miss Scatcherd was held up to
+opprobrium they also recognised in the writer of &ldquo;Jane Eyre&rdquo;
+an unconsciously avenging sister of the sufferer.</p>
+<p>One of their fellow-pupils, among other statements even worse, gives
+me the following:&mdash;The dormitory in which Maria slept was a long
+room, holding a row of narrow little beds on each side, occupied by
+the pupils; and at the end of this dormitory there was a small bed-chamber
+opening out of it, appropriated to the use of Miss Scatcherd.&nbsp;
+Maria&rsquo;s bed stood nearest to the door of this room.&nbsp; One
+morning, after she had become so seriously unwell as to have had a blister
+applied to her side (the sore from which was not perfectly healed),
+when the getting-up bell was heard, poor Maria moaned out that she was
+so ill, so very ill, she wished she might stop in bed; and some of the
+girls urged her to do so, and said they would explain it all to Miss
+Temple, the superintendent.&nbsp; But Miss Scatcherd was close at hand,
+and her anger would have to be faced before Miss Temple&rsquo;s kind
+thoughtfulness could interfere; so the sick child began to dress, shivering
+with cold, as, without leaving her bed, she slowly put on her black
+worsted stockings over her thin white legs (my informant spoke as if
+she saw it yet, and her whole face flushed out undying indignation).&nbsp;
+Just then Miss Scatcherd issued from her room, and, without asking for
+a word of explanation from the sick and frightened girl, she took her
+by the arm, on the side to which the blister had been applied, and by
+one vigorous movement whirled her out into the middle of the floor,
+abusing her all the time for dirty and untidy habits.&nbsp; There she
+left her.&nbsp; My informant says, Maria hardly spoke, except to beg
+some of the more indignant girls to be calm; but, in slow, trembling
+movements, with many a pause, she went down-stairs at last,&mdash;and
+was punished for being late.</p>
+<p>Any one may fancy how such an event as this would rankle in Charlotte&rsquo;s
+mind.&nbsp; I only wonder that she did not remonstrate against her father&rsquo;s
+decision to send her and Emily back to Cowan Bridge, after Maria&rsquo;s
+and Elizabeth&rsquo;s deaths.&nbsp; But frequently children are unconscious
+of the effect which some of their simple revelations would have in altering
+the opinions entertained by their friends of the persons placed around
+them.&nbsp; Besides, Charlotte&rsquo;s earnest vigorous mind saw, at
+an unusually early age, the immense importance of education, as furnishing
+her with tools which she had the strength and the will to wield, and
+she would be aware that the Cowan Bridge education was, in many points,
+the best that her father could provide for her.</p>
+<p>Before Maria Bront&euml;&rsquo;s death, that low fever broke out,
+in the spring of 1825, which is spoken of in &ldquo;Jane Eyre.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Mr. Wilson was extremely alarmed at the first symptoms of this.&nbsp;
+He went to a kind motherly woman, who had had some connection with the
+school&mdash;as laundress, I believe&mdash;and asked her to come and
+tell him what was the matter with them.&nbsp; She made herself ready,
+and drove with him in his gig.&nbsp; When she entered the schoolroom,
+she saw from twelve to fifteen girls lying about; some resting their
+aching heads on the table, others on the ground; all heavy-eyed, flushed,
+indifferent, and weary, with pains in every limb.&nbsp; Some peculiar
+odour, she says, made her recognise that they were sickening for &ldquo;the
+fever;&rdquo; and she told Mr. Wilson so, and that she could not stay
+there for fear of conveying the infection to her own children; but he
+half commanded, and half entreated her to remain and nurse them; and
+finally mounted his gig and drove away, while she was still urging that
+she must return to her own house, and to her domestic duties, for which
+she had provided no substitute.&nbsp; However, when she was left in
+this unceremonious manner, she determined to make the best of it; and
+a most efficient nurse she proved: although, as she says, it was a dreary
+time.</p>
+<p>Mr. Wilson supplied everything ordered by the doctors, of the best
+quality and in the most liberal manner; the invalids were attended by
+Dr. Batty, a very clever surgeon in Kirby, who had had the medical superintendence
+of the establishment from the beginning, and who afterwards became Mr.
+Wilson&rsquo;s brother-in-law.&nbsp; I have heard from two witnesses
+besides Charlotte Bront&euml;, that Dr. Batty condemned the preparation
+of the food by the expressive action of spitting out a portion of it.&nbsp;
+He himself, it is but fair to say, does not remember this circumstance,
+nor does he speak of the fever itself as either alarming or dangerous.&nbsp;
+About forty of the girls suffered from this, but none of them died at
+Cowan Bridge; though one died at her own home, sinking under the state
+of health which followed it.&nbsp; None of the Bront&euml;s had the
+fever.&nbsp; But the same causes, which affected the health of the other
+pupils through typhus, told more slowly, but not less surely, upon their
+constitutions.&nbsp; The principal of these causes was the food.</p>
+<p>The bad management of the cook was chiefly to be blamed for this;
+she was dismissed, and the woman who had been forced against her will
+to serve as head nurse, took the place of housekeeper; and henceforward
+the food was so well prepared that no one could ever reasonably complain
+of it.&nbsp; Of course it cannot be expected that a new institution,
+comprising domestic and educational arrangements for nearly a hundred
+persons, should work quite smoothly at the beginning.</p>
+<p>All this occurred during the first two years of the establishment,
+and in estimating its effect upon the character of Charlotte Bront&euml;,
+we must remember that she was a sensitive thoughtful child, capable
+of reflecting deeply, if not of analyzing truly; and peculiarly susceptible,
+as are all delicate and sickly children, to painful impressions.&nbsp;
+What the healthy suffer from but momentarily and then forget, those
+who are ailing brood over involuntarily and remember long,&mdash;perhaps
+with no resentment, but simply as a piece of suffering that has been
+stamped into their very life.&nbsp; The pictures, ideas, and conceptions
+of character received into the mind of the child of eight years old,
+were destined to be reproduced in fiery words a quarter of a century
+afterwards.&nbsp; She saw but one side of Mr. Wilson&rsquo;s character;
+and many of those who knew him at that time assure me of the fidelity
+with which this is represented, while at the same time they regret that
+the delineation should have obliterated, as it were, nearly all that
+was noble or conscientious.&nbsp; And that there were grand and fine
+qualities in Mr. Wilson, I have received abundant evidence.&nbsp; Indeed
+for several weeks past I have received letters almost daily, bearing
+on the subject of this chapter; some vague, some definite; many full
+of love and admiration for Mr. Wilson, some as full of dislike and indignation;
+few containing positive facts.&nbsp; After giving careful consideration
+to this mass of conflicting evidence, I have made such alterations and
+omissions in this chapter as seem to me to be required.&nbsp; It is
+but just to state that the major part of the testimony with which I
+have been favoured from old pupils is in high praise of Mr. Wilson.&nbsp;
+Among the letters that I have read, there is one whose evidence ought
+to be highly respected.&nbsp; It is from the husband of &ldquo;Miss
+Temple.&rdquo;&nbsp; She died in 1856, but he, a clergyman, thus wrote
+in reply to a letter addressed to him on the subject by one of Mr. Wilson&rsquo;s
+friends:&mdash;&ldquo;Often have I heard my late dear wife speak of
+her sojourn at Cowan Bridge; always in terms of admiration of Mr. Carus
+Wilson, his parental love to his pupils, and their love for him; of
+the food and general treatment, in terms of approval.&nbsp; I have heard
+her allude to an unfortunate cook, who used at times to spoil the porridge,
+but who, she said, was soon dismissed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The recollections left of the four Bront&euml; sisters at this period
+of their lives, on the minds of those who associated with them, are
+not very distinct.&nbsp; Wild, strong hearts, and powerful minds, were
+hidden under an enforced propriety and regularity of demeanour and expression,
+just as their faces had been concealed by their father, under his stiff,
+unchanging mask.&nbsp; Maria was delicate, unusually clever and thoughtful
+for her age, gentle, and untidy.&nbsp; Of her frequent disgrace from
+this last fault&mdash;of her sufferings, so patiently borne&mdash;I
+have already spoken.&nbsp; The only glimpse we get of Elizabeth, through
+the few years of her short life, is contained in a letter which I have
+received from &ldquo;Miss Temple.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;The second, Elizabeth,
+is the only one of the family of whom I have a vivid recollection, from
+her meeting with a somewhat alarming accident, in consequence of which
+I had her for some days and nights in my bedroom, not only for the sake
+of greater quiet, but that I might watch over her myself.&nbsp; Her
+head was severely cut, but she bore all the consequent suffering with
+exemplary patience, and by it won much upon my esteem.&nbsp; Of the
+two younger ones (if two there were) I have very slight recollections,
+save that one, a darling child, under five years of age, was quite the
+pet nursling of the school.&rdquo;&nbsp; This last would be Emily.&nbsp;
+Charlotte was considered the most talkative of the sisters&mdash;a &ldquo;bright,
+clever, little child.&rdquo;&nbsp; Her great friend was a certain &ldquo;Mellany
+Hane&rdquo; (so Mr. Bront&euml; spells the name), whose brother paid
+for her schooling, and who had no remarkable talent except for music,
+which her brother&rsquo;s circumstances forbade her to cultivate.&nbsp;
+She was &ldquo;a hungry, good-natured, ordinary girl;&rdquo; older than
+Charlotte, and ever ready to protect her from any petty tyranny or encroachments
+on the part of the elder girls.&nbsp; Charlotte always remembered her
+with affection and gratitude.</p>
+<p>I have quoted the word &ldquo;bright&rdquo; in the account of Charlotte.&nbsp;
+I suspect that this year of 1825 was the last time it could ever be
+applied to her.&nbsp; In the spring of it, Maria became so rapidly worse
+that Mr. Bront&euml; was sent for.&nbsp; He had not previously been
+aware of her illness, and the condition in which he found her was a
+terrible shock to him.&nbsp; He took her home by the Leeds coach, the
+girls crowding out into the road to follow her with their eyes over
+the bridge, past the cottages, and then out of sight for ever.&nbsp;
+She died a very few days after her arrival at home.&nbsp; Perhaps the
+news of her death falling suddenly into the life of which her patient
+existence had formed a part, only a little week or so before, made those
+who remained at Cowan Bridge look with more anxiety on Elizabeth&rsquo;s
+symptoms, which also turned out to be consumptive.&nbsp; She was sent
+home in charge of a confidential servant of the establishment; and she,
+too, died in the early summer of that year.&nbsp; Charlotte was thus
+suddenly called into the responsibilities of eldest sister in a motherless
+family.&nbsp; She remembered how anxiously her dear sister Maria had
+striven, in her grave earnest way, to be a tender helper and a counsellor
+to them all; and the duties that now fell upon her seemed almost like
+a legacy from the gentle little sufferer so lately dead.</p>
+<p>Both Charlotte and Emily returned to school after the Midsummer holidays
+in this fatal year.&nbsp; But before the next winter it was thought
+desirable to advise their removal, as it was evident that the damp situation
+of the house at Cowan Bridge did not suit their health. <a name="citation3"></a><a href="#footnote3">{3}</a></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
+<p>For the reason just stated, the little girls were sent home in the
+autumn of 1825, when Charlotte was little more than nine years old.</p>
+<p>About this time, an elderly woman of the village came to live as
+servant at the parsonage.&nbsp; She remained there, as a member of the
+household, for thirty years; and from the length of her faithful service,
+and the attachment and respect which she inspired, is deserving of mention.&nbsp;
+Tabby was a thorough specimen of a Yorkshire woman of her class, in
+dialect, in appearance, and in character.&nbsp; She abounded in strong
+practical sense and shrewdness.&nbsp; Her words were far from flattery;
+but she would spare no deeds in the cause of those whom she kindly regarded.&nbsp;
+She ruled the children pretty sharply; and yet never grudged a little
+extra trouble to provide them with such small treats as came within
+her power.&nbsp; In return, she claimed to be looked upon as a humble
+friend; and, many years later, Miss Bront&euml; told me that she found
+it somewhat difficult to manage, as Tabby expected to be informed of
+all the family concerns, and yet had grown so deaf that what was repeated
+to her became known to whoever might be in or about the house.&nbsp;
+To obviate this publication of what it might be desirable to keep secret,
+Miss Bront&euml; used to take her out for a walk on the solitary moors;
+where, when both were seated on a tuft of heather, in some high lonely
+place, she could acquaint the old woman, at leisure, with all that she
+wanted to hear.</p>
+<p>Tabby had lived in Haworth in the days when the pack-horses went
+through once a week, with their tinkling bells and gay worsted adornment,
+carrying the produce of the country from Keighley over the hills to
+Colne and Burnley.&nbsp; What is more, she had known the &ldquo;bottom,&rdquo;
+or valley, in those primitive days when the fairies frequented the margin
+of the &ldquo;beck&rdquo; on moonlight nights, and had known folk who
+had seen them.&nbsp; But that was when there were no mills in the valleys;
+and when all the wool-spinning was done by hand in the farm-houses round.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;It wur the factories as had driven &lsquo;em away,&rdquo; she
+said.&nbsp; No doubt she had many a tale to tell of by-gone days of
+the country-side; old ways of living, former inhabitants, decayed gentry,
+who had melted away, and whose places knew them no more; family tragedies,
+and dark superstitious dooms; and in telling these things, without the
+least consciousness that there might ever be anything requiring to be
+softened down, would give at full length the bare and simple details.</p>
+<p>Miss Branwell instructed the children at regular hours in all she
+could teach, making her bed-chamber into their schoolroom.&nbsp; Their
+father was in the habit of relating to them any public news in which
+he felt an interest; and from the opinions of his strong and independent
+mind they would gather much food for thought; but I do not know whether
+he gave them any direct instruction.&nbsp; Charlotte&rsquo;s deep thoughtful
+spirit appears to have felt almost painfully the tender responsibility
+which rested upon her with reference to her remaining sisters.&nbsp;
+She was only eighteen months older than Emily; but Emily and Anne were
+simply companions and playmates, while Charlotte was motherly friend
+and guardian to both; and this loving assumption of duties beyond her
+years, made her feel considerably older than she really was.</p>
+<p>Patrick Branwell, their only brother, was a boy of remarkable promise,
+and, in some ways, of extraordinary precocity of talent.&nbsp; Mr. Bront&euml;&rsquo;s
+friends advised him to send his son to school; but, remembering both
+the strength of will of his own youth and his mode of employing it,
+he believed that Patrick was better at home, and that he himself could
+teach him well, as he had taught others before.&nbsp; So Patrick, or
+as his family called him&mdash;Branwell, remained at Haworth, working
+hard for some hours a day with his father; but, when the time of the
+latter was taken up with his parochial duties, the boy was thrown into
+chance companionship with the lads of the village&mdash;for youth will
+to youth, and boys will to boys.</p>
+<p>Still, he was associated in many of his sisters&rsquo; plays and
+amusements.&nbsp; These were mostly of a sedentary and intellectual
+nature.&nbsp; I have had a curious packet confided to me, containing
+an immense amount of manuscript, in an inconceivably small space; tales,
+dramas, poems, romances, written principally by Charlotte, in a hand
+which it is almost impossible to decipher without the aid of a magnifying
+glass.&nbsp; No description will give so good an idea of the extreme
+minuteness of the writing as the annexed facsimile of a page.</p>
+<p>Among these papers there is a list of her works, which I copy, as
+a curious proof how early the rage for literary composition had seized
+upon her:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>CATALOGUE OF MY BOOKS, WITH THE PERIOD OF THEIR COMPLETION,
+UP TO AUGUST 3RD, 1830.</p>
+<p>Two romantic tales in one volume; viz., The Twelve Adventurers and
+the Adventures in Ireland, April 2nd, 1829.</p>
+<p>The Search after Happiness, a Tale, Aug. 1st, 1829.</p>
+<p>Leisure Hours, a Tale, and two Fragments, July 6th 1829.</p>
+<p>The Adventures of Edward de Crack, a Tale, Feb. 2nd, 1830.</p>
+<p>The Adventures of Ernest Alembert, a Tale, May 26th, 1830.</p>
+<p>An interesting Incident in the Lives of some of the most eminent
+Persons of the Age, a Tale, June 10th, 1830.</p>
+<p>Tales of the Islanders, in four volumes.&nbsp; Contents of the 1st
+Vol.:&mdash;l.&nbsp; An Account of their Origin; 2.&nbsp; A Description
+of Vision Island; 3.&nbsp; Ratten&rsquo;s Attempt; 4.&nbsp; Lord Charles
+Wellesley and the Marquis of Douro&rsquo;s Adventure; completed June
+31st, 1829.&nbsp; 2nd Vol.:&mdash;1.&nbsp; The School-rebellion; 2.&nbsp;
+The strange Incident in the Duke of Wellington&rsquo;s Life; 3.&nbsp;
+Tale to his Sons; 4.&nbsp; The Marquis of Douro and Lord Charles Wellesley&rsquo;s
+Tale to his little King and Queen; completed Dec. 2nd, 1829.&nbsp; 3rd
+Vol.:&mdash;1.&nbsp; The Duke of Wellington&rsquo;s Adventure in the
+Cavern; 2.&nbsp; The Duke of Wellington and the little King&rsquo;s
+and Queen&rsquo;s visit to the Horse-Guards; completed May 8th, 1830.&nbsp;
+4th Vol.:&mdash;1.&nbsp; The three old Washer-women of Strathfieldsaye;
+2.&nbsp; Lord C. Wellesley&rsquo;s Tale to his Brother; completed July
+30th, 1830.</p>
+<p>Characters of Great Men of the Present Age, Dec. 17th 1829.</p>
+<p>The Young Men&rsquo;s Magazines, in Six Numbers, from August to December,
+the latter months double number, completed December the 12th, 1829.&nbsp;
+General index to their contents:&mdash;1.&nbsp; A True Story; 2.&nbsp;
+Causes of the War; 3.&nbsp; A Song; 4.&nbsp; Conversations; 5.&nbsp;
+A True Story continued; 6.&nbsp; The Spirit of Cawdor; 7.&nbsp; Interior
+of a Pothouse, a Poem; 8.&nbsp; The Glass Town, a Song; 9.&nbsp; The
+Silver Cup, a Tale; 10.&nbsp; The Table and Vase in the Desert, a Song;
+11.&nbsp; Conversations; 12.&nbsp; Scene on the Great Bridge; 13.&nbsp;
+Song of the Ancient Britons; 14.&nbsp; Scene in my Tun, a Tale; 15.&nbsp;
+An American Tale; 16.&nbsp; Lines written on seeing the Garden of a
+Genius; 17.&nbsp; The Lay of the Glass Town; 18.&nbsp; The Swiss Artist,
+a Tale; 19.&nbsp; Lines on the Transfer of this Magazine; 20.&nbsp;
+On the Same, by a different hand; 21.&nbsp; Chief Genii in Council;
+22.&nbsp; Harvest in Spain; 23.&nbsp; The Swiss Artists continued; 24.&nbsp;
+Conversations.</p>
+<p>The Poetaster, a Drama, in 2 volumes, July 12th, 1830.</p>
+<p>A Book of Rhymes, finished December 17th, 1829.&nbsp; Contents:&mdash;1.&nbsp;
+The Beauty of Nature; 2.&nbsp; A Short Poem; 3.&nbsp; Meditations while
+Journeying in a Canadian Forest; 4.&nbsp; Song of an Exile; 5.&nbsp;
+On Seeing the Ruins of the Tower of Babel; 6.&nbsp; <i>A Thing of</i>
+14 <i>lines</i>;&nbsp; 7.&nbsp; Lines written on the Bank of a River
+one fine Summer Evening; 8.&nbsp; Spring, a Song; 9.&nbsp; Autumn, a
+Song.</p>
+<p>Miscellaneous Poems, finished May 30th, 1830.&nbsp; Contents:&mdash;1.&nbsp;
+The Churchyard; 2.&nbsp; Description of the Duke of Wellington&rsquo;s
+Palace on the Pleasant Banks of the Lusiva; this article is a small
+prose tale or incident; 3.&nbsp; Pleasure;&nbsp; 4.&nbsp; Lines written
+on the Summit of a high Mountain of the North of England; 5.&nbsp; Winter;
+6.&nbsp; Two Fragments, namely, 1st, The Vision; 2nd, A Short untitled
+Poem; the Evening Walk, a Poem, June 23rd, 1830.</p>
+<p>Making in the whole twenty-two volumes.</p>
+<p>C. BRONT&Euml;, <i>August</i> 3, 1830</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>As each volume contains from sixty to a hundred pages, and the size
+of the page lithographed is rather less than the average, the amount
+of the whole seems very great, if we remember that it was all written
+in about fifteen months.&nbsp; So much for the quantity; the quality
+strikes me as of singular merit for a girl of thirteen or fourteen.&nbsp;
+Both as a specimen of her prose style at this time, and also as revealing
+something of the quiet domestic life led by these children, I take an
+extract from the introduction to &ldquo;Tales of the Islanders,&rdquo;
+the title of one of their &ldquo;Little Magazines:&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;June the 31st, 1829.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The play of the &lsquo;Islanders&rsquo; was formed in December,
+1827, in the following manner.&nbsp; One night, about the time when
+the cold sleet and stormy fogs of November are succeeded by the snow-storms,
+and high piercing night winds of confirmed winter, we were all sitting
+round the warm blazing kitchen fire, having just concluded a quarrel
+with Tabby concerning the propriety of lighting a candle, from which
+she came off victorious, no candle having been produced.&nbsp; A long
+pause succeeded, which was at last broken by Branwell saying, in a lazy
+manner, &lsquo;I don&rsquo;t know what to do.&rsquo;&nbsp; This was
+echoed by Emily and Anne.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Tabby</i>.&nbsp; &lsquo;Wha ya may go t&rsquo; bed.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Branwell</i>.&nbsp; &lsquo;I&rsquo;d rather do anything
+than that.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Charlotte</i>.&nbsp; &lsquo;Why are you so glum to-night,
+Tabby?&nbsp; Oh! suppose we had each an island of our own.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Branwell</i>.&nbsp; &lsquo;If we had I would choose the
+Island of Man.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Charlotte</i>.&nbsp; &lsquo;And I would choose the Isle
+of Wight.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Emily</i>.&nbsp; &lsquo;The Isle of Arran for me.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Anne</i>.&nbsp; &lsquo;And mine shall be Guernsey.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We then chose who should be chief men in our islands.&nbsp;
+Branwell chose John Bull, Astley Cooper, and Leigh Hunt; Emily, Walter
+Scott, Mr. Lockhart, Johnny Lockhart; Anne, Michael Sadler, Lord Bentinck,
+Sir Henry Halford.&nbsp; I chose the Duke of Wellington and two sons,
+Christopher North and Co., and Mr. Abernethy.&nbsp; Here our conversation
+was interrupted by the, to us, dismal sound of the clock striking seven,
+and we were summoned off to bed.&nbsp; The next day we added many others
+to our list of men, till we got almost all the chief men of the kingdom.&nbsp;
+After this, for a long time, nothing worth noticing occurred.&nbsp;
+In June, 1828, we erected a school on a fictitious island, which was
+to contain 1,000 children.&nbsp; The manner of the building was as follows.&nbsp;
+The Island was fifty miles in circumference, and certainly appeared
+more like the work of enchantment than anything real,&rdquo; &amp;c.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Two or three things strike me much in this fragment; one is the graphic
+vividness with which the time of the year, the hour of the evening,
+the feeling of cold and darkness outside, the sound of the night-winds
+sweeping over the desolate snow-covered moors, coming nearer and nearer,
+and at last shaking the very door of the room where they were sitting&mdash;for
+it opened out directly on that bleak, wide expanse&mdash;is contrasted
+with the glow, and busy brightness of the cheerful kitchen where these
+remarkable children are grouped.&nbsp; Tabby moves about in her quaint
+country-dress, frugal, peremptory, prone to find fault pretty sharply,
+yet allowing no one else to blame her children, we may feel sure.&nbsp;
+Another noticeable fact is the intelligent partisanship with which they
+choose their great men, who are almost all stanch Tories of the time.&nbsp;
+Moreover, they do not confine themselves to local heroes; their range
+of choice has been widened by hearing much of what is not usually considered
+to interest children.&nbsp; Little Anne, aged scarcely eight, picks
+out the politicians of the day for her chief men.</p>
+<p>There is another scrap of paper, in this all but illegible handwriting,
+written about this time, and which gives some idea of the sources of
+their opinions.</p>
+<h3>THE HISTORY OF THE YEAR 1829.</h3>
+<p>&ldquo;Once Papa lent my sister Maria a book.&nbsp; It was an old
+geography-book; she wrote on its blank leaf, &lsquo;Papa lent me this
+book.&rsquo;&nbsp; This book is a hundred and twenty years old; it is
+at this moment lying before me.&nbsp; While I write this I am in the
+kitchen of the Parsonage, Haworth; Tabby, the servant, is washing up
+the breakfast-things, and Anne, my youngest sister (Maria was my eldest),
+is kneeling on a chair, looking at some cakes which Tabby has been baking
+for us.&nbsp; Emily is in the parlour, brushing the carpet.&nbsp; Papa
+and Branwell are gone to Keighley.&nbsp; Aunt is upstairs in her room,
+and I am sitting by the table writing this in the kitchen.&nbsp; Keighley
+is a small town four miles from here.&nbsp; Papa and Branwell are gone
+for the newspaper, the &lsquo;Leeds Intelligencer,&rsquo; a most excellent
+Tory newspaper, edited by Mr. Wood, and the proprietor, Mr. Henneman.&nbsp;
+We take two and see three newspapers a week.&nbsp; We take the &lsquo;Leeds
+Intelligencer,&rsquo; Tory, and the &lsquo;Leeds Mercury,&rsquo; Whig,
+edited by Mr. Baines, and his brother, son-in-law, and his two sons,
+Edward and Talbot.&nbsp; We see the &lsquo;John Bull;&rsquo; it is a
+high Tory, very violent.&nbsp; Mr. Driver lends us it, as likewise &lsquo;Blackwood&rsquo;s
+Magazine,&rsquo; the most able periodical there is.&nbsp; The Editor
+is Mr. Christopher North, an old man seventy-four years of age; the
+1st of April is his birth-day; his company are Timothy Tickler, Morgan
+O&rsquo;Doherty, Macrabin Mordecai, Mullion, Warnell, and James Hogg,
+a man of most extraordinary genius, a Scottish shepherd.&nbsp; Our plays
+were established; &lsquo;Young Men,&rsquo; June, 1826; &lsquo;Our Fellows,&rsquo;
+July, 1827; &lsquo;Islanders,&rsquo; December, 1827.&nbsp; These are
+our three great plays, that are not kept secret.&nbsp; Emily&rsquo;s
+and my best plays were established the 1st of December, 1827; the others
+March, 1828.&nbsp; Best plays mean secret plays; they are very nice
+ones.&nbsp; All our plays are very strange ones.&nbsp; Their nature
+I need not write on paper, for I think I shall always remember them.&nbsp;
+The &lsquo;Young Men&rsquo;s&rsquo; play took its rise from some wooden
+soldiers Branwell had: &lsquo;Our Fellows&rsquo; from &lsquo;&AElig;sop&rsquo;s
+Fables;&rsquo; and the &lsquo;Islanders&rsquo; from several events which
+happened.&nbsp; I will sketch out the origin of our plays more explicitly
+if I can.&nbsp; First, &lsquo;Young Men.&rsquo;&nbsp; Papa bought Branwell
+some wooden soldiers at Leeds; when Papa came home it was night, and
+we were in bed, so next morning Branwell came to our door with a box
+of soldiers.&nbsp; Emily and I jumped out of bed, and I snatched up
+one and exclaimed, &lsquo;This is the Duke of Wellington!&nbsp; This
+shall be the Duke!&rsquo;&nbsp; When I had said this, Emily likewise
+took up one and said it should be hers; when Anne came down, she said
+one should be hers.&nbsp; Mine was the prettiest of the whole, and the
+tallest, and the most perfect in every part.&nbsp; Emily&rsquo;s was
+a grave-looking fellow, and we called him &lsquo;Gravey.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Anne&rsquo;s was a queer little thing, much like herself, and we called
+him &lsquo;Waiting-Boy.&rsquo;&nbsp; Branwell chose his, and called
+him &lsquo;Buonaparte.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The foregoing extract shows something of the kind of reading in which
+the little Bront&euml;s were interested; but their desire for knowledge
+must have been excited in many directions, for I find a &ldquo;list
+of painters whose works I wish to see,&rdquo; drawn up by Charlotte
+when she was scarcely thirteen:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Guido Reni, Julio Romano, Titian, Raphael, Michael Angelo,
+Correggio, Annibal Caracci, Leonardo da Vinci, Fra Bartolomeo, Carlo
+Cignani, Vandyke, Rubens, Bartolomeo Ramerghi.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here is this little girl, in a remote Yorkshire parsonage, who has
+probably never seen anything worthy the name of a painting in her life,
+studying the names and characteristics of the great old Italian and
+Flemish masters, whose works she longs to see some time, in the dim
+future that lies before her!&nbsp; There is a paper remaining which
+contains minute studies of, and criticisms upon, the engravings in &ldquo;Friendship&rsquo;s
+Offering for 1829;&rdquo; showing how she had early formed those habits
+of close observation, and patient analysis of cause and effect, which
+served so well in after-life as handmaids to her genius.</p>
+<p>The way in which Mr. Bront&euml; made his children sympathise with
+him in his great interest in politics, must have done much to lift them
+above the chances of their minds being limited or tainted by petty local
+gossip.&nbsp; I take the only other remaining personal fragment out
+of &ldquo;Tales of the Islanders;&rdquo; it is a sort of apology, contained
+in the introduction to the second volume, for their not having been
+continued before; the writers had been for a long time too busy, and
+latterly too much absorbed in politics.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Parliament was opened, and the great Catholic question was
+brought forward, and the Duke&rsquo;s measures were disclosed, and all
+was slander, violence, party-spirit, and confusion.&nbsp; Oh, those
+six months, from the time of the King&rsquo;s speech to the end!&nbsp;
+Nobody could write, think, or speak on any subject but the Catholic
+question, and the Duke of Wellington, and Mr. Peel.&nbsp; I remember
+the day when the Intelligence Extraordinary came with Mr. Peel&rsquo;s
+speech in it, containing the terms on which the Catholics were to be
+let in!&nbsp; With what eagerness Papa tore off the cover, and how we
+all gathered round him, and with what breathless anxiety we listened,
+as one by one they were disclosed, and explained, and argued upon so
+ably, and so well! and then when it was all out, how aunt said that
+she thought it was excellent, and that the Catholics could do no harm
+with such good security!&nbsp; I remember also the doubts as to whether
+it would pass the House of Lords, and the prophecies that it would not;
+and when the paper came which was to decide the question, the anxiety
+was almost dreadful with which we listened to the whole affair: the
+opening of the doors; the hush; the royal dukes in their robes, and
+the great duke in green sash and waistcoat; the rising of all the peeresses
+when he rose; the reading of his speech&mdash;Papa saying that his words
+were like precious gold; and lastly, the majority of one to four (sic)
+in favour of the Bill.&nbsp; But this is a digression,&rdquo; &amp;c.,
+&amp;c.</p>
+<p>This must have been written when she was between thirteen and fourteen.</p>
+<p>It will be interesting to some of my readers to know what was the
+character of her purely imaginative writing at this period.&nbsp; While
+her description of any real occurrence is, as we have seen, homely,
+graphic, and forcible, when she gives way to her powers of creation,
+her fancy and her language alike run riot, sometimes to the very borders
+of apparent delirium.&nbsp; Of this wild weird writing, a single example
+will suffice.&nbsp; It is a letter to the editor of one of the &ldquo;Little
+Magazines.&rdquo;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Sir,&mdash;It is well known that the Genii have
+declared that unless they perform certain arduous duties every year,
+of a mysterious nature, all the worlds in the firmament will be burnt
+up, and gathered together in one mighty globe, which will roll in solitary
+grandeur through the vast wilderness of space, inhabited only by the
+four high princes of the Genii, till time shall be succeeded by Eternity;
+and the impudence of this is only to be paralleled by another of their
+assertions, namely, that by their magic might they can reduce the world
+to a desert, the purest waters to streams of livid poison, and the clearest
+lakes to stagnant waters, the pestilential vapours of which shall slay
+all living creatures, except the blood-thirsty beast of the forest,
+and the ravenous bird of the rock.&nbsp; But that in the midst of this
+desolation the palace of the Chief Genii shall rise sparkling in the
+wilderness, and the horrible howl of their war-cry shall spread over
+the land at morning, at noontide and night; but that they shall have
+their annual feast over the bones of the dead, and shall yearly rejoice
+with the joy of victors.&nbsp; I think, sir, that the horrible wickedness
+of this needs no remark, and therefore I haste to subscribe myself,
+&amp;c.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;July 14, 1829.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>It is not unlikely that the foregoing letter may have had some allegorical
+or political reference, invisible to our eyes, but very clear to the
+bright little minds for whom it was intended.&nbsp; Politics were evidently
+their grand interest; the Duke of Wellington their demi-god.&nbsp; All
+that related to him belonged to the heroic age.&nbsp; Did Charlotte
+want a knight-errant, or a devoted lover, the Marquis of Douro, or Lord
+Charles Wellesley, came ready to her hand.&nbsp; There is hardly one
+of her prose-writings at this time in which they are not the principal
+personages, and in which their &ldquo;august father&rdquo; does not
+appear as a sort of Jupiter Tonans, or Deus ex Machin&acirc;.</p>
+<p>As one evidence how Wellesley haunted her imagination, I copy out
+a few of the titles to her papers in the various magazines.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Liffey Castle,&rdquo; a Tale by Lord C. Wellesley.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lines to the River Aragua,&rdquo; by the Marquis of Douro.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An Extraordinary Dream,&rdquo; by Lord C. Wellesley.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Green Dwarf, a Tale of the Perfect Tense,&rdquo; by the
+Lord Charles Albert Florian Wellesley.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Strange Events,&rdquo; by Lord C. A. F. Wellesley.</p>
+<p>Life in an isolated village, or a lonely country-house, presents
+many little occurrences which sink into the mind of childhood, there
+to be brooded over.&nbsp; No other event may have happened, or be likely
+to happen, for days, to push one of these aside, before it has assumed
+a vague and mysterious importance.&nbsp; Thus, children leading a secluded
+life are often thoughtful and dreamy: the impressions made upon them
+by the world without&mdash;the unusual sights of earth and sky&mdash;the
+accidental meetings with strange faces and figures (rare occurrences
+in those out-of-the-way places)&mdash;are sometimes magnified by them
+into things so deeply significant as to be almost supernatural.&nbsp;
+This peculiarity I perceive very strongly in Charlotte&rsquo;s writings
+at this time.&nbsp; Indeed, under the circumstances, it is no peculiarity.&nbsp;
+It has been common to all, from the Chaldean shepherds&mdash;&ldquo;the
+lonely herdsman stretched on the soft grass through half a summer&rsquo;s
+day&rdquo;&mdash;the solitary monk&mdash;to all whose impressions from
+without have had time to grow and vivify in the imagination, till they
+have been received as actual personifications, or supernatural visions,
+to doubt which would be blasphemy.</p>
+<p>To counterbalance this tendency in Charlotte, was the strong common
+sense natural to her, and daily called into exercise by the requirements
+of her practical life.&nbsp; Her duties were not merely to learn her
+lessons, to read a certain quantity, to gain certain ideas; she had,
+besides, to brush rooms, to run errands up and down stairs, to help
+in the simpler forms of cooking, to be by turns play-fellow and monitress
+to her younger sisters and brother, to make and to mend, and to study
+economy under her careful aunt.&nbsp; Thus we see that, while her imagination
+received vivid impressions, her excellent understanding had full power
+to rectify them before her fancies became realities.&nbsp; On a scrap
+of paper, she has written down the following relation:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;June 22, 1830, 6 o&rsquo;clock p.m.<br />
+&ldquo;Haworth, near Bradford.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The following strange occurrence happened on the 22nd of June,
+1830:&mdash;At the time Papa was very ill, confined to his bed, and
+so weak that he could not rise without assistance.&nbsp; Tabby and I
+were alone in the kitchen, about half-past nine ante-meridian.&nbsp;
+Suddenly we heard a knock at the door; Tabby rose and opened it.&nbsp;
+An old man appeared, standing without, who accosted her thus:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Old Man</i>.&mdash;&lsquo;Does the parson live here?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Tabby</i>.&mdash;&lsquo;Yes.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Old Man</i>.&mdash;&lsquo;I wish to see him.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Tabby</i>.&mdash;&lsquo;He is poorly in bed.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Old Man</i>.&mdash;&lsquo;I have a message for him.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Tabby</i>.&mdash;&lsquo;Who from?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Old Man</i>.&mdash;&lsquo;From the Lord.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Tabby</i>.&mdash;&lsquo;Who?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Old Man</i>.&mdash;&lsquo;The Lord.&nbsp; He desires me
+to say that the Bridegroom is coming, and that we must prepare to meet
+him; that the cords are about to be loosed, and the golden bowl broken;
+the pitcher broken at the fountain.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here he concluded his discourse, and abruptly went his way.&nbsp;
+As Tabby closed the door, I asked her if she knew him.&nbsp; Her reply
+was, that she had never seen him before, nor any one like him.&nbsp;
+Though I am fully persuaded that he was some fanatical enthusiast, well
+meaning perhaps, but utterly ignorant of true piety; yet I could not
+forbear weeping at his words, spoken so unexpectedly at that particular
+period.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Though the date of the following poem is a little uncertain, it may
+be most convenient to introduce it here.&nbsp; It must have been written
+before 1833, but how much earlier there are no means of determining.&nbsp;
+I give it as a specimen of the remarkable poetical talent shown in the
+various diminutive writings of this time; at least, in all of them which
+I have been able to read.</p>
+<h3>THE WOUNDED STAG.</h3>
+<p>Passing amid the deepest shade<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of the wood&rsquo;s sombre heart,<br />
+Last night I saw a wounded deer<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Laid lonely and apart.</p>
+<p>Such light as pierced the crowded boughs<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; (Light scattered, scant and dim,)<br />
+Passed through the fern that formed his couch<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And centred full on him.</p>
+<p>Pain trembled in his weary limbs,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Pain filled his patient eye,<br />
+Pain-crushed amid the shadowy fern<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; His branchy crown did lie.</p>
+<p>Where were his comrades? where his mate?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; All from his death-bed gone!<br />
+And he, thus struck and desolate,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Suffered and bled alone.</p>
+<p>Did he feel what a man might feel,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Friend-left, and sore distrest?<br />
+Did Pain&rsquo;s keen dart, and Grief&rsquo;s sharp sting<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Strive in his mangled breast?</p>
+<p>Did longing for affection lost<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Barb every deadly dart;<br />
+Love unrepaid, and Faith betrayed,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Did these torment his heart?</p>
+<p>No! leave to man his proper doom!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; These are the pangs that rise<br />
+Around the bed of state and gloom,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Where Adam&rsquo;s offspring dies!</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+<p>This is perhaps a fitting time to give some personal description
+of Miss Bront&euml;.&nbsp; In 1831, she was a quiet, thoughtful girl,
+of nearly fifteen years of age, very small in figure&mdash;&ldquo;stunted&rdquo;
+was the word she applied to herself,&mdash;but as her limbs and head
+were in just proportion to the slight, fragile body, no word in ever
+so slight a degree suggestive of deformity could properly be applied
+to her; with soft, thick, brown hair, and peculiar eyes, of which I
+find it difficult to give a description, as they appeared to me in her
+later life.&nbsp; They were large and well shaped; their colour a reddish
+brown; but if the iris was closely examined, it appeared to be composed
+of a great variety of tints.&nbsp; The usual expression was of quiet,
+listening intelligence; but now and then, on some just occasion for
+vivid interest or wholesome indignation, a light would shine out, as
+if some spiritual lamp had been kindled, which glowed behind those expressive
+orbs.&nbsp; I never saw the like in any other human creature.&nbsp;
+As for the rest of her features, they were plain, large, and ill set;
+but, unless you began to catalogue them, you were hardly aware of the
+fact, for the eyes and power of the countenance over-balanced every
+physical defect; the crooked mouth and the large nose were forgotten,
+and the whole face arrested the attention, and presently attracted all
+those whom she herself would have cared to attract.&nbsp; Her hands
+and feet were the smallest I ever saw; when one of the former was placed
+in mine, it was like the soft touch of a bird in the middle of my palm.&nbsp;
+The delicate long fingers had a peculiar fineness of sensation, which
+was one reason why all her handiwork, of whatever kind&mdash;writing,
+sewing, knitting&mdash;was so clear in its minuteness.&nbsp; She was
+remarkably neat in her whole personal attire; but she was dainty as
+to the fit of her shoes and gloves.</p>
+<p>I can well imagine that the grave serious composure, which, when
+I knew her, gave her face the dignity of an old Venetian portrait, was
+no acquisition of later years, but dated from that early age when she
+found herself in the position of an elder sister to motherless children.&nbsp;
+But in a girl only just entered on her teens, such an expression would
+be called (to use a country phrase) &ldquo;old-fashioned;&rdquo; and
+in 1831, the period of which I now write, we must think of her as a
+little, set, antiquated girl, very quiet in manners, and very quaint
+in dress; for besides the influence exerted by her father&rsquo;s ideas
+concerning the simplicity of attire befitting the wife and daughters
+of a country clergyman, her aunt, on whom the duty of dressing her nieces
+principally devolved, had never been in society since she left Penzance,
+eight or nine years before, and the Penzance fashions of that day were
+still dear to her heart.</p>
+<p>In January, 1831, Charlotte was sent to school again.&nbsp; This
+time she went as a pupil to Miss W---, who lived at Roe Head, a cheerful
+roomy country house, standing a little apart in a field, on the right
+of the road from Leeds to Huddersfield.&nbsp; Three tiers of old-fashioned
+semicircular bow windows run from basement to roof; and look down upon
+a long green slope of pasture-land, ending in the pleasant woods of
+Kirklees, Sir George Armitage&rsquo;s park.&nbsp; Although Roe Head
+and Haworth are not twenty miles apart, the aspect of the country is
+as totally dissimilar as if they enjoyed a different climate.&nbsp;
+The soft curving and heaving landscape round the former gives a stranger
+the idea of cheerful airiness on the heights, and of sunny warmth in
+the broad green valleys below.&nbsp; It is just such a neighbourhood
+as the monks loved, and traces of the old Plantagenet times are to be
+met with everywhere, side by side with the manufacturing interests of
+the West Riding of to-day.&nbsp; There is the park of Kirklees, full
+of sunny glades, speckled with black shadows of immemorial yew-trees;
+the grey pile of building, formerly a &ldquo;House of professed Ladies;&rdquo;
+the mouldering stone in the depth of the wood, under which Robin Hood
+is said to lie; close outside the park, an old stone-gabled house, now
+a roadside inn, but which bears the name of the &ldquo;Three Nuns,&rdquo;
+and has a pictured sign to correspond.&nbsp; And this quaint old inn
+is frequented by fustian-dressed mill-hands from the neighbouring worsted
+factories, which strew the high road from Leeds to Huddersfield, and
+form the centres round which future villages gather.&nbsp; Such are
+the contrasts of modes of living, and of times and seasons, brought
+before the traveller on the great roads that traverse the West Riding.&nbsp;
+In no other part of England, I fancy, are the centuries brought into
+such close, strange contact as in the district in which Roe Head is
+situated.&nbsp; Within six miles of Miss W---&rsquo;s house&mdash;on
+the left of the road, coming from Leeds&mdash;lie the remains of Howley
+Hall, now the property of Lord Cardigan, but formerly belonging to a
+branch of the Saviles.&nbsp; Near to it is Lady Anne&rsquo;s well; &ldquo;Lady
+Anne,&rdquo; according to tradition, having been worried and eaten by
+wolves as she sat at the well, to which the indigo-dyed factory people
+from Birstall and Batley woollen mills would formerly repair on Palm
+Sunday, when the waters possess remarkable medicinal efficacy; and it
+is still believed by some that they assume a strange variety of colours
+at six o&rsquo;clock on the morning of that day.</p>
+<p>All round the lands held by the farmer who lives in the remains of
+Howley Hall are stone houses of to-day, occupied by the people who are
+making their living and their fortunes by the woollen mills that encroach
+upon and shoulder out the proprietors of the ancient halls.&nbsp; These
+are to be seen in every direction, picturesque, many-gabled, with heavy
+stone carvings of coats of arms for heraldic ornament; belonging to
+decayed families, from whose ancestral lands field after field has been
+shorn away, by the urgency of rich manufacturers pressing hard upon
+necessity.</p>
+<p>A smoky atmosphere surrounds these old dwellings of former Yorkshire
+squires, and blights and blackens the ancient trees that overshadow
+them; cinder-paths lead up to them; the ground round about is sold for
+building upon; but still the neighbours, though they subsist by a different
+state of things, remember that their forefathers lived in agricultural
+dependence upon the owners of these halls; and treasure up the traditions
+connected with the stately households that existed centuries ago.&nbsp;
+Take Oakwell Hall, for instance.&nbsp; It stands in a pasture-field,
+about a quarter of a mile from the high road.&nbsp; It is but that distance
+from the busy whirr of the steam-engines employed in the woollen mills
+at Birstall; and if you walk to it from Birstall Station about meal-time,
+you encounter strings of mill-hands, blue with woollen dye, and cranching
+in hungry haste over the cinder-paths bordering the high road.&nbsp;
+Turning off from this to the right, you ascend through an old pasture-field,
+and enter a short by-road, called the &ldquo;Bloody Lane&rdquo;&mdash;a
+walk haunted by the ghost of a certain Captain Batt, the reprobate proprietor
+of an old hall close by, in the days of the Stuarts.&nbsp; From the
+&ldquo;Bloody Lane,&rdquo; overshadowed by trees, you come into the
+field in which Oakwell Hall is situated.&nbsp; It is known in the neighbourhood
+to be the place described as &ldquo;Field Head,&rdquo; Shirley&rsquo;s
+residence.&nbsp; The enclosure in front, half court, half garden; the
+panelled hall, with the gallery opening into the bed-chambers running
+round; the barbarous peach-coloured drawing-room; the bright look-out
+through the garden-door upon the grassy lawns and terraces behind, where
+the soft-hued pigeons still love to coo and strut in the sun,&mdash;are
+described in &ldquo;Shirley.&rdquo;&nbsp; The scenery of that fiction
+lies close around; the real events which suggested it took place in
+the immediate neighbourhood.</p>
+<p>They show a bloody footprint in a bed-chamber of Oakwell Hall, and
+tell a story connected with it, and with the lane by which the house
+is approached.&nbsp; Captain Batt was believed to be far away; his family
+was at Oakwell; when in the dusk, one winter evening, he came stalking
+along the lane, and through the hall, and up the stairs, into his own
+room, where he vanished.&nbsp; He had been killed in a duel in London
+that very same afternoon of December 9th, 1684.</p>
+<p>The stones of the Hall formed part of the more ancient vicarage,
+which an ancestor of Captain Batt&rsquo;s had seized in the troublous
+times for property which succeeded the Reformation.&nbsp; This Henry
+Batt possessed himself of houses and money without scruple; and, at
+last, stole the great bell of Birstall Church, for which sacrilegious
+theft a fine was imposed on the land, and has to be paid by the owner
+of the Hall to this day.</p>
+<p>But the Oakwell property passed out of the hands of the Batts at
+the beginning of the last century; collateral descendants succeeded,
+and left this picturesque trace of their having been.&nbsp; In the great
+hall hangs a mighty pair of stag&rsquo;s horns, and dependent from them
+a printed card, recording the fact that, on the 1st of September, 1763,
+there was a great hunting-match, when this stag was slain; and that
+fourteen gentlemen shared in the chase, and dined on the spoil in that
+hall, along with Fairfax Fearneley, Esq., the owner.&nbsp; The fourteen
+names are given, doubtless &ldquo;mighty men of yore;&rdquo; but, among
+them all, Sir Fletcher Norton, Attorney-General, and Major-General Birch
+were the only ones with which I had any association in 1855.&nbsp; Passing
+on from Oakwell there lie houses right and left, which were well known
+to Miss Bront&euml; when she lived at Roe Head, as the hospitable homes
+of some of her school-fellows.&nbsp; Lanes branch off for three or four
+miles to heaths and commons on the higher ground, which formed pleasant
+walks on holidays, and then comes the white gate into the field-path
+leading to Roe Head itself.</p>
+<p>One of the bow-windowed rooms on the ground floor with the pleasant
+look-out I have described was the drawing-room; the other was the schoolroom.&nbsp;
+The dining-room was on one side of the door, and faced the road.</p>
+<p>The number of pupils, during the year and a half Miss Bront&euml;
+was there, ranged from seven to ten; and as they did not require the
+whole of the house for their accommodation, the third story was unoccupied,
+except by the ghostly idea of a lady, whose rustling silk gown was sometimes
+heard by the listeners at the foot of the second flight of stairs.</p>
+<p>The kind motherly nature of Miss W---, and the small number of the
+girls, made the establishment more like a private family than a school.&nbsp;
+Moreover, she was a native of the district immediately surrounding Roe
+Head, as were the majority of her pupils.&nbsp; Most likely Charlotte
+Bront&euml;, in coming from Haworth, came the greatest distance of all.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;E.&rsquo;s&rdquo; home was five miles away; two other dear friends
+(the Rose and Jessie Yorke of &ldquo;Shirley&rdquo;) lived still nearer;
+two or three came from Huddersfield; one or two from Leeds.</p>
+<p>I shall now quote from a valuable letter which I have received from
+&ldquo;Mary,&rdquo; one of these early friends; distinct and graphic
+in expression, as becomes a cherished associate of Charlotte Bront&euml;&rsquo;s.&nbsp;
+The time referred to is her first appearance at Roe Head, on January
+19th, 1831.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I first saw her coming out of a covered cart, in very old-fashioned
+clothes, and looking very cold and miserable.&nbsp; She was coming to
+school at Miss W---&rsquo;s.&nbsp; When she appeared in the schoolroom,
+her dress was changed, but just as old.&nbsp; She looked a little old
+woman, so short-sighted that she always appeared to be seeking something,
+and moving her head from side to side to catch a sight of it.&nbsp;
+She was very shy and nervous, and spoke with a strong Irish accent.&nbsp;
+When a book was given her, she dropped her head over it till her nose
+nearly touched it, and when she was told to hold her head up, up went
+the book after it, still close to her nose, so that it was not possible
+to help laughing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was the first impression she made upon one of those whose dear
+and valued friend she was to become in after-life.&nbsp; Another of
+the girls recalls her first sight of Charlotte, on the day she came,
+standing by the schoolroom window, looking out on the snowy landscape,
+and crying, while all the rest were at play.&nbsp; &ldquo;E.&rdquo;
+was younger than she, and her tender heart was touched by the apparently
+desolate condition in which she found the oddly-dressed, odd-looking
+little girl that winter morning, as &ldquo;sick for home she stood in
+tears,&rdquo; in a new strange place, among new strange people.&nbsp;
+Any over-demonstrative kindness would have scared the wild little maiden
+from Haworth; but &ldquo;E.&rdquo; (who is shadowed forth in the Caroline
+Helstone of &ldquo;Shirley&rdquo;) managed to win confidence, and was
+allowed to give sympathy.</p>
+<p>To quote again from &ldquo;Mary&rsquo;s&rdquo; letter:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We thought her very ignorant, for she had never learnt grammar
+at all, and very little geography.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This account of her partial ignorance is confirmed by her other school-fellows.&nbsp;
+But Miss W--- was a lady of remarkable intelligence and of delicate
+tender sympathy.&nbsp; She gave a proof of this in her first treatment
+of Charlotte.&nbsp; The little girl was well-read, but not well-grounded.&nbsp;
+Miss W--- took her aside and told her she was afraid that she must place
+her in the second class for some time till she could overtake the girls
+of her own age in the knowledge of grammar, &amp;c.; but poor Charlotte
+received this announcement with so sad a fit of crying, that Miss W---&rsquo;s
+kind heart was softened, and she wisely perceived that, with such a
+girl, it would be better to place her in the first class, and allow
+her to make up by private study in those branches where she was deficient.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She would confound us by knowing things that were out of our
+range altogether.&nbsp; She was acquainted with most of the short pieces
+of poetry that we had to learn by heart; would tell us the authors,
+the poems they were taken from, and sometimes repeat a page or two,
+and tell us the plot.&nbsp; She had a habit of writing in italics (printing
+characters), and said she had learnt it by writing in their magazine.&nbsp;
+They brought out a &lsquo;magazine&rsquo; once a month, and wished it
+to look as like print as possible.&nbsp; She told us a tale out of it.&nbsp;
+No one wrote in it, and no one read it, but herself, her brother, and
+two sisters.&nbsp; She promised to show me some of these magazines,
+but retracted it afterwards, and would never be persuaded to do so.&nbsp;
+In our play hours she sate, or stood still, with a book, if possible.&nbsp;
+Some of us once urged her to be on our side in a game at ball.&nbsp;
+She said she had never played, and could not play.&nbsp; We made her
+try, but soon found that she could not see the ball, so we put her out.&nbsp;
+She took all our proceedings with pliable indifference, and always seemed
+to need a previous resolution to say &lsquo;No&rsquo; to anything.&nbsp;
+She used to go and stand under the trees in the play-ground, and say
+it was pleasanter.&nbsp; She endeavoured to explain this, pointing out
+the shadows, the peeps of sky, &amp;c.&nbsp; We understood but little
+of it.&nbsp; She said that at Cowan Bridge she used to stand in the
+burn, on a stone, to watch the water flow by.&nbsp; I told her she should
+have gone fishing; she said she never wanted.&nbsp; She always showed
+physical feebleness in everything.&nbsp; She ate no animal food at school.&nbsp;
+It was about this time I told her she was very ugly.&nbsp; Some years
+afterwards, I told her I thought I had been very impertinent.&nbsp;
+She replied, &lsquo;You did me a great deal of good, Polly, so don&rsquo;t
+repent of it.&rsquo;&nbsp; She used to draw much better, and more quickly,
+than anything we had seen before, and knew much about celebrated pictures
+and painters.&nbsp; Whenever an opportunity offered of examining a picture
+or cut of any kind, she went over it piecemeal, with her eyes close
+to the paper, looking so long that we used to ask her &lsquo;what she
+saw in it.&rsquo;&nbsp; She could always see plenty, and explained it
+very well.&nbsp; She made poetry and drawing at least exceedingly interesting
+to me; and then I got the habit, which I have yet, of referring mentally
+to her opinion on all matters of that kind, along with many more, resolving
+to describe such and such things to her, until I start at the recollection
+that I never shall.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To feel the full force of this last sentence&mdash;to show how steady
+and vivid was the impression which Miss Bront&euml; made on those fitted
+to appreciate her&mdash;I must mention that the writer of this letter,
+dated January 18th, 1856, in which she thus speaks of constantly referring
+to Charlotte&rsquo;s opinion has never seen her for eleven years, nearly
+all of which have been passed among strange scenes, in a new continent,
+at the antipodes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We used to be furious politicians, as one could hardly help
+being in 1832.&nbsp; She knew the names of the two ministries; the one
+that resigned, and the one that succeeded and passed the Reform Bill.&nbsp;
+She worshipped the Duke of Wellington, but said that Sir Robert Peel
+was not to be trusted; he did not act from principle like the rest,
+but from expediency.&nbsp; I, being of the furious radical party, told
+her &lsquo;how could any of them trust one another; they were all of
+them rascals!&rsquo;&nbsp; Then she would launch out into praises of
+the Duke of Wellington, referring to his actions; which I could not
+contradict, as I knew nothing about him.&nbsp; She said she had taken
+interest in politics ever since she was five years old.&nbsp; She did
+not get her opinions from her father&mdash;that is, not directly&mdash;but
+from the papers, &amp;c., he preferred.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In illustration of the truth of this, I may give an extract from
+a letter to her brother, written from Roe Head, May 17th, 1832:&mdash;&ldquo;Lately
+I had begun to think that I had lost all the interest which I used formerly
+to take in politics; but the extreme pleasure I felt at the news of
+the Reform Bill&rsquo;s being thrown out by the House of Lords, and
+of the expulsion, or resignation of Earl Grey, &amp;c., convinced me
+that I have not as yet lost all my penchant for politics.&nbsp; I am
+extremely glad that aunt has consented to take in &lsquo;Fraser&rsquo;s
+Magazine;&rsquo; for, though I know from your description of its general
+contents it will be rather uninteresting when compared with &lsquo;Blackwood,&rsquo;
+still it will be better than remaining the whole year without being
+able to obtain a sight of any periodical whatever; and such would assuredly
+be our case, as, in the little wild moorland village where we reside,
+there would be no possibility of borrowing a work of that description
+from a circulating library.&nbsp; I hope with you that the present delightful
+weather may contribute to the perfect restoration of our dear papa&rsquo;s
+health; and that it may give aunt pleasant reminiscences of the salubrious
+climate of her native place,&rdquo; &amp;c.</p>
+<p>To return to &ldquo;Mary&rsquo;s&rdquo; letter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She used to speak of her two elder sisters, Maria and Elizabeth,
+who died at Cowan Bridge.&nbsp; I used to believe them to have been
+wonders of talent and kindness.&nbsp; She told me, early one morning,
+that she had just been dreaming; she had been told that she was wanted
+in the drawing-room, and it was Maria and Elizabeth.&nbsp; I was eager
+for her to go on, and when she said there was no more, I said, &lsquo;but
+go on!&nbsp; <i>Make it out</i>!&nbsp; I know you can.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+She said she would not; she wished she had not dreamed, for it did not
+go on nicely, they were changed; they had forgotten what they used to
+care for.&nbsp; They were very fashionably dressed, and began criticising
+the room, &amp;c.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This habit of &lsquo;making out&rsquo; interests for themselves
+that most children get who have none in actual life, was very strong
+in her.&nbsp; The whole family used to &lsquo;make out&rsquo; histories,
+and invent characters and events.&nbsp; I told her sometimes they were
+like growing potatoes in a cellar.&nbsp; She said, sadly, &lsquo;Yes!&nbsp;
+I know we are!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Some one at school said she &lsquo;was always talking about
+clever people; Johnson, Sheridan, &amp;c.&rsquo;&nbsp; She said, &lsquo;Now
+you don&rsquo;t know the meaning of <i>clever</i>, Sheridan might be
+clever; yes, Sheridan was clever,&mdash;scamps often are; but Johnson
+hadn&rsquo;t a spark of cleverality in him.&rsquo;&nbsp; No one appreciated
+the opinion; they made some trivial remark about &lsquo;<i>cleverality</i>,&rsquo;
+and she said no more.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is the epitome of her life.&nbsp; At our house she had
+just as little chance of a patient hearing, for though not school-girlish,
+we were more intolerant.&nbsp; We had a rage for practicality, and laughed
+all poetry to scorn.&nbsp; Neither she nor we had any idea but that
+our opinions were the opinions of all the <i>sensible</i> people in
+the world, and we used to astonish each other at every sentence . .
+. Charlotte, at school, had no plan of life beyond what circumstances
+made for her.&nbsp; She knew that she must provide for herself, and
+chose her trade; at least chose to begin it once.&nbsp; Her idea of
+self-improvement ruled her even at school.&nbsp; It was to cultivate
+her tastes.&nbsp; She always said there was enough of hard practicality
+and <i>useful</i> knowledge forced on us by necessity, and that the
+thing most needed was to soften and refine our minds.&nbsp; She picked
+up every scrap of information concerning painting, sculpture, poetry,
+music, &amp;c., as if it were gold.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>What I have heard of her school days from other sources, confirms
+the accuracy of the details in this remarkable letter.&nbsp; She was
+an indefatigable student: constantly reading and learning; with a strong
+conviction of the necessity and value of education, very unusual in
+a girl of fifteen.&nbsp; She never lost a moment of time, and seemed
+almost to grudge the necessary leisure for relaxation and play-hours,
+which might be partly accounted for by the awkwardness in all games
+occasioned by her shortness of sight.&nbsp; Yet, in spite of these unsociable
+habits, she was a great favourite with her school-fellows.&nbsp; She
+was always ready to try and do what they wished, though not sorry when
+they called her awkward, and left her out of their sports.&nbsp; Then,
+at night, she was an invaluable story-teller, frightening them almost
+out of their wits as they lay in bed.&nbsp; On one occasion the effect
+was such that she was led to scream out aloud, and Miss W---, coming
+up stairs, found that one of the listeners had been seized with violent
+palpitations, in consequence of the excitement produced by Charlotte&rsquo;s
+story.</p>
+<p>Her indefatigable craving for knowledge tempted Miss W--- on into
+setting her longer and longer tasks of reading for examination; and
+towards the end of the year and a half that she remained as a pupil
+at Roe Head, she received her first bad mark for an imperfect lesson.&nbsp;
+She had had a great quantity of Blair&rsquo;s &ldquo;Lectures on Belles
+Lettres&rdquo; to read; and she could not answer some of the questions
+upon it; Charlotte Bront&euml; had a bad mark.&nbsp; Miss W--- was sorry,
+and regretted that she had set Charlotte so long a task.&nbsp; Charlotte
+cried bitterly.&nbsp; But her school-fellows were more than sorry&mdash;they
+were indignant.&nbsp; They declared that the infliction of ever so slight
+a punishment on Charlotte Bront&euml; was unjust&mdash;for who had tried
+to do her duty like her?&mdash;and testified their feeling in a variety
+of ways, until Miss W---, who was in reality only too willing to pass
+over her good pupil&rsquo;s first fault, withdrew the bad mark; and
+the girls all returned to their allegiance except &ldquo;Mary,&rdquo;
+who took her own way during the week or two that remained of the half-year,
+choosing to consider that Miss W---, in giving Charlotte Bront&euml;
+so long a task, had forfeited her claim to obedience of the school regulations.</p>
+<p>The number of pupils was so small that the attendance to certain
+subjects at particular hours, common in larger schools, was not rigidly
+enforced.&nbsp; When the girls were ready with their lessons, they came
+to Miss W--- to say them.&nbsp; She had a remarkable knack of making
+them feel interested in whatever they had to learn.&nbsp; They set to
+their studies, not as to tasks or duties to be got through, but with
+a healthy desire and thirst for knowledge, of which she had managed
+to make them perceive the relishing savour.&nbsp; They did not leave
+off reading and learning as soon as the compulsory pressure of school
+was taken away.&nbsp; They had been taught to think, to analyse, to
+reject, to appreciate.&nbsp; Charlotte Bront&euml; was happy in the
+choice made for her of the second school to which she was sent.&nbsp;
+There was a robust freedom in the out-of-doors life of her companions.&nbsp;
+They played at merry games in the fields round the house: on Saturday
+half-holidays they went long scrambling walks down mysterious shady
+lanes, then climbing the uplands, and thus gaining extensive views over
+the country, about which so much had to be told, both of its past and
+present history.</p>
+<p>Miss W--- must have had in great perfection the French art, &ldquo;conter,&rdquo;
+to judge from her pupil&rsquo;s recollections of the tales she related
+during these long walks, of this old house, or that new mill, and of
+the states of society consequent on the changes involved by the suggestive
+dates of either building.&nbsp; She remembered the times when watchers
+or wakeners in the night heard the distant word of command, and the
+measured tramp of thousands of sad desperate men receiving a surreptitious
+military training, in preparation for some great day which they saw
+in their visions, when right should struggle with might and come off
+victorious: when the people of England, represented by the workers of
+Yorkshire, Lancashire, and Nottinghamshire, should make their voice
+heard in a terrible slogan, since their true and pitiful complaints
+could find no hearing in parliament.&nbsp; We forget, now-a-days, so
+rapid have been the changes for the better, how cruel was the condition
+of numbers of labourers at the close of the great Peninsular war.&nbsp;
+The half-ludicrous nature of some of their grievances has lingered on
+in tradition; the real intensity of their sufferings has become forgotten.&nbsp;
+They were maddened and desperate; and the country, in the opinion of
+many, seemed to be on the verge of a precipice, from which it was only
+saved by the prompt and resolute decision of a few in authority.&nbsp;
+Miss W--- spoke of those times; of the mysterious nightly drillings;
+of thousands on lonely moors; of the muttered threats of individuals
+too closely pressed upon by necessity to be prudent; of the overt acts,
+in which the burning of Cartwright&rsquo;s mill took a prominent place;
+and these things sank deep into the mind of one, at least, among her
+hearers.</p>
+<p>Mr. Cartwright was the owner of a factory called Rawfolds, in Liversedge,
+not beyond the distance of a walk from Roe Head.&nbsp; He had dared
+to employ machinery for the dressing of woollen cloth, which was an
+unpopular measure in 1812, when many other circumstances conspired to
+make the condition of the mill-hands unbearable from the pressure of
+starvation and misery.&nbsp; Mr. Cartwright was a very remarkable man,
+having, as I have been told, some foreign blood in him, the traces of
+which were very apparent in his tall figure, dark eyes and complexion,
+and singular, though gentlemanly bearing.&nbsp; At any rate he had been
+much abroad, and spoke French well, of itself a suspicious circumstance
+to the bigoted nationality of those days.&nbsp; Altogether he was an
+unpopular man, even before he took the last step of employing shears,
+instead of hands, to dress his wool.&nbsp; He was quite aware of his
+unpopularity, and of the probable consequences.&nbsp; He had his mill
+prepared for an assault.&nbsp; He took up his lodgings in it; and the
+doors were strongly barricaded at night.&nbsp; On every step of the
+stairs there was placed a roller, spiked with barbed points all round,
+so as to impede the ascent of the rioters, if they succeeded in forcing
+the doors.</p>
+<p>On the night of Saturday the 11th of April, 1812, the assault was
+made.&nbsp; Some hundreds of starving cloth-dressers assembled in the
+very field near Kirklees that sloped down from the house which Miss
+W--- afterwards inhabited, and were armed by their leaders with pistols,
+hatchets, and bludgeons, many of which had been extorted by the nightly
+bands that prowled about the country, from such inhabitants of lonely
+houses as had provided themselves with these means of self-defence.&nbsp;
+The silent sullen multitude marched in the dead of that spring-night
+to Rawfolds, and giving tongue with a great shout, roused Mr. Cartwright
+up to the knowledge that the long-expected attack was come.&nbsp; He
+was within walls, it is true; but against the fury of hundreds he had
+only four of his own workmen and five soldiers to assist him.&nbsp;
+These ten men, however, managed to keep up such a vigorous and well-directed
+fire of musketry that they defeated all the desperate attempts of the
+multitude outside to break down the doors, and force a way into the
+mill; and, after a conflict of twenty minutes, during which two of the
+assailants were killed and several wounded, they withdrew in confusion,
+leaving Mr. Cartwright master of the field, but so dizzy and exhausted,
+now the peril was past, that he forgot the nature of his defences, and
+injured his leg rather seriously by one of the spiked rollers, in attempting
+to go up his own staircase.&nbsp; His dwelling was near the factory.&nbsp;
+Some of the rioters vowed that, if he did not give in, they would leave
+this, and go to his house, and murder his wife and children.&nbsp; This
+was a terrible threat, for he had been obliged to leave his family with
+only one or two soldiers to defend them.&nbsp; Mrs. Cartwright knew
+what they had threatened; and on that dreadful night, hearing, as she
+thought, steps approaching, she snatched up her two infant children,
+and put them in a basket up the great chimney, common in old-fashioned
+Yorkshire houses.&nbsp; One of the two children who had been thus stowed
+away used to point out with pride, after she had grown up to woman&rsquo;s
+estate, the marks of musket shot, and the traces of gunpowder on the
+walls of her father&rsquo;s mill.&nbsp; He was the first that had offered
+any resistance to the progress of the &ldquo;Luddites,&rdquo; who had
+become by this time so numerous as almost to assume the character of
+an insurrectionary army.&nbsp; Mr. Cartwright&rsquo;s conduct was so
+much admired by the neighbouring mill-owners that they entered into
+a subscription for his benefit which amounted in the end to 3,000<i>l</i>.</p>
+<p>Not much more than a fortnight after this attack on Rawfolds, another
+manufacturer who employed the obnoxious machinery was shot down in broad
+daylight, as he was passing over Crossland Moor, which was skirted by
+a small plantation in which the murderers lay hidden.&nbsp; The readers
+of &ldquo;Shirley&rdquo; will recognise these circumstances, which were
+related to Miss Bront&euml; years after they occurred, but on the very
+spots where they took place, and by persons who remembered full well
+those terrible times of insecurity to life and property on the one hand,
+and of bitter starvation and blind ignorant despair on the other.</p>
+<p>Mr. Bront&euml; himself had been living amongst these very people
+in 1812, as he was then clergyman at Hartshead, not three miles from
+Rawfolds; and, as I have mentioned, it was in these perilous times that
+he began his custom of carrying a loaded pistol continually about with
+him.&nbsp; For not only his Tory politics, but his love and regard for
+the authority of the law, made him despise the cowardice of the surrounding
+magistrates, who, in their dread of the Luddites, refused to interfere
+so as to prevent the destruction of property.&nbsp; The clergy of the
+district were the bravest men by far.</p>
+<p>There was a Mr. Roberson of Heald&rsquo;s Hall, a friend of Mr. Bront&euml;&rsquo;s
+who has left a deep impression of himself on the public mind.&nbsp;
+He lived near Heckmondwike, a large, straggling, dirty village, not
+two miles from Roe Head.&nbsp; It was principally inhabited by blanket
+weavers, who worked in their own cottages; and Heald&rsquo;s Hall is
+the largest house in the village, of which Mr. Roberson was the vicar.&nbsp;
+At his own cost, he built a handsome church at Liversedge, on a hill
+opposite the one on which his house stood, which was the first attempt
+in the West Riding to meet the wants of the overgrown population, and
+made many personal sacrifices for his opinions, both religious and political,
+which were of the true old-fashioned Tory stamp.&nbsp; He hated everything
+which he fancied had a tendency towards anarchy.&nbsp; He was loyal
+in every fibre to Church and King; and would have proudly laid down
+his life, any day, for what he believed to be right and true.&nbsp;
+But he was a man of an imperial will, and by it he bore down opposition,
+till tradition represents him as having something grimly demoniac about
+him.&nbsp; He was intimate with Cartwright, and aware of the attack
+likely to be made on his mill; accordingly, it is said, he armed himself
+and his household, and was prepared to come to the rescue, in the event
+of a signal being given that aid was needed.&nbsp; Thus far is likely
+enough.&nbsp; Mr. Roberson had plenty of warlike spirit in him, man
+of peace though he was.</p>
+<p>But, in consequence of his having taken the unpopular side, exaggerations
+of his character linger as truth in the minds of the people; and a fabulous
+story is told of his forbidding any one to give water to the wounded
+Luddites, left in the mill-yard, when he rode in the next morning to
+congratulate his friend Cartwright on his successful defence.&nbsp;
+Moreover, this stern, fearless clergyman had the soldiers that were
+sent to defend the neighbourhood billeted at his house; and this deeply
+displeased the workpeople, who were to be intimidated by the red-coats.&nbsp;
+Although not a magistrate, he spared no pains to track out the Luddites
+concerned in the assassination I have mentioned; and was so successful
+in his acute unflinching energy, that it was believed he had been supernaturally
+aided; and the country people, stealing into the fields surrounding
+Heald&rsquo;s Hall on dusky winter evenings, years after this time,
+declared that through the windows they saw Parson Roberson dancing,
+in a strange red light, with black demons all whirling and eddying round
+him.&nbsp; He kept a large boys&rsquo; school; and made himself both
+respected and dreaded by his pupils.&nbsp; He added a grim kind of humour
+to his strength of will; and the former quality suggested to his fancy
+strange out-of-the-way kinds of punishment for any refractory pupils:
+for instance, he made them stand on one leg in a corner of the schoolroom,
+holding a heavy book in each hand; and once, when a boy had run away
+home, he followed him on horseback, reclaimed him from his parents,
+and, tying him by a rope to the stirrup of his saddle, made him run
+alongside of his horse for the many miles they had to traverse before
+reaching Heald&rsquo;s Hall.</p>
+<p>One other illustration of his character may be given.&nbsp; He discovered
+that his servant Betty had &ldquo;a follower;&rdquo; and, watching his
+time till Richard was found in the kitchen, he ordered him into the
+dining-room, where the pupils were all assembled.&nbsp; He then questioned
+Richard whether he had come after Betty; and on his confessing the truth,
+Mr. Roberson gave the word, &ldquo;Off with him, lads, to the pump!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The poor lover was dragged to the court-yard, and the pump set to play
+upon him; and, between every drenching, the question was put to him,
+&ldquo;Will you promise not to come after Betty again?&rdquo;&nbsp;
+For a long time Richard bravely refused to give in; when &ldquo;Pump
+again, lads!&rdquo; was the order.&nbsp; But, at last, the poor soaked
+&ldquo;follower&rdquo; was forced to yield, and renounce his Betty.</p>
+<p>The Yorkshire character of Mr. Roberson would be incomplete if I
+did not mention his fondness for horses.&nbsp; He lived to be a very
+old man, dying some time nearer to 1840 than 1830; and even after he
+was eighty years of age, he took great delight in breaking refractory
+steeds; if necessary, he would sit motionless on their backs for half-an-hour
+or more to bring them to.&nbsp; There is a story current that once,
+in a passion, he shot his wife&rsquo;s favourite horse, and buried it
+near a quarry, where the ground, some years after, miraculously opened
+and displayed the skeleton; but the real fact is, that it was an act
+of humanity to put a poor old horse out of misery; and that, to spare
+it pain, he shot it with his own hands, and buried it where, the ground
+sinking afterwards by the working of a coal-pit, the bones came to light.&nbsp;
+The traditional colouring shows the animus with which his memory is
+regarded by one set of people.&nbsp; By another, the neighbouring clergy,
+who remember him riding, in his old age, down the hill on which his
+house stood, upon his strong white horse&mdash;his bearing proud and
+dignified, his shovel hat bent over and shadowing his keen eagle eyes&mdash;going
+to his Sunday duty like a faithful soldier that dies in harness&mdash;who
+can appreciate his loyalty to conscience, his sacrifices to duty, and
+his stand by his religion&mdash;his memory is venerated.&nbsp; In his
+extreme old age, a rubric meeting was held, at which his clerical brethren
+gladly subscribed to present him with a testimonial of their deep respect
+and regard.</p>
+<p>This is a specimen of the strong character not seldom manifested
+by the Yorkshire clergy of the Established Church.&nbsp; Mr. Roberson
+was a friend of Charlotte Bront&euml;&rsquo;s father; lived within a
+couple of miles of Roe Head while she was at school there; and was deeply
+engaged in transactions, the memory of which was yet recent when she
+heard of them, and of the part which he had had in them.</p>
+<p>I may now say a little on the character of the Dissenting population
+immediately surrounding Roe Head; for the &ldquo;Tory and clergyman&rsquo;s
+daughter,&rdquo; &ldquo;taking interest in politics ever since she was
+five years old,&rdquo; and holding frequent discussions with such of
+the girls as were Dissenters and Radicals, was sure to have made herself
+as much acquainted as she could with the condition of those to whom
+she was opposed in opinion.</p>
+<p>The bulk of the population were Dissenters, principally Independents.&nbsp;
+In the village of Heckmondwike, at one end of which Roe Head is situated,
+there were two large chapels belonging to that denomination, and one
+to the Methodists, all of which were well filled two or three times
+on a Sunday, besides having various prayer-meetings, fully attended,
+on week-days.&nbsp; The inhabitants were a chapel-going people, very
+critical about the doctrine of their sermons, tyrannical to their ministers,
+and violent Radicals in politics.&nbsp; A friend, well acquainted with
+the place when Charlotte Bront&euml; was at school, has described some
+events which occurred then among them:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A scene, which took place at the Lower Chapel at Heckmondwike,
+will give you some idea of the people at that time.&nbsp; When a newly-married
+couple made their appearance at chapel, it was the custom to sing the
+Wedding Anthem, just after the last prayer, and as the congregation
+was quitting the chapel.&nbsp; The band of singers who performed this
+ceremony expected to have money given them, and often passed the following
+night in drinking; at least, so said the minister of the place; and
+he determined to put an end to this custom.&nbsp; In this he was supported
+by many members of the chapel and congregation; but so strong was the
+democratic element, that he met with the most violent opposition, and
+was often insulted when he went into the street.&nbsp; A bride was expected
+to make her first appearance, and the minister told the singers not
+to perform the anthem.&nbsp; On their declaring they would, he had the
+large pew which they usually occupied locked; they broke it open: from
+the pulpit he told the congregation that, instead of their singing a
+hymn, he would read a chapter; hardly had he uttered the first word,
+before up rose the singers, headed by a tall, fierce-looking weaver,
+who gave out a hymn, and all sang it at the very top of their voices,
+aided by those of their friends who were in the chapel.&nbsp; Those
+who disapproved of the conduct of the singers, and sided with the minister,
+remained seated till the hymn was finished.&nbsp; Then he gave out the
+chapter again, read it, and preached.&nbsp; He was just about to conclude
+with prayer, when up started the singers and screamed forth another
+hymn.&nbsp; These disgraceful scenes were continued for many weeks,
+and so violent was the feeling, that the different parties could hardly
+keep from blows as they came through the chapel-yard.&nbsp; The minister,
+at last, left the place, and along with him went many of the most temperate
+and respectable part of the congregation, and the singers remained triumphant.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I believe that there was such a violent contest respecting
+the choice of a pastor, about this time, in the Upper Chapel at Heckmondwike,
+that the Riot Act had to be read at a church-meeting.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Certainly, the <i>soi-disant</i> Christians who forcibly ejected
+Mr. Redhead at Haworth, ten or twelve years before, held a very heathen
+brotherhood with the <i>soi-disant</i> Christians of Heckmondwike; though
+the one set might be called members of the Church of England and the
+other Dissenters.</p>
+<p>The letter from which I have taken the above extract relates throughout
+to the immediate neighbourhood of the place where Charlotte Bront&euml;
+spent her school-days, and describes things as they existed at that
+very time.&nbsp; The writer says,&mdash;&ldquo;Having been accustomed
+to the respectful manners of the lower orders in the agricultural districts,
+I was at first, much disgusted and somewhat alarmed at the great freedom
+displayed by the working classes of Heckmondwike and Gomersall to those
+in a station above them.&nbsp; The term &lsquo;lass,&rsquo; was as freely
+applied to any young lady, as the word &lsquo;wench&rsquo; is in Lancashire.&nbsp;
+The extremely untidy appearance of the villagers shocked me not a little,
+though I must do the housewives the justice to say that the cottages
+themselves were not dirty, and had an air of rough plenty about them
+(except when trade was bad), that I had not been accustomed to see in
+the farming districts.&nbsp; The heap of coals on one side of the house-door,
+and the brewing tubs on the other, and the frequent perfume of malt
+and hops as you walked along, proved that fire and &lsquo;home-brewed&rsquo;
+were to be found at almost every man&rsquo;s hearth.&nbsp; Nor was hospitality,
+one of the main virtues of Yorkshire, wanting.&nbsp; Oat-cake, cheese,
+and beer were freely pressed upon the visitor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There used to be a yearly festival, half-religious, half social,
+held at Heckmondwike, called &lsquo;The Lecture.&rsquo;&nbsp; I fancy
+it had come down from the times of the Nonconformists.&nbsp; A sermon
+was preached by some stranger at the Lower Chapel, on a week-day evening,
+and the next day, two sermons in succession were delivered at the Upper
+Chapel.&nbsp; Of course, the service was a very long one, and as the
+time was June, and the weather often hot, it used to be regarded by
+myself and my companions as no pleasurable way of passing the morning.&nbsp;
+The rest of the day was spent in social enjoyment; great numbers of
+strangers flocked to the place; booths were erected for the sale of
+toys and gingerbread (a sort of &lsquo;Holy Fair&rsquo;); and the cottages,
+having had a little extra paint and white-washing, assumed quite a holiday
+look.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The village of Gomersall&rdquo; (where Charlotte Bront&euml;&rsquo;s
+friend &ldquo;Mary&rdquo; lived with her family), &ldquo;which was a
+much prettier place than Heckmondwike, contained a strange-looking cottage,
+built of rough unhewn stones, many of them projecting considerably,
+with uncouth heads and grinning faces carved upon them; and upon a stone
+above the door was cut, in large letters, &lsquo;SPITE HALL.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+It was erected by a man in the village, opposite to the house of his
+enemy, who had just finished for himself a good house, commanding a
+beautiful view down the valley, which this hideous building quite shut
+out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Fearless&mdash;because this people were quite familiar to all of
+them&mdash;amidst such a population, lived and walked the gentle Miss
+W---&rsquo;s eight or nine pupils.&nbsp; She herself was born and bred
+among this rough, strong, fierce set, and knew the depth of goodness
+and loyalty that lay beneath their wild manners and insubordinate ways.&nbsp;
+And the girls talked of the little world around them, as if it were
+the only world that was; and had their opinions and their parties, and
+their fierce discussions like their elders&mdash;possibly, their betters.&nbsp;
+And among them, beloved and respected by all, laughed at occasionally
+by a few, but always to her face&mdash;lived, for a year and a half,
+the plain, short-sighted, oddly-dressed, studious little girl they called
+Charlotte Bront&euml;.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+<p>Miss Bront&euml; left Roe Head in 1832, having won the affectionate
+regard both of her teacher and her school-fellows, and having formed
+there the two fast friendships which lasted her whole life long; the
+one with &ldquo;Mary,&rdquo; who has not kept her letters; the other
+with &ldquo;E.,&rdquo; who has kindly entrusted me with a large portion
+of Miss Bront&euml;&rsquo;s correspondence with her.&nbsp; This she
+has been induced to do by her knowledge of the urgent desire on the
+part of Mr. Bront&euml; that the life of his daughter should be written,
+and in compliance with a request from her husband that I should be permitted
+to have the use of these letters, without which such a task could be
+but very imperfectly executed.&nbsp; In order to shield this friend,
+however, from any blame or misconstruction, it is only right to state
+that, before granting me this privilege, she throughout most carefully
+and completely effaced the names of the persons and places which occurred
+in them; and also that such information as I have obtained from her
+bears reference solely to Miss Bront&euml; and her sisters, and not
+to any other individuals whom I may find it necessary to allude to in
+connection with them.</p>
+<p>In looking over the earlier portion of this correspondence, I am
+struck afresh by the absence of hope, which formed such a strong characteristic
+in Charlotte.&nbsp; At an age when girls, in general, look forward to
+an eternal duration of such feelings as they or their friends entertain,
+and can therefore see no hindrance to the fulfilment of any engagements
+dependent on the future state of the affections, she is surprised that
+&ldquo;E.&rdquo; keeps her promise to write.&nbsp; In after-life, I
+was painfully impressed with the fact, that Miss Bront&euml; never dared
+to allow herself to look forward with hope; that she had no confidence
+in the future; and I thought, when I heard of the sorrowful years she
+had passed through, that it had been this this pressure of grief which
+had crushed all buoyancy of expectation out of her.&nbsp; But it appears
+from the letters, that it must have been, so to speak, constitutional;
+or, perhaps, the deep pang of losing her two elder sisters combined
+with a permanent state of bodily weakness in producing her hopelessness.&nbsp;
+If her trust in God had been less strong, she would have given way to
+unbounded anxiety, at many a period of her life.&nbsp; As it was, we
+shall see, she made a great and successful effort to leave &ldquo;her
+times in His hands.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After her return home, she employed herself in teaching her sisters,
+over whom she had had superior advantages.&nbsp; She writes thus, July
+21st, 1832, of her course of life at the parsonage:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An account of one day is an account of all.&nbsp; In the morning,
+from nine o&rsquo;clock till half-past twelve, I instruct my sisters,
+and draw; then we walk till dinner-time.&nbsp; After dinner I sew till
+tea-time, and after tea I either write, read, or do a little fancy-work,
+or draw, as I please.&nbsp; Thus, in one delightful, though somewhat
+monotonous course, my life is passed.&nbsp; I have been only out twice
+to tea since I came home.&nbsp; We are expecting company this afternoon,
+and on Tuesday next we shall have all the female teachers of the Sunday-school
+to tea.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I may here introduce a quotation from a letter which I have received
+from &ldquo;Mary&rdquo; since the publication of the previous editions
+of this memoir.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Soon after leaving school she admitted reading something of
+Cobbett&rsquo;s.&nbsp; &lsquo;She did not like him,&rsquo; she said;
+&lsquo;but all was fish that came to her net.&rsquo;&nbsp; At this time
+she wrote to me that reading and drawing were the only amusements she
+had, and that her supply of books was very small in proportion to her
+wants.&nbsp; She never spoke of her aunt.&nbsp; When I saw Miss Branwell
+she was a very precise person, and looked very odd, because her dress,
+&amp;c., was so utterly out of fashion.&nbsp; She corrected one of us
+once for using the word &lsquo;spit&rsquo; or &lsquo;spitting.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+She made a great favourite of Branwell.&nbsp; She made her nieces sew,
+with purpose or without, and as far as possible discouraged any other
+culture.&nbsp; She used to keep the girls sewing charity clothing, and
+maintained to me that it was not for the good of the recipients, but
+of the sewers.&nbsp; &lsquo;It was proper for them to do it,&rsquo;
+she said.&nbsp; Charlotte never was &lsquo;in wild excitement&rsquo;
+that I know of.&nbsp; When in health she used to talk better, and indeed
+when in low spirits never spoke at all.&nbsp; She needed her best spirits
+to say what was in her heart, for at other times she had not courage.&nbsp;
+She never gave decided opinions at such times . . .</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Charlotte said she could get on with any one who had a bump
+at the top of their heads (meaning conscientiousness).&nbsp; I found
+that I seldom differed from her, except that she was far too tolerant
+of stupid people, if they had a grain of kindness in them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was about this time that Mr. Bront&euml; provided his children
+with a teacher in drawing, who turned out to be a man of considerable
+talent, but very little principle.&nbsp; Although they never attained
+to anything like proficiency, they took great interest in acquiring
+this art; evidently, from an instinctive desire to express their powerful
+imaginations in visible forms.&nbsp; Charlotte told me, that at this
+period of her life, drawing, and walking out with her sisters, formed
+the two great pleasures and relaxations of her day.</p>
+<p>The three girls used to walk upwards toward the &ldquo;purple-black&rdquo;
+moors, the sweeping surface of which was broken by here and there a
+stone-quarry; and if they had strength and time to go far enough, they
+reached a waterfall, where the beck fell over some rocks into the &ldquo;bottom.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+They seldom went downwards through the village.&nbsp; They were shy
+of meeting even familiar faces, and were scrupulous about entering the
+house of the very poorest uninvited. They were steady teachers at the
+Sunday-School, a habit which Charlotte kept up very faithfully, even
+after she was left alone; but they never faced their kind voluntary,
+and always preferred the solitude and freedom of the moors.</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>In the September of this year, Charlotte went to pay her first visit
+to her friend &ldquo;E.&rdquo;&nbsp; It took her into the neighbourhood
+of Roe Head, and brought her into pleasant contact with many of her
+old school-fellows.&nbsp; After this visit she and her friend seem to
+have agreed to correspond in French, for the sake of improvement in
+the language.&nbsp; But this improvement could not be great, when it
+could only amount to a greater familiarity with dictionary words, and
+when there was no one to explain to them that a verbal translation of
+English idioms hardly constituted French composition; but the effort
+was laudable, and of itself shows how willing they both were to carry
+on the education which they had begun under Miss W-.&nbsp;&nbsp; I will
+give an extract which, whatever may be thought of the language, is graphic
+enough, and presents us with a happy little family picture; the eldest
+sister returning home to the two younger, after a fortnight&rsquo;s
+absence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;J&rsquo;arrivait &agrave; Haworth en parfaite sauvet&eacute;
+sans le moindre accident ou malheur.&nbsp; Mes petites s&oelig;urs couraient
+hors de la maison pour me rencontrer aussit&ocirc;t que la voiture se
+fit voir, et elles m&rsquo;embrassaient avec autant d&rsquo;empressement
+et de plaisir comme si j&rsquo;avais &eacute;t&eacute; absente pour
+plus d&rsquo;an.&nbsp; Mon Papa, ma Tante, et le monsieur dent men fr&egrave;re
+avoit parl&eacute;, furent tous assembl&eacute;s dans le Salon, et en
+peu de temps je m&rsquo;y rendis aussi.&nbsp; C&rsquo;est souvent l&rsquo;ordre
+du Ciel que quand on a perdu un plaisir il y en a un autre pr&ecirc;t
+&agrave; prendre sa place.&nbsp; Ainsi je venois de partir de tr&egrave;s-chers
+amis, mais tout &agrave; l&rsquo;heure je revins &agrave; des parens
+aussi chers et bon dans le moment.&nbsp; M&ecirc;me que vous me perdiez
+(ose-je croire que mon d&eacute;part vous &eacute;tait un chagrin?)
+vous attendites l&rsquo;arriv&eacute;e de votre fr&egrave;re, et de
+votre s&oelig;ur.&nbsp; J&rsquo;ai donn&eacute; &agrave; mes s&oelig;urs
+les pommes que vous leur envoyiez avec tant de bont&eacute;; elles disent
+qu&rsquo;elles sont s&ucirc;r que Mademoiselle E. est tr&egrave;s-aimable
+et bonne; l&rsquo;une et l&rsquo;autre sont extr&ecirc;mement impatientes
+de vous voir; j&rsquo;esp&egrave;re qu&rsquo;en peu de mois elles auront
+ce plaisir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But it was some time yet before the friends could meet, and meanwhile
+they agreed to correspond once a month.&nbsp; There were no events to
+chronicle in the Haworth letters.&nbsp; Quiet days, occupied in reaching,
+and feminine occupations in the house, did not present much to write
+about; and Charlotte was naturally driven to criticise books.</p>
+<p>Of these there were many in different plights, and according to their
+plight, kept in different places.&nbsp; The well-bound were ranged in
+the sanctuary of Mr. Bront&euml;&rsquo;s study; but the purchase of
+books was a necessary luxury to him, but as it was often a choice between
+binding an old one, or buying a new one, the familiar volume, which
+had been hungrily read by all the members of the family, was sometimes
+in such a condition that the bedroom shelf was considered its fitting
+place.&nbsp; Up and down the house were to be found many standard works
+of a solid kind.&nbsp; Sir Walter Scott&rsquo;s writings, Wordsworth&rsquo;s
+and Southey&rsquo;s poems were among the lighter literature; while,
+as having a character of their own&mdash;earnest, wild, and occasionally
+fanatical&mdash;may be named some of the books which came from the Branwell
+side of the family&mdash;from the Cornish followers of the saintly John
+Wesley&mdash;and which are touched on in the account of the works to
+which Caroline Helstone had access in &ldquo;Shirley:&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Some
+venerable Lady&rsquo;s Magazines, that had once performed a voyage with
+their owner, and undergone a storm&rdquo;&mdash;(possibly part of the
+relics of Mrs. Bront&euml;&rsquo;s possessions, contained in the ship
+wrecked on the coast of Cornwall)&mdash;&ldquo;and whose pages were
+stained with salt water; some mad Methodist Magazines full of miracles
+and apparitions, and preternatural warnings, ominous dreams, and frenzied
+fanaticisms; and the equally mad letters of Mrs. Elizabeth Rowe from
+the Dead to the Living.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bront&euml; encouraged a taste for reading in his girls; and
+though Miss Branwell kept it in due bounds, by the variety of household
+occupations, in which she expected them not merely to take a part, but
+to become proficients, thereby occupying regularly a good portion of
+every day, they were allowed to get books from the circulating library
+at Keighley; and many a happy walk, up those long four miles, must they
+have had, burdened with some new book, into which they peeped as they
+hurried home.&nbsp; Not that the books were what would generally be
+called new; in the beginning of 1833, the two friends seem almost simultaneously
+to have fallen upon &ldquo;Kenilworth,&rdquo; and Charlotte writes as
+follows about it:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am glad you like &lsquo;Kenilworth;&rsquo; it is certainly
+more resembling a romance than a novel: in my opinion, one of the most
+interesting works that ever emanated from the great Sir Walter&rsquo;s
+pen.&nbsp; Varney is certainly the personification of consummate villainy;
+and in the delineation of his dark and profoundly artful mind, Scott
+exhibits a wonderful knowledge of human nature, as well as a surprising
+skill in embodying his perceptions, so as to enable others to become
+participators in that knowledge.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Commonplace as this extract may seem, it is noteworthy on two or
+three accounts: in the first place, instead of discussing the plot or
+story, she analyses the character of Varney; and next, she, knowing
+nothing of the world, both from her youth and her isolated position,
+has yet been so accustomed to hear &ldquo;human nature&rdquo; distrusted,
+as to receive the notion of intense and artful villainy without surprise.</p>
+<p>What was formal and set in her way of writing to &ldquo;E.&rdquo;
+diminished as their personal acquaintance increased, and as each came
+to know the home of the other; so that small details concerning people
+and places had their interest and their significance.&nbsp; In the summer
+of 1833, she wrote to invite her friend to come and pay her a visit.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Aunt thought it would be better&rdquo; (she says) &ldquo;to defer
+it until about the middle of summer, as the winter, and even the spring
+seasons, are remarkably cold and bleak among our mountains.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The first impression made on the visitor by the sisters of her school-friend
+was, that Emily was a tall, long-armed girl, more fully grown than her
+elder sister; extremely reserved in manner. I distinguish reserve from
+shyness, because I imagine shyness would please, if it knew how; whereas,
+reserve is indifferent whether it pleases or not.&nbsp; Anne, like her
+eldest sister, was shy; Emily was reserved.</p>
+<p>Branwell was rather a handsome boy, with &ldquo;tawny&rdquo; hair,
+to use Miss Bront&euml;&rsquo;s phrase for a more obnoxious colour.&nbsp;
+All were very clever, original, and utterly different to any people
+or family &ldquo;E.&rdquo; had ever seen before.&nbsp; But, on the whole,
+it was a happy visit to all parties.&nbsp; Charlotte says, in writing
+to &ldquo;E.,&rdquo; just after her return home&mdash;&ldquo;Were I
+to tell you of the impression you have made on every one here, you would
+accuse me of flattery. Papa and aunt are continually adducing you as
+an example for me to shape my actions and behaviour by.&nbsp; Emily
+and Anne say &lsquo;they never saw any one they liked so well as you.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+And Tabby, whom you have absolutely fascinated, talks a great deal more
+nonsense about your ladyship than I care to repeat.&nbsp; It is now
+so dark that, notwithstanding the singular property of seeing in the
+night-time, which the young ladies at Roe Head used to attribute to
+me, I can scribble no longer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To a visitor at the parsonage, it was a great thing to have Tabby&rsquo;s
+good word.&nbsp; She had a Yorkshire keenness of perception into character,
+and it was not everybody she liked.</p>
+<p>Haworth is built with an utter disregard of all sanitary conditions:
+the great old churchyard lies above all the houses, and it is terrible
+to think how the very water-springs of the pumps below must be poisoned.&nbsp;
+But this winter of 1833-4 was particularly wet and rainy, and there
+were an unusual number of deaths in the village.&nbsp; A dreary season
+it was to the family in the parsonage: their usual walks obstructed
+by the spongy state of the moors&mdash;the passing and funeral bells
+so frequently tolling, and filling the heavy air with their mournful
+sound&mdash;and, when they were still, the &ldquo;chip, chip,&rdquo;
+of the mason, as he cut the grave-stones in a shed close by.&nbsp; In
+many, living, as it were, in a churchyard, and with all the sights and
+sounds connected with the last offices to the dead things of everyday
+occurrence, the very familiarity would have bred indifference.&nbsp;
+But it was otherwise with Charlotte Bront&euml;.&nbsp; One of her friends
+says:&mdash;&ldquo;I have seen her turn pale and feel faint when, in
+Hartshead church, some one accidentally remarked that we were walking
+over graves. Charlotte was certainly afraid of death.&nbsp; Not only
+of dead bodies, or dying people.&nbsp; She dreaded it as something horrible.&nbsp;
+She thought we did not know how long the &lsquo;moment of dissolution&rsquo;
+might really be, or how terrible.&nbsp; This was just such a terror
+as only hypochondriacs can provide for themselves.&nbsp; She told me
+long ago that a misfortune was often preceded by the dream frequently
+repeated which she gives to &lsquo;Jane Eyre,&rsquo; of carrying a little
+wailing child, and being unable to still it.&nbsp; She described herself
+as having the most painful sense of pity for the little thing, lying
+<i>inert</i>, as sick children do, while she walked about in some gloomy
+place with it, such as the aisle of Haworth Church. The misfortunes
+she mentioned were not always to herself.&nbsp; She thought such sensitiveness
+to omens was like the cholera, present to susceptible people,&mdash;some
+feeling more, some less.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>About the beginning of 1834, &ldquo;E.&rdquo; went to London for
+the first time.&nbsp; The idea of her friend&rsquo;s visit seems to
+have stirred Charlotte strangely.&nbsp; She appears to have formed her
+notions of its probable consequences from some of the papers in the
+&ldquo;British Essayists,&rdquo; &ldquo;The Rambler,&rdquo; &ldquo;The
+Mirror,&rdquo; or &ldquo;The Lounger,&rdquo; which may have been among
+the English classics on the parsonage bookshelves; for she evidently
+imagines that an entire change of character for the worse is the usual
+effect of a visit to &ldquo;the great metropolis,&rdquo; and is delighted
+to find that &ldquo;E.&rdquo; is &ldquo;E.&rdquo; still.&nbsp; And,
+as her faith in her friend&rsquo;s stability is restored, her own imagination
+is deeply moved by the idea of what great wonders are to be seen in
+that vast and famous city.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Haworth, February 20th, 1834.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your letter gave me real and heartfelt pleasure, mingled with
+no small share of astonishment.&nbsp; Mary had previously informed me
+of your departure for London, and I had not ventured to calculate on
+any communication from you while surrounded by the splendours and novelties
+of that great city, which has been called the mercantile metropolis
+of Europe.&nbsp; Judging from human nature, I thought that a little
+country girl, for the first time in a situation so well calculated to
+excite curiosity, and to distract attention, would lose all remembrance,
+for a time at least, of distant and familiar objects, and give herself
+up entirely to the fascination of those scenes which were then presented
+to her view.&nbsp; Your kind, interesting, and most welcome epistle
+showed me, however, that I had been both mistaken and uncharitable in
+these suppositions.&nbsp; I was greatly amused at the tone of nonchalance
+which you assumed, while treating of London and its wonders.&nbsp; Did
+you not feel awed while gazing at St. Paul&rsquo;s and Westminster Abbey?&nbsp;
+Had you no feeling of intense and ardent interest, when in St. James&rsquo;s
+you saw the palace where so many of England&rsquo;s kings have held
+their courts, and beheld the representations of their persons on the
+walls?&nbsp; You should not be too much afraid of appearing <i>country-bred</i>;
+the magnificence of London has drawn exclamations of astonishment from
+travelled men, experienced in the world, its wonders and beauties.&nbsp;
+Have you yet seen anything of the great personages whom the sitting
+of Parliament now detains in London&mdash;the Duke of Wellington, Sir
+Robert Peel, Earl Grey, Mr. Stanley, Mr. O&rsquo;Connell?&nbsp; If I
+were you, I would not be too anxious to spend my time in reading whilst
+in town.&nbsp; Make use of your own eyes for the purposes of observation
+now, and, for a time at least, lay aside the spectacles with which authors
+would furnish us.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In a postscript she adds:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Will you be kind enough to inform me of the number
+of performers in the King&rsquo;s military band?&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>And in something of the same strain she writes on</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;June 19th.<br />
+&ldquo;My own Dear E.,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I may rightfully and truly call you so now.&nbsp; You <i>have</i>
+returned or <i>are</i> returning from London&mdash;from the great city
+which is to me as apocryphal as Babylon, or Nineveh, or ancient Rome.&nbsp;
+You are withdrawing from the world (as it is called), and bringing with
+you&mdash;if your letters enable me to form a correct judgment&mdash;a
+heart as unsophisticated, as natural, as true, as that you carried there.&nbsp;
+I am slow, <i>very</i> slow, to believe the protestations of another;
+I know my own sentiments, I can read my own mind, but the minds of the
+rest of man and woman kind are to me sealed volumes, hieroglyphical
+scrolls, which I cannot easily either unseal or decipher.&nbsp; Yet
+time, careful study, long acquaintance, overcome most difficulties;
+and, in your case, I think they have succeeded well in bringing to light
+and construing that hidden language, whose turnings, windings, inconsistencies,
+and obscurities, so frequently baffle the researches of the honest observer
+of human nature . . . I am truly grateful for your mindfulness of so
+obscure a person as myself, and I hope the pleasure is not altogether
+selfish; I trust it is partly derived from the consciousness that my
+friend&rsquo;s character is of a higher, a more steadfast order than
+I was once perfectly aware of.&nbsp; Few girls would have done as you
+have done&mdash;would have beheld the glare, and glitter, and dazzling
+display of London with dispositions so unchanged, heart so uncontaminated.&nbsp;
+I see no affectation in your letters, no trifling, no frivolous contempt
+of plain, and weak admiration of showy persons and things.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In these days of cheap railway trips, we may smile at the idea of
+a short visit to London having any great effect upon the character,
+whatever it may have upon the intellect.&nbsp; But her London&mdash;her
+great apocryphal city&mdash;was the &ldquo;town&rdquo; of a century
+before, to which giddy daughters dragged unwilling papas, or went with
+injudicious friends, to the detriment of all their better qualities,
+and sometimes to the ruin of their fortunes; it was the Vanity Fair
+of the &ldquo;Pilgrim&rsquo;s Progress&rdquo; to her.</p>
+<p>But see the just and admirable sense with which she can treat a subject
+of which she is able to overlook all the bearings.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Haworth, July 4th, 1834.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In your last, you request me to tell you of your faults.&nbsp;
+Now, really, how can you be so foolish!&nbsp; I <i>won&rsquo;t</i> tell
+you of your faults, because I don&rsquo;t know them.&nbsp; What a creature
+would that be, who, after receiving an affectionate and kind letter
+from a beloved friend, should sit down and write a catalogue of defects
+by way of answer!&nbsp; Imagine me doing so, and then consider what
+epithets you would bestow on me.&nbsp; Conceited, dogmatical, hypocritical,
+little humbug, I should think, would be the mildest. Why, child!&nbsp;
+I&rsquo;ve neither time nor inclination to reflect on your <i>faults</i>
+when you are so far from me, and when, besides, kind letters and presents,
+and so forth, are continually bringing forth your goodness in the most
+prominent light.&nbsp; Then, too, there are judicious relations always
+round you, who can much better discharge that unpleasant office.&nbsp;
+I have no doubt their advice is completely at your service; why then
+should I intrude mine?&nbsp; If you will not hear them, it will be vain
+though one should rise from the dead to instruct you.&nbsp; Let us have
+no more nonsense, if you love me.&nbsp; Mr. --- is going to be married,
+is he?&nbsp; Well, his wife elect appeared to me to be a clever and
+amiable lady, as far as I could judge from the little I saw of her,
+and from your account. Now to that flattering sentence must I tack on
+a list of her faults?&nbsp; You say it is in contemplation for you to
+leave ---.&nbsp; I am sorry for it.&nbsp; --- is a pleasant spot, one
+of the old family halls of England, surrounded by lawn and woodland,
+speaking of past times, and suggesting (to me at least) happy feelings.&nbsp;
+M. thought you grown less, did she?&nbsp; I am not grown a bit, but
+as short and dumpy as ever.&nbsp; You ask me to recommend you some books
+for your perusal. I will do so in as few words as I can.&nbsp; If you
+like poetry, let it be first-rate; Milton, Shakspeare, Thomson, Goldsmith,
+Pope (if you will, though I don&rsquo;t admire him), Scott, Byron, Campbell,
+Wordsworth, and Southey.&nbsp; Now don&rsquo;t be startled at the names
+of Shakspeare and Byron.&nbsp; Both these were great men, and their
+works are like themselves.&nbsp; You will know how to choose the good,
+and to avoid the evil; the finest passages are always the purest, the
+bad are invariably revolting; you will never wish to read them over
+twice.&nbsp; Omit the comedies of Shakspeare, and the Don Juan, perhaps
+the Cain, of Byron, though the latter is a magnificent poem, and read
+the rest fearlessly; that must indeed be a depraved mind which can gather
+evil from Henry VIII., from Richard III., from Macbeth, and Hamlet,
+and Julius C&aelig;sar.&nbsp; Scott&rsquo;s sweet, wild, romantic poetry
+can do you no harm.&nbsp; Nor can Wordsworth&rsquo;s, nor Campbell&rsquo;s,
+nor Southey&rsquo;s&mdash;the greatest part at least of his; some is
+certainly objectionable.&nbsp; For history, read Hume, Rollin, and the
+Universal History, if you can; I never did.&nbsp; For fiction, read
+Scott alone; all novels after his are worthless.&nbsp; For biography,
+read Johnson&rsquo;s Lives of the Poets, Boswell&rsquo;s Life of Johnson,
+Southey&rsquo;s Life of Nelson, Lockhart&rsquo;s Life of Burns, Moore&rsquo;s
+Life of Sheridan, Moore&rsquo;s Life of Byron, Wolfe&rsquo;s Remains.&nbsp;
+For natural history, read Bewick and Audubon, and Goldsmith and White&rsquo;s
+history of Selborne.&nbsp; For divinity, your brother will advise you
+there.&nbsp; I can only say, adhere to standard authors, and avoid novelty.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>From this list, we see that she must have had a good range of books
+from which to choose her own reading.&nbsp; It is evident, that the
+womanly consciences of these two correspondents were anxiously alive
+to many questions discussed among the stricter religionists. The morality
+of Shakspeare needed the confirmation of Charlotte&rsquo;s opinion to
+the sensitive &ldquo;E.;&rdquo; and a little later, she inquired whether
+dancing was objectionable, when indulged in for an hour or two in parties
+of boys and girls.&nbsp; Charlotte replies, &ldquo;I should hesitate
+to express a difference of opinion from Mr. ---, or from your excellent
+sister, but really the matter seems to me to stand thus.&nbsp; It is
+allowed on all hands, that the sin of dancing consists not in the mere
+action of &lsquo;shaking the shanks&rsquo; (as the Scotch say), but
+in the consequences that usually attend it; namely, frivolity and waste
+of time; when it is used only, as in the case you state, for the exercise
+and amusement of an hour among young people (who surely may without
+any breach of God&rsquo;s commandments be allowed a little light-heartedness),
+these consequences cannot follow.&nbsp; Ergo (according to my manner
+of arguing), the amusement is at such times perfectly innocent.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Although the distance between Haworth and B--- was but seventeen
+miles, it was difficult to go straight from the one to the other without
+hiring a gig or vehicle of some kind for the journey. Hence a visit
+from Charlotte required a good deal of pre-arrangement.&nbsp; <i>The</i>
+Haworth gig was not always to be had; and Mr. Bront&euml; was often
+unwilling to fall into any arrangement for meeting at Bradford or other
+places, which would occasion trouble to others.&nbsp; The whole family
+had an ample share of that sensitive pride which led them to dread incurring
+obligations, and to fear &ldquo;outstaying their welcome&rdquo; when
+on any visit.&nbsp; I am not sure whether Mr. Bront&euml; did not consider
+distrust of others as a part of that knowledge of human nature on which
+he piqued himself.&nbsp; His precepts to this effect, combined with
+Charlotte&rsquo;s lack of hope, made her always fearful of loving too
+much; of wearying the objects of her affection; and thus she was often
+trying to restrain her warm feelings, and was ever chary of that presence
+so invariably welcome to her true friends.&nbsp; According to this mode
+of acting, when she was invited for a month, she stayed but a fortnight
+amidst &ldquo;E.&rsquo;s&rdquo; family, to whom every visit only endeared
+her the more, and by whom she was received with that kind of quiet gladness
+with which they would have greeted a sister.</p>
+<p>She still kept up her childish interest in politics.&nbsp; In March,
+1835, she writes: &ldquo;What do you think of the course politics are
+taking?&nbsp; I make this enquiry, because I now think you take a wholesome
+interest in the matter; formerly you did not care greatly about it.&nbsp;
+B., you see, is triumphant.&nbsp; Wretch!&nbsp; I am a hearty hater,
+and if there is any one I thoroughly abhor, it is that man.&nbsp; But
+the Opposition is divided, Red-hots, and Luke-warms; and the Duke (par
+excellence <i>the</i> Duke) and Sir Robert Peel show no signs of insecurity,
+though they have been twice beat; so &lsquo;Courage, mon amie,&rsquo;
+as the old chevaliers used to say, before they joined battle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In the middle of the summer of 1835, a great family plan was mooted
+at the parsonage.&nbsp; The question was, to what trade or profession
+should Branwell be brought up?&nbsp; He was now nearly eighteen; it
+was time to decide.&nbsp; He was very clever, no doubt; perhaps to begin
+with, the greatest genius in this rare family. The sisters hardly recognised
+their own, or each others&rsquo; powers, but they knew <i>his</i>.&nbsp;
+The father, ignorant of many failings in moral conduct, did proud homage
+to the great gifts of his son; for Branwell&rsquo;s talents were readily
+and willingly brought out for the entertainment of others.&nbsp; Popular
+admiration was sweet to him. And this led to his presence being sought
+at &ldquo;arvills&rdquo; and all the great village gatherings, for the
+Yorkshiremen have a keen relish for intellect; and it likewise procured
+him the undesirable distinction of having his company recommended by
+the landlord of the Black Bull to any chance traveller who might happen
+to feel solitary or dull over his liquor.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do you want some
+one to help you with your bottle, sir?&nbsp; If you do, I&rsquo;ll send
+up for Patrick&rdquo; (so the villagers called him till the day of his
+death, though in his own family he was always &ldquo;Branwell&rdquo;).&nbsp;
+And while the messenger went, the landlord entertained his guest with
+accounts of the wonderful talents of the boy, whose precocious cleverness,
+and great conversational powers, were the pride of the village.&nbsp;
+The attacks of ill health to which Mr. Bront&euml; had been subject
+of late years, rendered it not only necessary that he should take his
+dinner alone (for the sake of avoiding temptations to unwholesome diet),
+but made it also desirable that he should pass the time directly succeeding
+his meals in perfect quiet.&nbsp; And this necessity, combined with
+due attention to his parochial duties, made him partially ignorant how
+his son employed himself out of lesson-time.&nbsp; His own youth had
+been spent among people of the same conventional rank as those into
+whose companionship Branwell was now thrown; but he had had a strong
+will, and an earnest and persevering ambition, and a resoluteness of
+purpose which his weaker son wanted.</p>
+<p>It is singular how strong a yearning the whole family had towards
+the art of drawing.&nbsp; Mr. Bront&euml; had been very solicitous to
+get them good instruction; the girls themselves loved everything connected
+with it&mdash;all descriptions or engravings of great pictures; and,
+in default of good ones, they would take and analyse any print or drawing
+which came in their way, and find out how much thought had gone to its
+composition, what ideas it was intended to suggest, and what it <i>did</i>
+suggest.&nbsp; In the same spirit, they laboured to design imaginations
+of their own; they lacked the power of execution, not of conception.&nbsp;
+At one time, Charlotte had the notion of making her living as an artist,
+and wearied her eyes in drawing with pre-Raphaelite minuteness, but
+not with pre-Raphaelite accuracy, for she drew from fancy rather than
+from nature.</p>
+<p>But they all thought there could be no doubt about Branwell&rsquo;s
+talent for drawing.&nbsp; I have seen an oil painting of his, done I
+know not when, but probably about this time.&nbsp; It was a group of
+his sisters, life-size, three-quarters&rsquo; length; not much better
+than sign-painting, as to manipulation; but the likenesses were, I should
+think, admirable.&nbsp; I could only judge of the fidelity with which
+the other two were depicted, from the striking resemblance which Charlotte,
+upholding the great frame of canvas, and consequently standing right
+behind it, bore to her own representation, though it must have been
+ten years and more since the portraits were taken.&nbsp; The picture
+was divided, almost in the middle, by a great pillar.&nbsp; On the side
+of the column which was lighted by the sun, stood Charlotte, in the
+womanly dress of that day of gigot sleeves and large collars.&nbsp;
+On the deeply shadowed side, was Emily, with Anne&rsquo;s gentle face
+resting on her shoulder. Emily&rsquo;s countenance struck me as full
+of power; Charlotte&rsquo;s of solicitude; Anne&rsquo;s of tenderness.&nbsp;
+The two younger seemed hardly to have attained their full growth, though
+Emily was taller than Charlotte; they had cropped hair, and a more girlish
+dress.&nbsp; I remember looking on those two sad, earnest, shadowed
+faces, and wondering whether I could trace the mysterious expression
+which is said to foretell an early death.&nbsp; I had some fond superstitious
+hope that the column divided their fates from hers, who stood apart
+in the canvas, as in life she survived.&nbsp; I liked to see that the
+bright side of the pillar was towards <i>her</i>&mdash;that the light
+in the picture fell on <i>her</i>: I might more truly have sought in
+her presentment&mdash;nay, in her living face&mdash;for the sign of
+death&mdash;in her prime.&nbsp; They were good likenesses, however badly
+executed. From thence I should guess his family augured truly that,
+if Branwell had but the opportunity, and, alas! had but the moral qualities,
+he might turn out a great painter.</p>
+<p>The best way of preparing him to become so appeared to be to send
+him as a pupil to the Royal Academy.&nbsp; I dare say he longed and
+yearned to follow this path, principally because it would lead him to
+that mysterious London&mdash;that Babylon the great&mdash;which seems
+to have filled the imaginations and haunted the minds of all the younger
+members of this recluse family.&nbsp; To Branwell it was more than a
+vivid imagination, it was an impressed reality.&nbsp; By dint of studying
+maps, he was as well acquainted with it, even down to its by-ways, as
+if he had lived there.&nbsp; Poor misguided fellow! this craving to
+see and know London, and that stronger craving after fame, were never
+to be satisfied.&nbsp; He was to die at the end of a short and blighted
+life.&nbsp; But in this year of 1835, all his home kindred were thinking
+how they could best forward his views, and how help him up to the pinnacle
+where he desired to be.&nbsp; What their plans were, let Charlotte explain.&nbsp;
+These are not the first sisters who have laid their lives as a sacrifice
+before their brother&rsquo;s idolized wish.&nbsp; Would to God they
+might be the last who met with such a miserable return!</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Haworth, July 6th, 1835.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had hoped to have had the extreme pleasure of seeing you
+at Haworth this summer, but human affairs are mutable, and human resolutions
+must bend to the course of events.&nbsp; We are all about to divide,
+break up, separate.&nbsp; Emily is going to school, Branwell is going
+to London, and I am going to be a governess.&nbsp; This last determination
+I formed myself, knowing that I should have to take the step sometime,
+&lsquo;and better sune as syne,&rsquo; to use the Scotch proverb; and
+knowing well that papa would have enough to do with his limited income,
+should Branwell be placed at the Royal Academy, and Emily at Roe Head.&nbsp;
+Where am I going to reside? you will ask.&nbsp; Within four miles of
+you, at a place neither of us is unacquainted with, being no other than
+the identical Roe Head mentioned above.&nbsp; Yes!&nbsp; I am going
+to teach in the very school where I was myself taught.&nbsp; Miss W---
+made me the offer, and I preferred it to one or two proposals of private
+governess-ship, which I had before received.&nbsp; I am sad&mdash;very
+sad&mdash;at the thoughts of leaving home; but duty&mdash;necessity&mdash;these
+are stern mistresses, who will not be disobeyed.&nbsp; Did I not once
+say you ought to be thankful for your independence?&nbsp; I felt what
+I said at the time, and I repeat it now with double earnestness; if
+anything would cheer me, it is the idea of being so near you.&nbsp;
+Surely, you and Polly will come and see me; it would be wrong in me
+to doubt it; you were never unkind yet.&nbsp; Emily and I leave home
+on the 27th of this month; the idea of being together consoles us both
+somewhat, and, truth, since I must enter a situation, &lsquo;My lines
+have fallen in pleasant places.&rsquo;&nbsp; I both love and respect
+Miss W-.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+<p>On the 29th of July, 1835, Charlotte, now a little more than nineteen
+years old, went as teacher to Miss W---&rsquo;s. Emily accompanied her
+as a pupil; but she became literally ill from home-sickness, and could
+not settle to anything, and after passing only three months at Roe Head,
+returned to the parsonage and the beloved moors.</p>
+<p>Miss Bront&euml; gives the following reasons as those which prevented
+Emily&rsquo;s remaining at school, and caused the substitution of her
+younger sister in her place at Miss W---&rsquo;s:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My sister Emily loved the moors.&nbsp; Flowers brighter than
+the rose bloomed in the blackest of the heath for her;&mdash;out of
+a sullen hollow in a livid hill-side, her mind could make an Eden.&nbsp;
+She found in the bleak solitude many and dear delights; and not the
+least and best-loved was&mdash;liberty.&nbsp; Liberty was the breath
+of Emily&rsquo;s nostrils; without it she perished.&nbsp; The change
+from her own home to a school, and from her own very noiseless, very
+secluded, but unrestricted and unartificial mode of life, to one of
+disciplined routine (though under the kindest auspices), was what she
+failed in enduring.&nbsp; Her nature proved here too strong for her
+fortitude.&nbsp; Every morning, when she woke, the vision of home and
+the moors rushed on her, and darkened and saddened the day that lay
+before her.&nbsp; Nobody knew what ailed her but me.&nbsp; I knew only
+too well.&nbsp; In this struggle her health was quickly broken: her
+white face, attenuated form, and failing strength, threatened rapid
+decline.&nbsp; I felt in my heart she would die, if she did not go home,
+and with this conviction obtained her recall.&nbsp; She had only been
+three months at school; and it was some years before the experiment
+of sending her from home was again ventured on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This physical suffering on Emily&rsquo;s part when absent from Haworth,
+after recurring several times under similar circumstances, became at
+length so much an acknowledged fact, that whichever was obliged to leave
+home, the sisters decided that Emily must remain there, where alone
+she could enjoy anything like good health.&nbsp; She left it twice again
+in her life; once going as teacher to a school in Halifax for six months,
+and afterwards accompanying Charlotte to Brussels for ten.&nbsp; When
+at home, she took the principal part of the cooking upon herself, and
+did all the household ironing; and after Tabby grew old and infirm,
+it was Emily who made all the bread for the family; and any one passing
+by the kitchen-door, might have seen her studying German out of an open
+book, propped up before her, as she kneaded the dough; but no study,
+however interesting, interfered with the goodness of the bread, which
+was always light and excellent.&nbsp; Books were, indeed, a very common
+sight in that kitchen; the girls were taught by their father theoretically,
+and by their aunt, practically, that to take an active part in all household
+work was, in their position, woman&rsquo;s simple duty; but in their
+careful employment of time, they found many an odd five minutes for
+reading while watching the cakes, and managed the union of two kinds
+of employment better than King Alfred.</p>
+<p>Charlotte&rsquo;s life at Miss W---&rsquo;s was a very happy one,
+until her health failed.&nbsp; She sincerely loved and respected the
+former schoolmistress, to whom she was now become both companion and
+friend.&nbsp; The girls were hardly strangers to her, some of them being
+younger sisters of those who had been her own playmates.&nbsp; Though
+the duties of the day might be tedious and monotonous, there were always
+two or three happy hours to look forward to in the evening, when she
+and Miss W--- sat together&mdash;sometimes late into the night&mdash;and
+had quiet pleasant conversations, or pauses of silence as agreeable,
+because each felt that as soon as a thought or remark occurred which
+they wished to express, there was an intelligent companion ready to
+sympathise, and yet they were not compelled to &ldquo;make talk.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Miss W--- was always anxious to afford Miss Bront&euml; every opportunity
+of recreation in her power; but the difficulty often was to persuade
+her to avail herself of the invitations which came, urging her to spend
+Saturday and Sunday with &ldquo;E.&rdquo; and &ldquo;Mary,&rdquo; in
+their respective homes, that lay within the distance of a walk.&nbsp;
+She was too apt to consider, that allowing herself a holiday was a dereliction
+of duty, and to refuse herself the necessary change, from something
+of an over-ascetic spirit, betokening a loss of healthy balance in either
+body or mind.&nbsp; Indeed, it is clear that such was the case, from
+a passage, referring to this time, in the letter of &ldquo;Mary&rdquo;
+from which I have before given extracts.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Three years after&mdash;&rdquo; (the period when they were
+at school together)&mdash;&ldquo;I heard that she had gone as teacher
+to Miss W---&rsquo;s.&nbsp; I went to see her, and asked how she could
+give so much for so little money, when she could live without it.&nbsp;
+She owned that, after clothing herself and Anne, there was nothing left,
+though she had hoped to be able to save something.&nbsp; She confessed
+it was not brilliant, but what could she do?&nbsp; I had nothing to
+answer.&nbsp; She seemed to have no interest or pleasure beyond the
+feeling of duty, and, when she could get, used to sit alone, and &lsquo;make
+out.&rsquo;&nbsp; She told me afterwards, that one evening she had sat
+in the dressing-room until it was quite dark, and then observing it
+all at once, had taken sudden fright.&rdquo;&nbsp; No doubt she remembered
+this well when she described a similar terror getting hold upon Jane
+Eyre.&nbsp; She says in the story, &ldquo;I sat looking at the white
+bed and overshadowed walls&mdash;occasionally turning a fascinated eye
+towards the gleaming mirror&mdash;I began to recall what I had heard
+of dead men troubled in their graves . . . I endeavoured to be firm;
+shaking my hair from my eyes, I lifted my head and tried to look boldly
+through the dark room; at this moment, a ray from the moon penetrated
+some aperture in the blind.&nbsp; No! moon light was still, and this
+stirred . . . prepared as my mind was for horror, shaken as my nerves
+were by agitation, I thought the swift-darting beam was a herald of
+some coming vision from another world.&nbsp; My heart beat thick, my
+head grew hot; a sound filled my ears which I deemed the rustling of
+wings; something seemed near me.&rdquo; <a name="citation4"></a><a href="#footnote4">{4}</a></p>
+<p>&ldquo;From that time,&rdquo; Mary adds, &ldquo;her imaginations
+became gloomy or frightful; she could not help it, nor help thinking.&nbsp;
+She could not forget the gloom, could not sleep at night, nor attend
+in the day.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She told me that one night, sitting alone, about this time,
+she heard a voice repeat these lines:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Come thou high and holy feeling,<br />
+Shine o&rsquo;er mountain, flit o&rsquo;er wave,<br />
+Gleam like light o&rsquo;er dome and shielding.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;There were eight or ten more lines which I forget.&nbsp; She
+insisted that she had not made them, that she had heard a voice repeat
+them.&nbsp; It is possible that she had read them, and unconsciously
+recalled them.&nbsp; They are not in the volume of poems which the sisters
+published.&nbsp; She repeated a verse of Isaiah, which she said had
+inspired them, and which I have forgotten.&nbsp; Whether the lines were
+recollected or invented, the tale proves such habits of sedentary, monotonous
+solitude of thought as would have shaken a feebler mind.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Of course, the state of health thus described came on gradually,
+and is not to be taken as a picture of her condition in 1836.&nbsp;
+Yet even then there is a despondency in some of her expressions, that
+too sadly reminds one of some of Cowper&rsquo;s letters.&nbsp; And it
+is remarkable how deeply his poems impressed her.&nbsp; His words, his
+verses, came more frequently to her memory, I imagine, than those of
+any other poet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mary&rdquo; says: &ldquo;Cowper&rsquo;s poem, &lsquo;The Castaway,&rsquo;
+was known to them all, and they all at times appreciated, or almost
+appropriated it.&nbsp; Charlotte told me once that Branwell had done
+so; and though his depression was the result of his faults, it was in
+no other respect different from hers.&nbsp; Both were not mental but
+physical illnesses.&nbsp; She was well aware of this, and would ask
+how that mended matters, as the feeling was there all the same, and
+was not removed by knowing the cause.&nbsp; She had a larger religious
+toleration than a person would have who had never questioned, and the
+manner of recommending religion was always that of offering comfort,
+not fiercely enforcing a duty.&nbsp; One time I mentioned that some
+one had asked me what religion I was of (with the view of getting me
+for a partizan), and that I had said that that was between God and me;&mdash;Emily
+(who was lying on the hearth-rug) exclaimed, &lsquo;That&rsquo;s right.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+This was all I ever heard Emily say on religious subjects.&nbsp; Charlotte
+was free from religious depression when in tolerable health; when that
+failed, her depression returned.&nbsp; You have probably seen such instances.&nbsp;
+They don&rsquo;t get over their difficulties; they forget them, when
+their stomach (or whatever organ it is that inflicts such misery on
+sedentary people) will let them.&nbsp; I have heard her condemn Socinianism,
+Calvinism, and many other &lsquo;isms&rsquo; inconsistent with Church
+of Englandism.&nbsp; I used to wonder at her acquaintance with such
+subjects.&rdquo;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;May 10th, 1836.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was struck with the note you sent me with the umbrella;
+it showed a degree of interest in my concerns which I have no right
+to expect from any earthly creature.&nbsp; I won&rsquo;t play the hypocrite;
+I won&rsquo;t answer your kind, gentle, friendly questions in the way
+you wish me to.&nbsp; Don&rsquo;t deceive yourself by imagining I have
+a bit of real goodness about me.&nbsp; My darling, if I were like you,
+I should have my face Zion-ward, though prejudice and error might occasionally
+fling a mist over the glorious vision before me&mdash;but I <i>am not
+like you</i>.&nbsp; If you knew my thoughts, the dreams that absorb
+me, and the fiery imagination that at times eats me up, and makes me
+feel society, as it is, wretchedly insipid, you would pity and I dare
+say despise me.&nbsp; But I know the treasures of the <i>Bible</i>;
+I love and adore them.&nbsp; I can <i>see</i> the Well of Life in all
+its clearness and brightness; but when I stoop down to drink of the
+pure waters they fly from my lips as if I were Tantalus.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are far too kind and frequent in your invitations.&nbsp;
+You puzzle me.&nbsp; I hardly know how to refuse, and it is still more
+embarrassing to accept.&nbsp; At any rate, I cannot come this week,
+for we are in the very thickest mel&eacute;e of the Repetitions.&nbsp;
+I was hearing the terrible fifth section when your note arrived.&nbsp;
+But Miss Wooler says I must go to Mary next Friday, as she promised
+for me on Whit-Sunday; and on Sunday morning I will join you at church,
+if it be convenient, and stay till Monday.&nbsp; There&rsquo;s a free
+and easy proposal!&nbsp; Miss W--- has driven me to it.&nbsp; She says
+her character is implicated.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Good, kind Miss W---! however monotonous and trying were the duties
+Charlotte had to perform under her roof, there was always a genial and
+thoughtful friend watching over her, and urging her to partake of any
+little piece of innocent recreation that might come in her way.&nbsp;
+And in those Midsummer holidays of 1836, her friend E. came to stay
+with her at Haworth, so there was one happy time secured.</p>
+<p>Here follows a series of letters, not dated, but belonging to the
+latter portion of this year; and again we think of the gentle and melancholy
+Cowper.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;My dear dear E.,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am at this moment trembling all over with excitement, after
+reading your note; it is what I never received before&mdash;it is the
+unrestrained pouring out of a warm, gentle, generous heart . . . I thank
+you with energy for this kindness.&nbsp; I will no longer shrink from
+answering your questions.&nbsp; I <i>do</i> wish to be better than I
+am.&nbsp; I pray fervently sometimes to be made so.&nbsp; I have stings
+of conscience, visitings of remorse, glimpses of holy, of inexpressible
+things, which formerly I used to be a stranger to; it may all die away,
+and I may be in utter midnight, but I implore a merciful Redeemer, that,
+if this be the dawn of the gospel, it may still brighten to perfect
+day.&nbsp; Do not mistake me&mdash;do not think I am good; I only wish
+to be so.&nbsp; I only hate my former flippancy and forwardness.&nbsp;
+Oh! I am no better than ever I was.&nbsp; I am in that state of horrid,
+gloomy uncertainty that, at this moment, I would submit to be old, grey-haired,
+to have passed all my youthful days of enjoyment, and to be settling
+on the verge of the grave, if I could only thereby ensure the prospect
+of reconciliation to God, and redemption through his Son&rsquo;s merits.&nbsp;
+I never was exactly careless of these matters, but I have always taken
+a clouded and repulsive view of them; and now, if possible, the clouds
+are gathering darker, and a more oppressive despondency weighs on my
+spirits.&nbsp; You have cheered me, my darling; for one moment, for
+an atom of time, I thought I might call you my own sister in the spirit;
+but the excitement is past, and I am now as wretched and hopeless as
+ever.&nbsp; This very night I will pray as you wish me.&nbsp; May the
+Almighty hear me compassionately! and I humbly hope he will, for you
+will strengthen my polluted petitions with your own pure requests.&nbsp;
+All is bustle and confusion round me, the ladies pressing with their
+sums and their lessons . . . If you love me, <i>do, do, do</i> come
+on Friday: I shall watch and wait for you, and if you disappoint me
+I shall weep.&nbsp; I wish you could know the thrill of delight which
+I experienced, when, as I stood at the dining-room window, I saw ---,
+as he whirled past, toss your little packet over the wall.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Huddersfield market-day was still the great period for events at
+Roe Head.&nbsp; Then girls, running round the corner of the house and
+peeping between tree-stems, and up a shadowy lane, could catch a glimpse
+of a father or brother driving to market in his gig; might, perhaps,
+exchange a wave of the hand; or see, as Charlotte Bront&euml; did from
+the window, a white packet tossed over the avail by come swift strong
+motion of an arm, the rest of the traveller&rsquo;s body unseen.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Weary with a day&rsquo;s hard work . . . I am sitting down
+to write a few lines to my dear E.&nbsp; Excuse me if I say nothing
+but nonsense, for my mind is exhausted and dispirited.&nbsp; It is a
+stormy evening, and the wind is uttering a continual moaning sound,
+that makes me feel very melancholy.&nbsp; At such times&mdash;in such
+moods as these&mdash;it is my nature to seek repose in some calm tranquil
+idea, and I have now summoned up your image to give me rest.&nbsp; There
+you sit, upright and still in your black dress, and white scarf, and
+pale marble-like face&mdash;just like reality.&nbsp; I wish you would
+speak to me.&nbsp; If we should be separated&mdash;if it should be our
+lot to live at a great distance, and never to see each other again&mdash;in
+old age, how I should conjure up the memory of my youthful days, and
+what a melancholy pleasure I should feel in dwelling on the recollection
+of my early friend! . . . I have some qualities that make me very miserable,
+some feelings that you can have no participation in&mdash;that few,
+very few, people in the world can at all understand.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t
+pride myself on these peculiarities.&nbsp; I strive to conceal and suppress
+them as much as I can; but they burst out sometimes, and then those
+who see the explosion despise me, and I hate myself for days afterwards
+. . . I have just received your epistle and what accompanied it.&nbsp;
+I can&rsquo;t tell what should induce you and your sisters to waste
+your kindness on such a one as me.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m obliged to them,
+and I hope you&rsquo;ll tell them so.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m obliged to you
+also, more for your note than for your present.&nbsp; The first gave
+me pleasure, the last something like pain.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>The nervous disturbance, which is stated to have troubled her while
+she was at Miss W---&rsquo;s, seems to have begun to distress her about
+this time; at least, she herself speaks of her irritable condition,
+which was certainly only a temporary ailment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have been very kind to me of late, and have spared me
+all those little sallies of ridicule, which, owing to my miserable and
+wretched touchiness of character, used formerly to make me wince, as
+if I had been touched with a hot iron; things that nobody else cares
+for, enter into my mind and rankle there like venom.&nbsp; I know these
+feelings are absurd, and therefore I try to hide them, but they only
+sting the deeper for concealment.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Compare this state of mind with the gentle resignation with which
+she had submitted to be put aside as useless, or told of her ugliness
+by her school-fellows, only three years before.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My life since I saw you has passed as monotonously and unbroken
+as ever; nothing but teach, teach, teach, from morning till night.&nbsp;
+The greatest variety I ever have is afforded by a letter from you, or
+by meeting with a pleasant new book.&nbsp; The &lsquo;Life of Oberlin,&rsquo;
+and &lsquo;Leigh Richmond&rsquo;s Domestic Portraiture,&rsquo; are the
+last of this description.&nbsp; The latter work strongly attracted and
+strangely fascinated my attention.&nbsp; Beg, borrow, or steal it without
+delay; and read the &lsquo;Memoir of Wilberforce,&rsquo;&mdash;that
+short record of a brief uneventful life; I shall never forget it; it
+is beautiful, not on account of the language in which it is written,
+not on account of the incidents it details, but because of the simple
+narrative it gives of a young talented sincere Christian.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>About this time Miss W--- removed her school from the fine, open,
+breezy situation of Roe Head, to Dewsbury Moor, only two or three miles
+distant.&nbsp; Her new residence was on a lower site, and the air was
+less exhilarating to one bred in the wild hill-village of Haworth.&nbsp;
+Emily had gone as teacher to a school at Halifax, where there were nearly
+forty pupils.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have had one letter from her since her departure,&rdquo;
+writes Charlotte, on October 2nd, 1836: &ldquo;it gives an appalling
+account of her duties; hard labour from six in the morning to eleven
+at night, with only one half-hour of exercise between.&nbsp; This is
+slavery.&nbsp; I fear she can never stand it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>When the sisters met at home in the Christmas holidays, they talked
+over their lives, and the prospect which they afforded of employment
+and remuneration.&nbsp; They felt that it was a duty to relieve their
+father of the burden of their support, if not entirely, or that of all
+three, at least that of one or two; and, naturally, the lot devolved
+upon the elder ones to find some occupation which would enable them
+to do this.&nbsp; They knew that they were never likely to inherit much
+money.&nbsp; Mr. Bront&euml; had but a small stipend, and was both charitable
+and liberal.&nbsp; Their aunt had an annuity of 50<i>l</i>., but it
+reverted to others at her death, and her nieces had no right, and were
+the last persons in the world to reckon upon her savings.&nbsp; What
+could they do?&nbsp; Charlotte and Emily were trying teaching, and,
+as it seemed, without much success.&nbsp; The former, it is true, had
+the happiness of having a friend for her employer, and of being surrounded
+by those who knew her and loved her; but her salary was too small for
+her to save out of it; and her education did not entitle her to a larger.&nbsp;
+The sedentary and monotonous nature of the life, too, was preying upon
+her health and spirits, although, with necessity &ldquo;as her mistress,&rdquo;
+she might hardly like to acknowledge this even to herself.&nbsp; But
+Emily&mdash;that free, wild, untameable spirit, never happy nor well
+but on the sweeping moors that gathered round her home&mdash;that hater
+of strangers, doomed to live amongst them, and not merely to live but
+to slave in their service&mdash;what Charlotte could have borne patiently
+for herself, she could not bear for her sister.&nbsp; And yet what to
+do?&nbsp; She had once hoped that she herself might become an artist,
+and so earn her livelihood; but her eyes had failed her in the minute
+and useless labour which she had imposed upon herself with a view to
+this end.</p>
+<p>It was the household custom among these girls to sew till nine o&rsquo;clock
+at night.&nbsp; At that hour, Miss Branwell generally went to bed, and
+her nieces&rsquo; duties for the day were accounted done.&nbsp; They
+put away their work, and began to pace the room backwards and forwards,
+up and down,&mdash;as often with the candles extinguished, for economy&rsquo;s
+sake, as not,&mdash;their figures glancing into the fire-light, and
+out into the shadow, perpetually.&nbsp; At this time, they talked over
+past cares and troubles; they planned for the future, and consulted
+each other as to their plans.&nbsp; In after years this was the time
+for discussing together the plots of their novels.&nbsp; And again,
+still later, this was the time for the last surviving sister to walk
+alone, from old accustomed habit, round and round the desolate room,
+thinking sadly upon the &ldquo;days that were no more.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+But this Christmas of 1836 was not without its hopes and daring aspirations.&nbsp;
+They had tried their hands at story-writing, in their miniature magazine,
+long ago; they all of them &ldquo;made out&rdquo; perpetually.&nbsp;
+They had likewise attempted to write poetry; and had a modest confidence
+that they had achieved a tolerable success.&nbsp; But they knew that
+they might deceive themselves, and that sisters&rsquo; judgments of
+each other&rsquo;s productions were likely to be too partial to be depended
+upon.&nbsp; So Charlotte, as the eldest, resolved to write to Southey.&nbsp;
+I believe (from an expression in a letter to be noticed hereafter),
+that she also consulted Coleridge; but I have not met with any part
+of that correspondence.</p>
+<p>On December 29th, her letter to Southey was despatched; and from
+an excitement not unnatural in a girl who has worked herself up to the
+pitch of writing to a Poet Laureate and asking his opinion of her poems,
+she used some high-flown expressions which, probably, gave him the idea
+that she was a romantic young lady, unacquainted with the realities
+of life.</p>
+<p>This, most likely, was the first of those adventurous letters that
+passed through the little post-office of Haworth.&nbsp; Morning after
+morning of the holidays slipped away, and there was no answer; the sisters
+had to leave home, and Emily to return to her distasteful duties, without
+knowing even whether Charlotte&rsquo;s letter had ever reached its destination.</p>
+<p>Not dispirited, however, by the delay, Branwell determined to try
+a similar venture, and addressed the following letter to Wordsworth.&nbsp;
+It was given by the poet to Mr. Quillinan in 1850, after the name of
+Bront&euml; had become known and famous.&nbsp; I have no means of ascertaining
+what answer was returned by Mr. Wordsworth; but that he considered the
+letter remarkable may, I think, be inferred both from its preservation,
+and its recurrence to his memory when the real name of Currer Bell was
+made known to the public.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Haworth, near Bradford,<br />
+&ldquo;Yorkshire, January 19, 1837.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir,&mdash;I most earnestly entreat you to read and pass your
+judgment upon what I have sent you, because from the day of my birth
+to this the nineteenth year of my life, I have lived among secluded
+hills, where I could neither know what I was, or what I could do.&nbsp;
+I read for the same reason that I ate or drank; because it was a real
+craving of nature.&nbsp; I wrote on the same principle as I spoke&mdash;out
+of the impulse and feelings of the mind; nor could I help it, for what
+came, came out, and there was the end of it.&nbsp; For as to self-conceit,
+that could not receive food from flattery, since to this hour, not half
+a dozen people in the world know that I have ever penned a line.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But a change has taken place now, sir: and I am arrived at
+an age wherein I must do something for myself: the powers I possess
+must be exercised to a definite end, and as I don&rsquo;t know them
+myself I must ask of others what they are worth.&nbsp; Yet there is
+not one here to tell me; and still, if they are worthless, time will
+henceforth be too precious to be wasted on them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do pardon me, sir, that I have ventured to come before one
+whose works I have most loved in our literature, and who most has been
+with me a divinity of the mind, laying before him one of my writings,
+and asking of him a judgment of its contents.&nbsp; I must come before
+some one from whose sentence there is no appeal; and such a one is he
+who has developed the theory of poetry as well as its practice, and
+both in such a way as to claim a place in the memory of a thousand years
+to come.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My aim, sir, is to push out into the open world, and for this
+I trust not poetry alone&mdash;that might launch the vessel, but could
+not bear her on; sensible and scientific prose, bold and vigorous efforts
+in my walk in life, would give a farther title to the notice of the
+world; and then again poetry ought to brighten and crown that name with
+glory; but nothing of all this can be ever begun without means, and
+as I don&rsquo;t possess these, I must in every shape strive to gain
+them.&nbsp; Surely, in this day, when there is not a <i>writing</i>
+poet worth a sixpence, the field must be open, if a better man can step
+forward.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What I send you is the Prefatory Scene of a much longer subject,
+in which I have striven to develop strong passions and weak principles
+struggling with a high imagination and acute feelings, till, as youth
+hardens towards age, evil deeds and short enjoyments end in mental misery
+and bodily ruin.&nbsp; Now, to send you the whole of this would be a
+mock upon your patience; what you see, does not even pretend to be more
+than the description of an imaginative child.&nbsp; But read it, sir;
+and, as you would hold a light to one in utter darkness&mdash;as you
+value your own kindheartedness&mdash;<i>return</i> me an <i>answer</i>,
+if but one word, telling me whether I should write on, or write no more.&nbsp;
+Forgive undue warmth, because my feelings in this matter cannot be cool;
+and believe me, sir, with deep respect,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your really humble servant,<br />
+&ldquo;P. B. Bront&euml;&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The poetry enclosed seems to me by no means equal to parts of the
+letter; but, as every one likes to judge for himself, I copy the six
+opening stanzas&mdash;about a third of the whole, and certainly not
+the worst.</p>
+<blockquote><p>So where he reigns in glory bright,<br />
+Above those starry skies of night,<br />
+Amid his Paradise of light<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Oh, why may I not be?</p>
+<p>Oft when awake on Christmas morn,<br />
+In sleepless twilight laid forlorn,<br />
+Strange thoughts have o&rsquo;er my mind been borne,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; How he has died for me.</p>
+<p>And oft within my chamber lying,<br />
+Have I awaked myself with crying<br />
+From dreams, where I beheld Him dying<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Upon the accursed Tree.</p>
+<p>And often has my mother said,<br />
+While on her lap I laid my head,<br />
+She feared for time I was not made,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But for Eternity.</p>
+<p>So &ldquo;I can read my title clear,<br />
+To mansions in the skies,<br />
+And let me bid farewell to fear,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And wipe my weeping eyes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I&rsquo;ll lay me down on this marble stone,<br />
+And set the world aside,<br />
+To see upon her ebon throne<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The Moon in glory ride.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Soon after Charlotte returned to Dewsbury Moor, she was distressed
+by hearing that her friend &ldquo;E.&rdquo; was likely to leave the
+neighbourhood for a considerable length of time.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Feb. 20th.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What shall I do without you?&nbsp; How long are we likely
+to be separated?&nbsp; Why are we to be denied each other&rsquo;s society?&nbsp;
+It is an inscrutable fatality.&nbsp; I long to be with you, because
+it seems as if two or three days, or weeks, spent in your company would
+beyond measure strengthen me in the enjoyment of those feelings which
+I have so lately begun to cherish.&nbsp; You first pointed out to me
+that way in which I am so feebly endeavouring to travel, and now I cannot
+keep you by my side, I must proceed sorrowfully alone.&nbsp; Why are
+we to be divided?&nbsp; Surely, it must be because we are in danger
+of loving each other too well&mdash;of losing sight of the <i>Creator</i>
+in idolatry of the <i>creature</i>.&nbsp; At first, I could not say
+&lsquo;Thy will be done!&rsquo;&nbsp; I felt rebellious, but I knew
+it was wrong to feel so.&nbsp; Being left a moment alone this morning,
+I prayed fervently to be enabled to resign myself to <i>every</i> decree
+of God&rsquo;s will, though it should be dealt forth by a far severer
+hand than the present disappointment; since then I have felt calmer
+and humbler, and consequently happier.&nbsp; Last Sunday I took up my
+Bible in a gloomy state of mind: I began to read&mdash;a feeling stole
+over me such as I have not known for many long years&mdash;a sweet,
+placid sensation, like those, I remember, which used to visit me when
+I was a little child, and, on Sunday evenings in summer, stood by the
+open window reading the life of a certain French nobleman, who attained
+a purer and higher degree of sanctity than has been known since the
+days of the early martyrs.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;E.&rsquo;s&rdquo; residence was equally within a walk from
+Dewsbury Moor as it had been from Roe Head; and on Saturday afternoons
+both &ldquo;Mary&rdquo; and she used to call upon Charlotte, and often
+endeavoured to persuade her to return with them, and be the guest of
+one of them till Monday morning; but this was comparatively seldom.&nbsp;
+Mary says:&mdash;&ldquo;She visited us twice or thrice when she was
+at Miss W---&rsquo;s.&nbsp; We used to dispute about politics and religion.&nbsp;
+She, a Tory and clergyman&rsquo;s daughter, was always in a minority
+of one in our house of violent Dissent and Radicalism.&nbsp; She used
+to hear over again, delivered <i>with authority</i>, all the lectures
+I had been used to give her at school on despotic aristocracy, mercenary
+priesthood, &amp;c.&nbsp; She had not energy to defend herself; sometimes
+she owned to a <i>little</i> truth in it, but generally said nothing.&nbsp;
+Her feeble health gave her her yielding manner, for she could never
+oppose any one without gathering up all her strength for the struggle.&nbsp;
+Thus she would let me advise and patronise most imperiously, sometimes
+picking out any grain of sense there might be in what I said, but never
+allowing any one materially to interfere with her independence of thought
+and action.&nbsp; Though her silence sometimes left one under the impression
+that she agreed when she did not, she never gave a flattering opinion,
+and thus her words were golden, whether for praise or blame.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mary&rsquo;s&rdquo; father was a man of remarkable intelligence,
+but of strong, not to say violent prejudices, all running in favour
+of Republicanism and Dissent.&nbsp; No other county but Yorkshire could
+have produced such a man.&nbsp; His brother had been a <i>d&eacute;tenu</i>
+in France, and had afterwards voluntarily taken up his residence there.&nbsp;
+Mr. T. himself had been much abroad, both on business and to see the
+great continental galleries of paintings.&nbsp; He spoke French perfectly,
+I have been told, when need was; but delighted usually in talking the
+broadest Yorkshire.&nbsp; He bought splendid engravings of the pictures
+which he particularly admired, and his house was full of works of art
+and of books; but he rather liked to present his rough side to any stranger
+or new-comer; he would speak his broadest, bring out his opinions on
+Church and State in their most startling forms, and, by and by, if he
+found his hearer could stand the shock, he would involuntarily show
+his warm kind heart, and his true taste, and real refinement.&nbsp;
+His family of four sons and two daughters were brought up on Republican
+principles; independence of thought and action was encouraged; no &ldquo;shams&rdquo;
+tolerated.&nbsp; They are scattered far and wide: Martha, the younger
+daughter, sleeps in the Protestant cemetery at Brussels; Mary is in
+New Zealand; Mr. T. is dead.&nbsp; And so life and death have dispersed
+the circle of &ldquo;violent Radicals and Dissenters&rdquo; into which,
+twenty years ago, the little, quiet, resolute clergyman&rsquo;s daughter
+was received, and by whom she was truly loved and honoured.</p>
+<p>January and February of 1837 had passed away, and still there was
+no reply from Southey.&nbsp; Probably she had lost expectation and almost
+hope when at length, in the beginning of March, she received the letter
+inserted in Mr. C. C. Southey&rsquo;s life of his Father, vol. iv. p.
+327.</p>
+<p>After accounting for his delay in replying to hers by the fact of
+a long absence from home, during which his letters had accumulated,
+whence &ldquo;it has lain unanswered till the last of a numerous file,
+not from disrespect or indifference to its contents, but because in
+truth it is not an easy task to answer it, nor a pleasant one to cast
+a damp over the high spirits and the generous desires of youth,&rdquo;
+he goes on to say: &ldquo;What you are I can only infer from your letter,
+which appears to be written in sincerity, though I may suspect that
+you have used a fictitious signature.&nbsp; Be that as it may, the letter
+and the verses bear the same stamp, and I can well understand the state
+of mind they indicate.</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is not my advice that you have asked as to the direction
+of your talents, but my opinion of them, and yet the opinion may be
+worth little, and the advice much.&nbsp; You evidently possess, and
+in no inconsiderable degree, what Wordsworth calls the &lsquo;faculty
+of verse.&rsquo;&nbsp; I am not depreciating it when I say that in these
+times it is not rare.&nbsp; Many volumes of poems are now published
+every year without attracting public attention, any one of which if
+it had appeared half a century ago, would have obtained a high reputation
+for its author.&nbsp; Whoever, therefore, is ambitious of distinction
+in this way ought to be prepared for disappointment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But it is not with a view to distinction that you should cultivate
+this talent, if you consult your own happiness.&nbsp; I, who have made
+literature my profession, and devoted my life to it, and have never
+for a moment repented of the deliberate choice, think myself, nevertheless,
+bound in duty to caution every young man who applies as an aspirant
+to me for encouragement and advice, against taking so perilous a course.&nbsp;
+You will say that a woman has no need of such a caution; there can be
+no peril in it for her.&nbsp; In a certain sense this is true; but there
+is a danger of which I would, with all kindness and all earnestness,
+warn you.&nbsp; The day dreams in which you habitually indulge are likely
+to induce a distempered state of mind; and in proportion as all the
+ordinary uses of the world seem to you flat and unprofitable, you will
+be unfitted for them without becoming fitted for anything else.&nbsp;
+Literature cannot be the business of a woman&rsquo;s life, and it ought
+not to be.&nbsp; The more she is engaged in her proper duties, the less
+leisure will she have for it, even as an accomplishment and a recreation.&nbsp;
+To those duties you have not yet been called, and when you are you will
+be less eager for celebrity.&nbsp; You will not seek in imagination
+for excitement, of which the vicissitudes of this life, and the anxieties
+from which you must not hope to be exempted, be your state what it may,
+will bring with them but too much.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But do not suppose that I disparage the gift which you possess;
+nor that I would discourage you from exercising it.&nbsp; I only exhort
+you so to think of it, and so to use it, as to render it conducive to
+your own permanent good.&nbsp; Write poetry for its own sake; not in
+a spirit of emulation, and not with a view to celebrity; the less you
+aim at that the more likely you will be to deserve and finally to obtain
+it.&nbsp; So written, it is wholesome both for the heart and soul; it
+may be made the surest means, next to religion, of soothing the mind
+and elevating it.&nbsp; You may embody in it your best thoughts and
+your wisest feelings, and in so doing discipline and strengthen them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Farewell, madam.&nbsp; It is not because I have forgotten
+that I was once young myself, that I write to you in this strain; but
+because I remember it.&nbsp; You will neither doubt my sincerity nor
+my good will; and however ill what has here been said may accord with
+your present views and temper, the longer you live the more reasonable
+it will appear to you.&nbsp; Though I may be but an ungracious adviser,
+you will allow me, therefore, to subscribe myself, with the best wishes
+for your happiness here and hereafter, your true friend,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;ROBERT SOUTHEY.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>I was with Miss Bront&euml; when she received Mr. Cuthbert Southey&rsquo;s
+note, requesting her permission to insert the foregoing letter in his
+father&rsquo;s life.&nbsp; She said to me, &ldquo;Mr. Southey&rsquo;s
+letter was kind and admirable; a little stringent, but it did me good.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It is partly because I think it so admirable, and partly because
+it tends to bring out her character, as shown in the following reply,
+that I have taken the liberty of inserting the foregoing extracts from
+it.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Sir, March 16th.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I cannot rest till I have answered your letter, even though
+by addressing you a second time I should appear a little intrusive;
+but I must thank you for the kind and wise advice you have condescended
+to give me.&nbsp; I had not ventured to hope for such a reply; so considerate
+in its tone, so noble in its spirit.&nbsp; I must suppress what I feel,
+or you will think me foolishly enthusiastic.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At the first perusal of your letter, I felt only shame and
+regret that I had ever ventured to trouble you with my crude rhapsody;
+I felt a painful heat rise to my face when I thought of the quires of
+paper I had covered with what once gave me so much delight, but which
+now was only a source of confusion; but after I had thought a little
+and read it again and again, the prospect seemed to clear.&nbsp; You
+do not forbid me to write; you do not say that what I write is utterly
+destitute of merit.&nbsp; You only warn me against the folly of neglecting
+real duties for the sake of imaginative pleasures; of writing for the
+love of fame; for the selfish excitement of emulation.&nbsp; You kindly
+allow me to write poetry for its own sake, provided I leave undone nothing
+which I ought to do, in order to pursue that single, absorbing, exquisite
+gratification.&nbsp; I am afraid, sir, you think me very foolish.&nbsp;
+I know the first letter I wrote to you was all senseless trash from
+beginning to end; but I am not altogether the idle dreaming being it
+would seem to denote.&nbsp; My father is a clergyman of limited, though
+competent income, and I am the eldest of his children.&nbsp; He expended
+quite as much in my education as he could afford in justice to the rest.&nbsp;
+I thought it therefore my duty, when I left school, to become a governess.&nbsp;
+In that capacity I find enough to occupy my thoughts all day long, and
+my head and hands too, without having a moment&rsquo;s time for one
+dream of the imagination.&nbsp; In the evenings, I confess, I do think,
+but I never trouble any one else with my thoughts.&nbsp; I carefully
+avoid any appearance of preoccupation and eccentricity, which might
+lead those I live amongst to suspect the nature of my pursuits.&nbsp;
+Following my father&rsquo;s advice&mdash;who from my childhood has counselled
+me, just in the wise and friendly tone of your letter&mdash;I have endeavoured
+not only attentively to observe all the duties a woman ought to fulfil,
+but to feel deeply interested in them.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t always succeed,
+for sometimes when I&rsquo;m teaching or sewing I would rather be reading
+or writing; but I try to deny myself; and my father&rsquo;s approbation
+amply rewarded me for the privation.&nbsp; Once more allow me to thank
+you with sincere gratitude.&nbsp; I trust I shall never more feel ambitious
+to see my name in print: if the wish should rise, I&rsquo;ll look at
+Southey&rsquo;s letter, and suppress it.&nbsp; It is honour enough for
+me that I have written to him, and received an answer.&nbsp; That letter
+is consecrated; no one shall ever see it, but papa and my brother and
+sisters.&nbsp; Again I thank you.&nbsp; This incident, I suppose, will
+be renewed no more; if I live to be an old woman, I shall remember it
+thirty years hence as a bright dream.&nbsp; The signature which you
+suspected of being fictitious is my real name.&nbsp; Again, therefore,
+I must sign myself,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;C. Bront&euml;.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;P.S.&mdash;Pray, sir, excuse me for writing to you a second
+time; I could not help writing, partly to tell you how thankful I am
+for your kindness, and partly to let you know that your advice shall
+not be wasted; however sorrowfully and reluctantly it may be at first
+followed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;C. B.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I cannot deny myself the gratification of inserting Southey&rsquo;s
+reply:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Keswick, March 22, 1837.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear Madam,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your letter has given me great pleasure, and I should not
+forgive myself if I did not tell you so.&nbsp; You have received admonition
+as considerately and as kindly as it was given.&nbsp; Let me now request
+that, if you ever should come to these Lakes while I am living here,
+you will let me see you.&nbsp; You would then think of me afterwards
+with the more good-will, because you would perceive that there is neither
+severity nor moroseness in the state of mind to which years and observation
+have brought me.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is, by God&rsquo;s mercy, in our power to attain a degree
+of self-government, which is essential to our own happiness, and contributes
+greatly to that of those around us.&nbsp; Take care of over-excitement,
+and endeavour to keep a quiet mind (even for your health it is the best
+advice that can be given you): your moral and spiritual improvement
+will then keep pace with the culture of your intellectual powers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And now, madam, God bless you!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Farewell, and believe me to be your sincere friend,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;ROBERT SOUTHEY.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Of this second letter, also, she spoke, and told me that it contained
+an invitation for her to go and see the poet if ever she visited the
+Lakes.&nbsp; &ldquo;But there was no money to spare,&rdquo; said she,
+&ldquo;nor any prospect of my ever earning money enough to have the
+chance of so great a pleasure, so I gave up thinking of it.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+At the time we conversed together on the subject we were at the Lakes.&nbsp;
+But Southey was dead.</p>
+<p>This &ldquo;stringent&rdquo; letter made her put aside, for a time,
+all idea of literary enterprise.&nbsp; She bent her whole energy towards
+the fulfilment of the duties in hand; but her occupation was not sufficient
+food for her great forces of intellect, and they cried out perpetually,
+&ldquo;Give, give,&rdquo; while the comparatively less breezy air of
+Dewsbury Moor told upon her health and spirits more and more.&nbsp;
+On August 27, 1837, she writes:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;I am again at Dewsbury, engaged in the old business,&mdash;teach,
+teach, teach . . . <i>When will you come home</i>?&nbsp; Make haste!&nbsp;
+You have been at Bath long enough for all purposes; by this time you
+have acquired polish enough, I am sure; if the varnish is laid on much
+thicker, I am afraid the good wood underneath will be quite concealed,
+and your Yorkshire friends won&rsquo;t stand that.&nbsp; Come, come.&nbsp;
+I am getting really tired of your absence.&nbsp; Saturday after Saturday
+comes round, and I can have no hope of hearing your knock at the door,
+and then being told that &lsquo;Miss E. is come.&rsquo;&nbsp; Oh, dear!
+in this monotonous life of mine, that was a pleasant event.&nbsp; I
+wish it would recur again; but it will take two or three interviews
+before the stiffness&mdash;the estrangement of this long separation&mdash;will
+wear away.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>About this time she forgot to return a work-bag she had borrowed,
+by a messenger, and in repairing her error she says:&mdash;&ldquo;These
+aberrations of memory warn me pretty intelligibly that I am getting
+past my prime.&rdquo;&nbsp; AEtat 21!&nbsp; And the same tone of despondency
+runs through the following letter:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;I wish exceedingly that I could come to you before
+Christmas, but it is impossible; another three weeks must elapse before
+I shall again have my comforter beside me, under the roof of my own
+dear quiet home.&nbsp; If I could always live with you, and daily read
+the Bible with you&mdash;if your lips and mine could at the same time
+drink the same draught, from the same pure fountain of mercy&mdash;I
+hope, I trust, I might one day become better, far better than my evil,
+wandering thoughts, my corrupt heart, cold to the spirit and warm to
+the flesh, will now permit me to be.&nbsp; I often plan the pleasant
+life which we might lead together, strengthening each other in that
+power of self-denial, that hallowed and glowing devotion, which the
+first saints of God often attained to.&nbsp; My eyes fill with tears
+when I contrast the bliss of such a state, brightened by hopes of the
+future, with the melancholy state I now live in, uncertain that I ever
+felt true contrition, wandering in thought and deed, longing for holiness,
+which I shall <i>never</i>, <i>never</i> obtain, smitten at times to
+the heart with the conviction that ghastly Calvinistic doctrines are
+true&mdash;darkened, in short, by the very shadows of spiritual death.&nbsp;
+If Christian perfection be necessary to salvation, I shall never be
+saved; my heart is a very hotbed for sinful thoughts, and when I decide
+on an action I scarcely remember to look to my Redeemer for direction.&nbsp;
+I know not how to pray; I cannot bend my life to the grand end of doing
+good; I go on constantly seeking my own pleasure, pursuing the gratification
+of my own desires.&nbsp; I forget God, and will not God forget me?&nbsp;
+And, meantime, I know the greatness of Jehovah; I acknowledge the perfection
+of His word; I adore the purity of the Christian faith; my theory is
+right, my practice horribly wrong.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The Christmas holidays came, and she and Anne returned to the parsonage,
+and to that happy home circle in which alone their natures expanded;
+amongst all other people they shrivelled up more or less.&nbsp; Indeed,
+there were only one or two strangers who could be admitted among the
+sisters without producing the same result.&nbsp; Emily and Anne were
+bound up in their lives and interests like twins.&nbsp; The former from
+reserve, the latter from timidity, avoided all friendships and intimacies
+beyond their family.&nbsp; Emily was impervious to influence; she never
+came in contact with public opinion, and her own decision of what was
+right and fitting was a law for her conduct and appearance, with which
+she allowed no one to interfere.&nbsp; Her love was poured out on Anne,
+as Charlotte&rsquo;s was on her.&nbsp; But the affection among all the
+three was stronger than either death or life.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;E.&rdquo; was eagerly welcomed by Charlotte, freely admitted
+by Emily, and kindly received by Anne, whenever she could visit them;
+and this Christmas she had promised to do so, but her coming had to
+be delayed on account of a little domestic accident detailed in the
+following letter:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Dec. 29, 1837.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am sure you will have thought me very remiss in not sending
+my promised letter long before now; but I have a sufficient and very
+melancholy excuse in an accident that befell our old faithful Tabby,
+a few days after my return home.&nbsp; She was gone out into the village
+on some errand, when, as she was descending the steep street, her foot
+slipped on the ice, and she fell; it was dark, and no one saw her mischance,
+till after a time her groans attracted the attention of a passer-by.&nbsp;
+She was lifted up and carried into the druggist&rsquo;s near; and, after
+the examination, it was discovered that she had completely shattered
+and dislocated one leg.&nbsp; Unfortunately, the fracture could not
+be set till six o&rsquo;clock the next morning, as no surgeon was to
+be had before that time, and she now lies at our house in a very doubtful
+and dangerous state.&nbsp; Of course we are all exceedingly distressed
+at the circumstance, for she was like one of our own family.&nbsp; Since
+the event we have been almost without assistance&mdash;a person has
+dropped in now and then to do the drudgery, but we have as yet been
+able to procure no regular servant; and consequently, the whole work
+of the house, as well as the additional duty of nursing Tabby, falls
+on ourselves.&nbsp; Under these circumstances I dare not press your
+visit here, at least until she is pronounced out of danger; it would
+be too selfish of me.&nbsp; Aunt wished me to give you this information
+before, but papa and all the rest were anxious I should delay until
+we saw whether matters took a more settled aspect, and I myself kept
+putting it off from day to day, most bitterly reluctant to give up all
+the pleasure I had anticipated so long.&nbsp; However, remembering what
+you told me, namely, that you had commended the matter to a higher decision
+than ours, and that you were resolved to submit with resignation to
+that decision, whatever it might be, I hold it my duty to yield also,
+and to be silent; it may be all for the best.&nbsp; I fear, if you had
+been here during this severe weather, your visit would have been of
+no advantage to you, for the moors are blockaded with snow, and you
+would never have been able to get out.&nbsp; After this disappointment,
+I never dare reckon with certainty on the enjoyment of a pleasure again;
+it seems as if some fatality stood between you and me.&nbsp; I am not
+good enough for you, and you must be kept from the contamination of
+too intimate society.&nbsp; I would urge your visit yet&mdash;I would
+entreat and press it&mdash;but the thought comes across me, should Tabby
+die while you are in the house, I should never forgive myself.&nbsp;
+No! it must not be, and in a thousand ways the consciousness of that
+mortifies and disappoints me most keenly, and I am not the only one
+who is disappointed.&nbsp; All in the house were looking to your visit
+with eagerness.&nbsp; Papa says he highly approves of my friendship
+with you, and he wishes me to continue it through life.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>A good neighbour of the Bront&euml;s&mdash;a clever, intelligent
+Yorkshire woman, who keeps a druggist&rsquo;s shop in Haworth, and from
+her occupation, her experience, and excellent sense, holds the position
+of village doctress and nurse, and, as such, has been a friend, in many
+a time of trial, and sickness, and death, in the households round&mdash;told
+me a characteristic little incident connected with Tabby&rsquo;s fractured
+leg.&nbsp; Mr. Bront&euml; is truly generous and regardful of all deserving
+claims.&nbsp; Tabby had lived with them for ten or twelve years, and
+was, as Charlotte expressed it, &ldquo;one of the family.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+But on the other hand, she was past the age for any very active service,
+being nearer seventy than sixty at the time of the accident; she had
+a sister living in the village; and the savings she had accumulated,
+during many years&rsquo; service, formed a competency for one in her
+rank of life.&nbsp; Or if, in this time of sickness, she fell short
+of any comforts which her state rendered necessary, the parsonage could
+supply them.&nbsp; So reasoned Miss Branwell, the prudent, not to say
+anxious aunt; looking to the limited contents of Mr. Bront&euml;&rsquo;s
+purse, and the unprovided-for-future of her nieces; who were, moreover,
+losing the relaxation of the holidays, in close attendance upon Tabby.</p>
+<p>Miss Branwell urged her views upon Mr. Bront&euml; as soon as the
+immediate danger to the old servant&rsquo;s life was over.&nbsp; He
+refused at first to listen to the careful advice; it was repugnant to
+his liberal nature.&nbsp; But Miss Branwell persevered; urged economical
+motives; pressed on his love for his daughters.&nbsp; He gave way.&nbsp;
+Tabby was to be removed to her sister&rsquo;s, and there nursed and
+cared for, Mr. Bront&euml; coming in with his aid when her own resources
+fell short.&nbsp; This decision was communicated to the girls.&nbsp;
+There were symptoms of a quiet, but sturdy rebellion, that winter afternoon,
+in the small precincts of Haworth parsonage.&nbsp; They made one unanimous
+and stiff remonstrance.&nbsp; Tabby had tended them in their childhood;
+they, and none other, should tend her in her infirmity and age.&nbsp;
+At tea-time, they were sad and silent, and the meal went away untouched
+by any of the three.&nbsp; So it was at breakfast; they did not waste
+many words on the subject, but each word they did utter was weighty.&nbsp;
+They &ldquo;struck&rdquo; eating till the resolution was rescinded,
+and Tabby was allowed to remain a helpless invalid entirely dependent
+upon them.&nbsp; Herein was the strong feeling of Duty being paramount
+to pleasure, which lay at the foundation of Charlotte&rsquo;s character,
+made most apparent; for we have seen how she yearned for her friend&rsquo;s
+company; but it was to be obtained only by shrinking from what she esteemed
+right, and that she never did, whatever might be the sacrifice.</p>
+<p>She had another weight on her mind this Christmas.&nbsp; I have said
+that the air of Dewsbury Moor did not agree with her, though she herself
+was hardly aware how much her life there was affecting her health.&nbsp;
+But Anne had begun to suffer just before the holidays, and Charlotte
+watched over her younger sisters with the jealous vigilance of some
+wild creature, that changes her very nature if danger threatens her
+young.&nbsp; Anne had a slight cough, a pain at her side, a difficulty
+of breathing.&nbsp; Miss W--- considered it as little more than a common
+cold; but Charlotte felt every indication of incipient consumption as
+a stab at her heart, remembering Maria and Elizabeth, whose places once
+knew them, and should know them no more.</p>
+<p>Stung by anxiety for this little sister, she upbraided Miss W---
+for her fancied indifference to Anne&rsquo;s state of health.&nbsp;
+Miss W--- felt these reproaches keenly, and wrote to Mr. Bront&euml;
+about them.&nbsp; He immediately replied most kindly, expressing his
+fear that Charlotte&rsquo;s apprehensions and anxieties respecting her
+sister had led her to give utterance to over-excited expressions of
+alarm.&nbsp; Through Miss W---&rsquo;s kind consideration, Anne was
+a year longer at school than her friends intended.&nbsp; At the close
+of the half-year Miss W--- sought for the opportunity of an explanation
+of each other&rsquo;s words, and the issue proved that &ldquo;the falling
+out of faithful friends, renewing is of love.&rdquo;&nbsp; And so ended
+the first, last, and only difference Charlotte ever had with good, kind
+Miss W ---.</p>
+<p>Still her heart had received a shock in the perception of Anne&rsquo;s
+delicacy; and all these holidays she watched over her with the longing,
+fond anxiety, which is so full of sudden pangs of fear.</p>
+<p>Emily had given up her situation in the Halifax school, at the expiration
+of six months of arduous trial, on account of her health, which could
+only be re-established by the bracing moorland air and free life of
+home.&nbsp; Tabby&rsquo;s illness had preyed on the family resources.&nbsp;
+I doubt whether Branwell was maintaining himself at this time.&nbsp;
+For some unexplained reason, he had given up the idea of becoming a
+student of painting at the Royal Academy, and his prospects in life
+were uncertain, and had yet to be settled.&nbsp; So Charlotte had quietly
+to take up her burden of teaching again, and return to her previous
+monotonous life.</p>
+<p>Brave heart, ready to die in harness!&nbsp; She went back to her
+work, and made no complaint, hoping to subdue the weakness that was
+gaining ground upon her.&nbsp; About this time, she would turn sick
+and trembling at any sudden noise, and could hardly repress her screams
+when startled.&nbsp; This showed a fearful degree of physical weakness
+in one who was generally so self-controlled; and the medical man, whom
+at length, through Miss W---&rsquo;s entreaty, she was led to consult,
+insisted on her return to the parsonage.&nbsp; She had led too sedentary
+a life, he said; and the soft summer air, blowing round her home, the
+sweet company of those she loved, the release, the freedom of life in
+her own family, were needed, to save either reason or life.&nbsp; So,
+as One higher than she had over-ruled that for a time she might relax
+her strain, she returned to Haworth; and after a season of utter quiet,
+her father sought for her the enlivening society of her two friends,
+Mary and Martha T.&nbsp; At the conclusion of the following letter,
+written to the then absent E., there is, I think, as pretty a glimpse
+of a merry group of young people as need be; and like all descriptions
+of doing, as distinct from thinking or feeling, in letters, it saddens
+one in proportion to the vivacity of the picture of what was once, and
+is now utterly swept away.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Haworth, June 9, 1838.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I received your packet of despatches on Wednesday; it was
+brought me by Mary and Martha, who have been staying at Haworth for
+a few days; they leave us to-day.&nbsp; You will be surprised at the
+date of this letter.&nbsp; I ought to be at Dewsbury Moor, you know;
+but I stayed as long as I was able, and at length I neither could nor
+dared stay any longer.&nbsp; My health and spirits had utterly failed
+me, and the medical man whom I consulted enjoined me, as I valued my
+life, to go home.&nbsp; So home I went, and the change has at once roused
+and soothed me; and I am now, I trust, fairly in the way to be myself
+again.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A calm and even mind like yours cannot conceive the feelings
+of the shattered wretch who is now writing to you, when, after weeks
+of mental and bodily anguish not to be described, something like peace
+began to dawn again.&nbsp; Mary is far from well.&nbsp; She breathes
+short, has a pain in her chest, and frequent flushings of fever.&nbsp;
+I cannot tell you what agony these symptoms give me; they remind me
+too strongly of my two sisters, whom no power of medicine could save.&nbsp;
+Martha is now very well; she has kept in a continual flow of good humour
+during her stay here, and has consequently been very fascinating . .
+. &rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They are making such a noise about me I cannot write any more.&nbsp;
+Mary is playing on the piano; Martha is chattering as fast as her little
+tongue can run; and Branwell is standing before her, laughing at her
+vivacity.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Charlotte grew much stronger in this quiet, happy period at home.&nbsp;
+She paid occasional visits to her two great friends, and they in return
+came to Haworth.&nbsp; At one of their houses, I suspect, she met with
+the person to whom the following letter refers&mdash;some one having
+a slight resemblance to the character of &ldquo;St. John,&rdquo; in
+the last volume of &ldquo;Jane Eyre,&rdquo; and, like him, in holy orders.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;March 12, 1839.</p>
+<p>. . . &ldquo;I had a kindly leaning towards him, because he is an
+amiable and well-disposed man.&nbsp; Yet I had not, and could not have,
+that intense attachment which would make me willing to die for him;
+and if ever I marry, it must be in that light of adoration that I will
+regard my husband.&nbsp; Ten to one I shall never have the chance again;
+but <i>n&rsquo;importe</i>.&nbsp; Moreover, I was aware that he knew
+so little of me he could hardly be conscious to whom he was writing.&nbsp;
+Why! it would startle him to see me in my natural home character; he
+would think I was a wild, romantic enthusiast indeed.&nbsp; I could
+not sit all day long making a grave face before my husband.&nbsp; I
+would laugh, and satirize, and say whatever came into my head first.&nbsp;
+And if he were a clever man, and loved me, the whole world, weighed
+in the balance against his smallest wish, should be light as air.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>So that&mdash;her first proposal of marriage&mdash;was quietly declined
+and put on one side.&nbsp; Matrimony did not enter into the scheme of
+her life, but good, sound, earnest labour did; the question, however,
+was as yet undecided in what direction she should employ her forces.&nbsp;
+She had been discouraged in literature; her eyes failed her in the minute
+kind of drawing which she practised when she wanted to express an idea;
+teaching seemed to her at this time, as it does to most women at all
+times, the only way of earning an independent livelihood.&nbsp; But
+neither she nor her sisters were naturally fond of children.&nbsp; The
+hieroglyphics of childhood were an unknown language to them, for they
+had never been much with those younger than themselves.&nbsp; I am inclined
+to think, too, that they had not the happy knack of imparting information,
+which seems to be a separate gift from the faculty of acquiring it;
+a kind of sympathetic tact, which instinctively perceives the difficulties
+that impede comprehension in a child&rsquo;s mind, and that yet are
+too vague and unformed for it, with its half-developed powers of expression,
+to explain by words.&nbsp; Consequently, teaching very young children
+was anything but a &ldquo;delightful task&rdquo; to the three Bront&euml;
+sisters.&nbsp; With older girls, verging on womanhood, they might have
+done better, especially if these had any desire for improvement.&nbsp;
+But the education which the village clergyman&rsquo;s daughters had
+received, did not as yet qualify them to undertake the charge of advanced
+pupils.&nbsp; They knew but little French, and were not proficients
+in music; I doubt whether Charlotte could play at all.&nbsp; But they
+were all strong again, and, at any rate, Charlotte and Anne must put
+their shoulders to the wheel.&nbsp; One daughter was needed at home,
+to stay with Mr. Bront&euml; and Miss Branwell; to be the young and
+active member in a household of four, whereof three&mdash;the father,
+the aunt, and faithful Tabby&mdash;were past middle age.&nbsp; And Emily,
+who suffered and drooped more than her sisters when away from Haworth,
+was the one appointed to remain.&nbsp; Anne was the first to meet with
+a situation.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;April 15th, 1839.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I could not write to you in the week you requested, as about
+that time we were very busy in preparing for Anne&rsquo;s departure.&nbsp;
+Poor child! she left us last Monday; no one went with her; it was her
+own wish that she might be allowed to go alone, as she thought she could
+manage better and summon more courage if thrown entirely upon her own
+resources.&nbsp; We have had one letter from her since she went.&nbsp;
+She expresses herself very well satisfied, and says that Mrs. --- is
+extremely kind; the two eldest children alone are under her care, the
+rest are confined to the nursery, with which and its occupants she has
+nothing to do . . . I hope she&rsquo;ll do.&nbsp; You would be astonished
+what a sensible, clever letter she writes; it is only the talking part
+that I fear.&nbsp; But I do seriously apprehend that Mrs. --- will sometimes
+conclude that she has a natural impediment in her speech.&nbsp; For
+my own part, I am as yet &lsquo;wanting a situation,&rsquo; like a housemaid
+out of place.&nbsp; By the way, I have lately discovered I have quite
+a talent for cleaning, sweeping up hearths, dusting rooms, making beds,
+&amp;c.; so, if everything else fails, I can turn my hand to that, if
+anybody will give me good wages for little labour.&nbsp; I won&rsquo;t
+be a cook; I hate soothing.&nbsp; I won&rsquo;t be a nurserymaid, nor
+a lady&rsquo;s-maid, far less a lady&rsquo;s companion, or a mantua-maker,
+or a straw-bonnet maker, or a taker-in of plain work.&nbsp; I won&rsquo;t
+be anything but a housemaid . . . With regard to my visit to G., I have
+as yet received no invitation; but if I should be asked, though I should
+feel it a great act of self-denial to refuse, yet I have almost made
+up my mind to do so, though the society of the T.&rsquo;s is one of
+the most rousing pleasures I have ever known.&nbsp; Good-bye, my darling
+E., &amp;c.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;P. S.&mdash;Strike out that word &lsquo;darling;&rsquo; it
+is humbug.&nbsp; Where&rsquo;s the use of protestations?&nbsp; We&rsquo;ve
+known each other, and liked each other, a good while; that&rsquo;s enough.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Not many weeks after this was written, Charlotte also became engaged
+as a governess.&nbsp; I intend carefully to abstain from introducing
+the names of any living people, respecting whom I may have to tell unpleasant
+truths, or to quote severe remarks from Miss Bront&euml;&rsquo;s letters;
+but it is necessary that the difficulties she had to encounter in her
+various phases of life, should be fairly and frankly made known, before
+the force &ldquo;of what was resisted&rdquo; can be at all understood.&nbsp;
+I was once speaking to her about &ldquo;Agnes Grey&rdquo;&mdash;the
+novel in which her sister Anne pretty literally describes her own experience
+as a governess&mdash;and alluding more particularly to the account of
+the stoning of the little nestlings in the presence of the parent birds.&nbsp;
+She said that none but those who had been in the position of a governess
+could ever realise the dark side of &ldquo;respectable&rdquo; human
+nature; under no great temptation to crime, but daily giving way to
+selfishness and ill-temper, till its conduct towards those dependent
+on it sometimes amounts to a tyranny of which one would rather be the
+victim than the inflicter.&nbsp; We can only trust in such cases that
+the employers err rather from a density of perception and an absence
+of sympathy, than from any natural cruelty of disposition.&nbsp; Among
+several things of the same kind, which I well remember, she told me
+what had once occurred to herself.&nbsp; She had been entrusted with
+the care of a little boy, three or four years old, during the absence
+of his parents on a day&rsquo;s excursion, and particularly enjoined
+to keep him out of the stable-yard.&nbsp; His elder brother, a lad of
+eight or nine, and not a pupil of Miss Bront&euml;&rsquo;s, tempted
+the little fellow into the forbidden place.&nbsp; She followed, and
+tried to induce him to come away; but, instigated by his brother, he
+began throwing stones at her, and one of them hit her so severe a blow
+on the temple that the lads were alarmed into obedience.&nbsp; The next
+day, in full family conclave, the mother asked Miss Bront&euml; what
+occasioned the mark on her forehead.&nbsp; She simply replied, &ldquo;An
+accident, ma&rsquo;am,&rdquo; and no further inquiry was made; but the
+children (both brothers and sisters) had been present, and honoured
+her for not &ldquo;telling tales.&rdquo;&nbsp; From that time, she began
+to obtain influence over all, more or less, according to their different
+characters; and as she insensibly gained their affection, her own interest
+in them was increasing.&nbsp; But one day, at the children&rsquo;s dinner,
+the small truant of the stable-yard, in a little demonstrative gush,
+said, putting his hand in hers, &ldquo;I love &lsquo;ou, Miss Bront&euml;.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Whereupon, the mother exclaimed, before all the children, &ldquo;Love
+the <i>governess</i>, my dear!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The family into which she first entered was, I believe, that
+of a wealthy Yorkshire manufacturer.&nbsp; The following extracts from
+her correspondence at this time will show how painfully the restraint
+of her new mode of life pressed upon her.&nbsp; The first is from a
+letter to Emily, beginning with one of the tender expressions in which,
+in spite of &lsquo;humbug,&rsquo; she indulged herself.&nbsp; &lsquo;Mine
+dear love,&rsquo; &lsquo;Mine-bonnie love,&rsquo; are her terms of address
+to this beloved sister.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;June 8th, 1839.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have striven hard to be pleased with my new situation.&nbsp;
+The country, the house and the grounds are, as I have said, divine;
+but, alack-a-day! there is such a thing as seeing all beautiful around
+you&mdash;pleasant woods, white paths, green lawns, and blue sunshiny
+sky&mdash;and not having a free moment or a free thought left to enjoy
+them.&nbsp; The children are constantly with me.&nbsp; As for correcting
+them, I quickly found that was out of the question; they are to do as
+they like.&nbsp; A complaint to the mother only brings black looks on
+myself, and unjust, partial excuses to screen the children.&nbsp; I
+have tried that plan once, and succeeded so notably, I shall try no
+more.&nbsp; I said in my last letter that Mrs. --- did not know me.&nbsp;
+I now begin to find she does not intend to know me; that she cares nothing
+about me, except to contrive how the greatest possible quantity of labour
+may be got out of me; and to that end she overwhelms me with oceans
+of needle-work; yards of cambric to hem, muslin nightcaps to make, and,
+above all things, dolls to dress.&nbsp; I do not think she likes me
+at all, because I can&rsquo;t help being shy in such an entirely novel
+scene, surrounded as I have hitherto been by strange and constantly
+changing faces . . . I used to think I should like to be in the stir
+of grand folks&rsquo; society; but I have had enough of it&mdash;it
+is dreary work to look on and listen.&nbsp; I see more clearly than
+I have ever done before, that a private governess has no existence,
+is not considered as a living rational being, except as connected with
+the wearisome duties she has to fulfil . . . One of the pleasantest
+afternoons I have spent here&mdash;indeed, the only one at all pleasant&mdash;was
+when Mr. --- walked out with his children, and I had orders to follow
+a little behind.&nbsp; As he strolled on through his fields, with his
+magnificent Newfoundland dog at his side, he looked very like what a
+frank, wealthy, Conservative gentleman ought to be.&nbsp; He spoke freely
+and unaffectedly to the people he met, and, though he indulged his children
+and allowed them to tease himself far too much, he would not suffer
+them grossly to insult others.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>(WRITTEN IN PENCIL TO A FRIEND.)</p>
+<p>&ldquo;July, 1839.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I cannot procure ink, without going into the drawing-room,
+where I do not wish to go . . . I should have written to you long since,
+and told you every detail of the utterly new scene into which I have
+lately been cast, had I not been daily expecting a letter from yourself,
+and wondering and lamenting that you did not write; for you will remember
+it was your turn.&nbsp; I must not bother you too much with my sorrows,
+of which, I fear, you have heard an exaggerated account.&nbsp; If you
+were near me, perhaps I might be tempted to tell you all, to grow egotistical,
+and pour out the long history of a private governess&rsquo;s trials
+and crosses in her first situation.&nbsp; As it is, I will only ask
+you to imagine the miseries of a reserved wretch like me, thrown at
+once into the midst of a large family, at a time when they were particularly
+gay&mdash;when the house was filled with company&mdash;all strangers&mdash;people
+whose faces I had never seen before.&nbsp; In this state I had charge
+given me of a set of pampered, spoilt, turbulent children, whom I was
+expected constantly to amuse, as well as to instruct.&nbsp; I soon found
+that the constant demand on my stock of animal spirits reduced them
+to the lowest state of exhaustion; at times I felt&mdash;and, I suppose,
+seemed&mdash;depressed.&nbsp; To my astonishment, I was taken to task
+on the subject by Mrs. --- with a sternness of manner and a harshness
+of language scarcely credible; like a fool, I cried most bitterly.&nbsp;
+I could not help it; my spirits quite failed me at first.&nbsp; I thought
+I had done my best&mdash;strained every nerve to please her; and to
+be treated in that way, merely because I was shy and sometimes melancholy,
+was too bad.&nbsp; At first I was for giving all up and going home.&nbsp;
+But, after a little reflection, I determined to summon what energy I
+had, and to weather the storm.&nbsp; I said to myself, &lsquo;I have
+never yet quitted a place without gaining a friend; adversity is a good
+school; the poor are born to labour, and the dependent to endure.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+I resolved to be patient, to command my feelings, and to take what came;
+the ordeal, I reflected, would not last many weeks, and I trusted it
+would do me good.&nbsp; I recollected the fable of the willow and the
+oak; I bent quietly, and now, I trust, the storm is blowing over me.&nbsp;
+Mrs. --- is generally considered an agreeable woman; so she is, I doubt
+not, in general society.&nbsp; She behaves somewhat more civilly to
+me now than she did at first, and the children are a little more manageable;
+but she does not know my character, and she does not wish to know it.&nbsp;
+I have never had five minutes&rsquo; conversation with her since I came,
+except while she was scolding me.&nbsp; I have no wish to be pitied,
+except by yourself; if I were talking to you I could tell you much more.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>(TO EMILY, ABOUT THIS TIME.)</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mine bonnie love, I was as glad of your letter as tongue can
+express: it is a real, genuine pleasure to hear from home; a thing to
+be saved till bedtime, when one has a moment&rsquo;s quiet and rest
+to enjoy it thoroughly.&nbsp; Write whenever you can.&nbsp; I could
+like to be at home.&nbsp; I could like to work in a mill.&nbsp; I could
+like to feel some mental liberty.&nbsp; I could like this weight of
+restraint to be taken off.&nbsp; But the holidays will come.&nbsp; Coraggio.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Her temporary engagement in this uncongenial family ended in the
+July of this year; not before the constant strain upon her spirits and
+strength had again affected her health; but when this delicacy became
+apparent in palpitations and shortness of breathing, it was treated
+as affectation&mdash;as a phase of imaginary indisposition, which could
+be dissipated by a good scolding.&nbsp; She had been brought up rather
+in a school of Spartan endurance than in one of maudlin self-indulgence,
+and could bear many a pain and relinquish many a hope in silence.</p>
+<p>After she had been at home about a week, her friend proposed that
+she should accompany her in some little excursion, having pleasure alone
+for its object.&nbsp; She caught at the idea most eagerly at first;
+but her hope stood still, waned, and had almost disappeared before,
+after many delays, it was realised.&nbsp; In its fulfilment at last,
+it was a favourable specimen of many a similar air-bubble dancing before
+her eyes in her brief career, in which stern realities, rather than
+pleasures, formed the leading incidents.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;July 26th, 1839.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your proposal has almost driven me &lsquo;clean daft&rsquo;&mdash;if
+you don&rsquo;t understand that ladylike expression, you must ask me
+what it means when I see you.&nbsp; The fact is, an excursion with you
+anywhere,&mdash;whether to Cleathorpe or Canada,&mdash;just by ourselves,
+would be to me most delightful.&nbsp; I should, indeed, like to go;
+but I can&rsquo;t get leave of absence for longer than a week, and I&rsquo;m
+afraid that would not suit you&mdash;must I then give it up entirely?&nbsp;
+I feel as if I <i>could not</i>; I never had such a chance of enjoyment
+before; I do want to see you and talk to you, and be with you.&nbsp;
+When do you wish to go?&nbsp; Could I meet you at Leeds?&nbsp; To take
+a gig from Haworth to B., would be to me a very serious increase of
+expense, and I happen to be very low in cash.&nbsp; Oh! rich people
+seem to have many pleasures at their command which we are debarred from!&nbsp;
+However, no repining.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Say when you go, and I shall be able in my answer to say decidedly
+whether I can accompany you or not.&nbsp; I must&mdash;I will&mdash;I&rsquo;m
+set upon it&mdash;I&rsquo;ll be obstinate and bear down all opposition.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;P.S.&mdash;Since writing the above, I find that aunt and papa
+have determined to go to Liverpool for a fortnight, and take us all
+with them.&nbsp; It is stipulated, however, that I should give up the
+Cleathorpe scheme.&nbsp; I yield reluctantly.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I fancy that, about this time, Mr. Bront&euml; found it necessary,
+either from failing health or the increased populousness of the parish,
+to engage the assistance of a curate.&nbsp; At least, it is in a letter
+written this summer that I find mention of the first of a succession
+of curates, who henceforward revolved round Haworth Parsonage, and made
+an impression on the mind of one of its inmates which she has conveyed
+pretty distinctly to the world.&nbsp; The Haworth curate brought his
+clerical friends and neighbours about the place, and for a time the
+incursions of these, near the parsonage tea-time, formed occurrences
+by which the quietness of the life there was varied, sometimes pleasantly,
+sometimes disagreeably.&nbsp; The little adventure recorded at the end
+of the following letter is uncommon in the lot of most women, and is
+a testimony in this case to the unusual power of attraction&mdash;though
+so plain in feature&mdash;which Charlotte possessed, when she let herself
+go in the happiness and freedom of home.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;August 4th, 1839.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Liverpool journey is yet a matter of talk, a sort of castle
+in the air; but, between you and me, I fancy it is very doubtful whether
+it will ever assume a more solid shape.&nbsp; Aunt&mdash;like many other
+elderly people&mdash;likes to talk of such things; but when it comes
+to putting them into actual execution, she rather falls off.&nbsp; Such
+being the case, I think you and I had better adhere to our first plan
+of going somewhere together independently of other people.&nbsp; I have
+got leave to accompany you for a week&mdash;at the utmost a fortnight&mdash;but
+no more.&nbsp; Where do you wish to go?&nbsp; Burlington, I should think,
+from what M. says, would be as eligible a place as any.&nbsp; When do
+you set off?&nbsp; Arrange all these things according to your convenience;
+I shall start no objections.&nbsp; The idea of seeing the sea&mdash;of
+being near it&mdash;watching its changes by sunrise, sunset, moonlight,
+and noon-day&mdash;in calm, perhaps in storm&mdash;fills and satisfies
+my mind.&nbsp; I shall be discontented at nothing.&nbsp; And then I
+am not to be with a set of people with whom I have nothing in common&mdash;who
+would be nuisances and bores: but with you, whom I like and know, and
+who knows me.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have an odd circumstance to relate to you: prepare for a
+hearty laugh!&nbsp; The other day, Mr. ---, a vicar, came to spend the
+day with us, bringing with him his own curate.&nbsp; The latter gentleman,
+by name Mr. B., is a young Irish clergyman, fresh from Dublin University.&nbsp;
+It was the first time we had any of us seen him, but, however, after
+the manner of his countrymen, he soon made himself at home.&nbsp; His
+character quickly appeared in his conversation; witty, lively, ardent,
+clever too; but deficient in the dignity and discretion of an Englishman.&nbsp;
+At home, you know, I talk with ease, and am never shy&mdash;never weighed
+down and oppressed by that miserable <i>mauvaise honte</i> which torments
+and constrains me elsewhere.&nbsp; So I conversed with this Irishman,
+and laughed at his jests; and, though I saw faults in his character,
+excused them because of the amusement his originality afforded.&nbsp;
+I cooled a little, indeed, and drew in towards the latter part of the
+evening, because he began to season his conversation with something
+of Hibernian flattery, which I did not quite relish.&nbsp; However,
+they went away, and no more was thought about them.&nbsp; A few days
+after, I got a letter, the direction of which puzzled me, it being in
+a hand I was not accustomed to see.&nbsp; Evidently, it was neither
+from you nor Mary, my only correspondents.&nbsp; Having opened and read
+it, it proved to be a declaration of attachment and proposal of matrimony,
+expressed in the ardent language of the sapient young Irishman!&nbsp;
+I hope you are laughing heartily.&nbsp; This is not like one of my adventures,
+is it?&nbsp; It more nearly resembles Martha&rsquo;s.&nbsp; I am certainly
+doomed to be an old maid.&nbsp; Never mind.&nbsp; I made up my mind
+to that fate ever since I was twelve years old.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well! thought I, I have heard of love at first sight, but
+this beats all!&nbsp; I leave you to guess what my answer would be,
+convinced that you will not do me the injustice of guessing wrong.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>On the 14th of August she still writes from Haworth:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;I have in vain packed my box, and prepared everything
+for our anticipated journey.&nbsp; It so happens that I can get no conveyance
+this week or the next.&nbsp; The only gig let out to hire in Haworth,
+is at Harrowgate, and likely to remain there, for aught I can hear.&nbsp;
+Papa decidedly objects to my going by the coach, and walking to B.,
+though I am sure I could manage it.&nbsp; Aunt exclaims against the
+weather, and the roads, and the four winds of heaven, so I am in a fix,
+and, what is worse, so are you.&nbsp; On reading over, for the second
+or third time, your last letter (which, by the by, was written in such
+hieroglyphics that, at the first hasty perusal, I could hardly make
+out two consecutive words), I find you intimate that if I leave this
+journey till Thursday I shall be too late.&nbsp; I grieve that I should
+have so inconvenienced you; but I need not talk of either Friday or
+Saturday now, for I rather imagine there is small chance of my ever
+going at all.&nbsp; The elders of the house have never cordially acquiesced
+in the measure; and now that impediments seem to start up at every step,
+opposition grows more open.&nbsp; Papa, indeed, would willingly indulge
+me, but this very kindness of his makes me doubt whether I ought to
+draw upon it; so, though I could battle out aunt&rsquo;s discontent,
+I yield to papa&rsquo;s indulgence.&nbsp; He does not say so, but I
+know he would rather I stayed at home; and aunt meant well too, I dare
+say, but I am provoked that she reserved the expression of her decided
+disapproval till all was settled between you and myself.&nbsp; Reckon
+on me no more; leave me out in your calculations: perhaps I ought, in
+the beginning, to have had prudence sufficient to shut my eyes against
+such a prospect of pleasure, so as to deny myself the hope of it.&nbsp;
+Be as angry as you please with me for disappointing you.&nbsp; I did
+not intend it, and have only one thing more to say&mdash;if you do not
+go immediately to the sea, will you come to see us at Haworth?&nbsp;
+This invitation is not mine only, but papa&rsquo;s and aunt&rsquo;s.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>However, a little more patience, a little more delay, and she enjoyed
+the pleasure she had wished for so much.&nbsp; She and her friend went
+to Easton for a fortnight in the latter part of September.&nbsp; It
+was here she received her first impressions of the sea.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Oct. 24th.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have you forgotten the sea by this time, E.?&nbsp; Is it grown
+dim in your mind?&nbsp; Or can you still see it, dark, blue, and green,
+and foam-white, and hear it roaring roughly when the wind is high, or
+rushing softly when it is calm? . . . I am as well as need be, and very
+fat.&nbsp; I think of Easton very often, and of worthy Mr. H., and his
+kind-hearted helpmate, and of our pleasant walks to H--- Wood, and to
+Boynton, our merry evenings, our romps with little Hancheon, &amp;c.,
+&amp;c.&nbsp; If we both live, this period of our lives will long be
+a theme for pleasant recollection.&nbsp; Did you chance, in your letter
+to Mr. H., to mention my spectacles?&nbsp; I am sadly inconvenienced
+by the want of them.&nbsp; I can neither read, write, nor draw with
+comfort in their absence.&nbsp; I hope Madame won&rsquo;t refuse to
+give them up . . . Excuse the brevity of this letter, for I have been
+drawing all day, and my eyes are so tired it is quite a labour to write.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>But, as the vivid remembrance of this pleasure died away, an accident
+occurred to make the actual duties of life press somewhat heavily for
+a time.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;December 21st, 1839</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We are at present, and have been during the last month, rather
+busy, as, for that space of time, we have been without a servant, except
+a little girl to run errands.&nbsp; Poor Tabby became so lame that she
+was at length obliged to leave us.&nbsp; She is residing with her sister,
+in a little house of her own, which she bought with her savings a year
+or two since.&nbsp; She is very comfortable, and wants nothing; as she
+is near, we see her very often.&nbsp; In the meantime, Emily and I are
+sufficiently busy, as you may suppose: I manage the ironing, and keep
+the rooms clean; Emily does the baking, and attends to the kitchen.&nbsp;
+We are such odd animals, that we prefer this mode of contrivance to
+having a new face amongst us.&nbsp; Besides, we do not despair of Tabby&rsquo;s
+return, and she shall not be supplanted by a stranger in her absence.&nbsp;
+I excited aunt&rsquo;s wrath very much by burning the clothes, the first
+time I attempted to iron; but I do better now.&nbsp; Human feelings
+are queer things; I am much happier black-leading the stoves, making
+the beds, and sweeping the floors at home, than I should be living like
+a fine lady anywhere else.&nbsp; I must indeed drop my subscription
+to the Jews, because I have no money to keep it up.&nbsp; I ought to
+have announced this intention to you before, but I quite forgot I was
+a subscriber.&nbsp; I intend to force myself to take another situation
+when I can get one, though I <i>hate</i> and <i>abhor</i> the very thoughts
+of governess-ship.&nbsp; But I must do it; and, therefore, I heartily
+wish I could hear of a family where they need such a commodity as a
+governess.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<h2>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+<p>The year 1840 found all the Bront&euml;s living at home, except Anne.&nbsp;
+As I have already intimated, for some reason with which I am unacquainted,
+the plan of sending Branwell to study at the Royal Academy had been
+relinquished; probably it was found, on inquiry, that the expenses of
+such a life, were greater than his father&rsquo;s slender finances could
+afford, even with the help which Charlotte&rsquo;s labours at Miss W---&rsquo;s
+gave, by providing for Anne&rsquo;s board and education.&nbsp; I gather
+from what I have heard, that Branwell must have been severely disappointed
+when the plan fell through.&nbsp; His talents were certainly very brilliant,
+and of this he was fully conscious, and fervently desired, by their
+use, either in writing or drawing, to make himself a name.&nbsp; At
+the same time, he would probably have found his strong love of pleasure
+and irregular habits a great impediment in his path to fame; but these
+blemishes in his character were only additional reasons why he yearned
+after a London life, in which he imagined he could obtain every stimulant
+to his already vigorous intellect, while at the same time he would have
+a license of action to be found only in crowded cities.&nbsp; Thus his
+whole nature was attracted towards the metropolis; and many an hour
+must he have spent poring over the map of London, to judge from an anecdote
+which has been told me.&nbsp; Some traveller for a London house of business
+came to Haworth for a night; and according to the unfortunate habit
+of the place, the brilliant &ldquo;Patrick&rdquo; was sent for to the
+inn, to beguile the evening by his intellectual conversation and his
+flashes of wit.&nbsp; They began to talk of London; of the habits and
+ways of life there; of the places of amusement; and Branwell informed
+the Londoner of one or two short cuts from point to point, up narrow
+lanes or back streets; and it was only towards the end of the evening
+that the traveller discovered, from his companion&rsquo;s voluntary
+confession, that he had never set foot in London at all.</p>
+<p>At this time the young man seemed to have his fate in his own hands.&nbsp;
+He was full of noble impulses, as well as of extraordinary gifts; not
+accustomed to resist temptation, it is true, from any higher motive
+than strong family affection, but showing so much power of attachment
+to all about him that they took pleasure in believing that, after a
+time, he would &ldquo;right himself,&rdquo; and that they should have
+pride and delight in the use he would then make of his splendid talents.&nbsp;
+His aunt especially made him her great favourite.&nbsp; There are always
+peculiar trials in the life of an only boy in a family of girls.&nbsp;
+He is expected to act a part in life; to <i>do</i>, while they are only
+to <i>be</i>; and the necessity of their giving way to him in some things,
+is too often exaggerated into their giving way to him in all, and thus
+rendering him utterly selfish.&nbsp; In the family about whom I am writing,
+while the rest were almost ascetic in their habits, Branwell was allowed
+to grow up self-indulgent; but, in early youth, his power of attracting
+and attaching people was so great, that few came in contact with him
+who were not so much dazzled by him as to be desirous of gratifying
+whatever wishes he expressed.&nbsp; Of course, he was careful enough
+not to reveal anything before his father and sisters of the pleasures
+he indulged in; but his tone of thought and conversation became gradually
+coarser, and, for a time, his sisters tried to persuade themselves that
+such coarseness was a part of manliness, and to blind themselves by
+love to the fact that Branwell was worse than other young men.&nbsp;
+At present, though he had, they were aware, fallen into some errors,
+the exact nature of which they avoided knowing, still he was their hope
+and their darling; their pride, who should some time bring great glory
+to the name of Bront&euml;.</p>
+<p>He and his sister Charlotte were both slight and small of stature,
+while the other two were of taller and larger make.&nbsp; I have seen
+Branwell&rsquo;s profile; it is what would be generally esteemed very
+handsome; the forehead is massive, the eye well set, and the expression
+of it fine and intellectual; the nose too is good; but there are coarse
+lines about the mouth, and the lips, though of handsome shape, are loose
+and thick, indicating self-indulgence, while the slightly retreating
+chin conveys an idea of weakness of will.&nbsp; His hair and complexion
+were sandy.&nbsp; He had enough of Irish blood in him to make his manners
+frank and genial, with a kind of natural gallantry about them.&nbsp;
+In a fragment of one of his manuscripts which I have read, there is
+a justness and felicity of expression which is very striking.&nbsp;
+It is the beginning of a tale, and the actors in it are drawn with much
+of the grace of characteristic portrait-painting, in perfectly pure
+and simple language which distinguishes so many of Addison&rsquo;s papers
+in the &ldquo;Spectator.&rdquo;&nbsp; The fragment is too short to afford
+the means of judging whether he had much dramatic talent, as the persons
+of the story are not thrown into conversation.&nbsp; But altogether
+the elegance and composure of style are such as one would not have expected
+from this vehement and ill-fated young man.&nbsp; He had a stronger
+desire for literary fame burning in his heart, than even that which
+occasionally flashed up in his sisters&rsquo;.&nbsp; He tried various
+outlets for his talents.&nbsp; He wrote and sent poems to Wordsworth
+and Coleridge, who both expressed kind and laudatory opinions, and he
+frequently contributed verses to the <i>Leeds Mercury</i>.&nbsp; In
+1840, he was living at home, employing himself in occasional composition
+of various kinds, and waiting till some occupation, for which he might
+be fitted without any expensive course of preliminary training, should
+turn up; waiting, not impatiently; for he saw society of one kind (probably
+what he called &ldquo;life&rdquo;) at the Black Bull; and at home he
+was as yet the cherished favourite.</p>
+<p>Miss Branwell was unaware of the fermentation of unoccupied talent
+going on around her.&nbsp; She was not her nieces&rsquo; confidante&mdash;perhaps
+no one so much older could have been; but their father, from whom they
+derived not a little of their adventurous spirit, was silently cognisant
+of much of which she took no note.&nbsp; Next to her nephew, the docile,
+pensive Anne was her favourite.&nbsp; Of her she had taken charge from
+her infancy; she was always patient and tractable, and would submit
+quietly to occasional oppression, even when she felt it keenly.&nbsp;
+Not so her two elder sisters; they made their opinions known, when roused
+by any injustice.&nbsp; At such times, Emily would express herself as
+strongly as Charlotte, although perhaps less frequently.&nbsp; But,
+in general, notwithstanding that Miss Branwell might be occasionally
+unreasonable, she and her nieces went on smoothly enough; and though
+they might now and then be annoyed by petty tyranny, she still inspired
+them with sincere respect, and not a little affection.&nbsp; They were,
+moreover, grateful to her for many habits she had enforced upon them,
+and which in time had become second nature: order, method, neatness
+in everything; a perfect knowledge of all kinds of household work; an
+exact punctuality, and obedience to the laws of time and place, of which
+no one but themselves, I have heard Charlotte say, could tell the value
+in after-life; with their impulsive natures, it was positive repose
+to have learnt implicit obedience to external laws.&nbsp; People in
+Haworth have assured me that, according to the hour of day&mdash;nay,
+the very minute&mdash;could they have told what the inhabitants of the
+parsonage were about.&nbsp; At certain times the girls would be sewing
+in their aunt&rsquo;s bedroom&mdash;the chamber which, in former days,
+before they had outstripped her in their learning, had served them as
+a schoolroom; at certain (early) hours they had their meals; from six
+to eight, Miss Branwell read aloud to Mr. Bront&euml;; at punctual eight,
+the household assembled to evening prayers in his study; and by nine
+he, the aunt, and Tabby, were all in bed,&mdash;the girls free to pace
+up and down (like restless wild animals) in the parlour, talking over
+plans and projects, and thoughts of what was to be their future life.</p>
+<p>At the time of which I write, the favourite idea was that of keeping
+a school.&nbsp; They thought that, by a little contrivance, and a very
+little additional building, a small number of pupils, four or six, might
+be accommodated in the parsonage.&nbsp; As teaching seemed the only
+profession open to them, and as it appeared that Emily at least could
+not live away from home, while the others also suffered much from the
+same cause, this plan of school-keeping presented itself as most desirable.&nbsp;
+But it involved some outlay; and to this their aunt was averse.&nbsp;
+Yet there was no one to whom they could apply for a loan of the requisite
+means, except Miss Branwell, who had made a small store out of her savings,
+which she intended for her nephew and nieces eventually, but which she
+did not like to risk.&nbsp; Still, this plan of school-keeping remained
+uppermost; and in the evenings of this winter of 1839-40, the alterations
+that would be necessary in the house, and the best way of convincing
+their aunt of the wisdom of their project, formed the principal subject
+of their conversation.</p>
+<p>This anxiety weighed upon their minds rather heavily, during the
+months of dark and dreary weather.&nbsp; Nor were external events, among
+the circle of their friends, of a cheerful character.&nbsp; In January,
+1840, Charlotte heard of the death of a young girl who had been a pupil
+of hers, and a schoolfellow of Anne&rsquo;s, at the time when the sisters
+were together at Roe Head; and had attached herself very strongly to
+the latter, who, in return, bestowed upon her much quiet affection.&nbsp;
+It was a sad day when the intelligence of this young creature&rsquo;s
+death arrived.&nbsp; Charlotte wrote thus on January 12th, 1840:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Your letter, which I received this morning, was
+one of painful interest.&nbsp; Anne C., it seems, is <i>dead</i>; when
+I saw her last, she was a young, beautiful, and happy girl; and now
+&lsquo;life&rsquo;s fitful fever&rsquo; is over with her, and she &lsquo;sleeps
+well.&rsquo;&nbsp; I shall never see her again.&nbsp; It is a sorrowful
+thought; for she was a warm-hearted, affectionate being, and I cared
+for her.&nbsp; Wherever I seek for her now in this world, she cannot
+be found, no more than a flower or a leaf which withered twenty years
+ago.&nbsp; A bereavement of this kind gives one a glimpse of the feeling
+those must have who have seen all drop round them, friend after friend,
+and are left to end their pilgrimage alone.&nbsp; But tears are fruitless,
+and I try not to repine.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>During this winter, Charlotte employed her leisure hours in writing
+a story.&nbsp; Some fragments of the manuscript yet remain, but it is
+in too small a hand to be read without great fatigue to the eyes; and
+one cares the less to read it, as she herself condemned it, in the preface
+to the &ldquo;Professor,&rdquo; by saying that in this story she had
+got over such taste as she might once have had for the &ldquo;ornamental
+and redundant in composition.&rdquo;&nbsp; The beginning, too, as she
+acknowledges, was on a scale commensurate with one of Richardson&rsquo;s
+novels, of seven or eight volumes.&nbsp; I gather some of these particulars
+from a copy of a letter, apparently in reply to one from Wordsworth,
+to whom she had sent the commencement of the story, sometime in the
+summer of 1840.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Authors are generally very tenacious of their
+productions, but I am not so much attached to this but that I can give
+it up without much distress.&nbsp; No doubt, if I had gone on, I should
+have made quite a Richardsonian concern of it . . . I had materials
+in my head for half-a-dozen volumes . . . Of course, it is with considerable
+regret I relinquish any scheme so charming as the one I have sketched.&nbsp;
+It is very edifying and profitable to create a world out of your own
+brains, and people it with inhabitants, who are so many Melchisedecs,
+and have no father nor mother but your own imagination . . . I am sorry
+I did not exist fifty or sixty years ago, when the &lsquo;Ladies&rsquo;
+Magazine&rsquo; was flourishing like a green bay-tree.&nbsp; In that
+case, I make no doubt, my aspirations after literary fame would have
+met with due encouragement, and I should have had the pleasure of introducing
+Messrs. Percy and West into the very best society, and recording all
+their sayings and doings in double-columned close-printed pages . .
+. I recollect, when I was a child, getting hold of some antiquated volumes,
+and reading them by stealth with the most exquisite pleasure.&nbsp;
+You give a correct description of the patient Grisels of those days.&nbsp;
+My aunt was one of them; and to this day she thinks the tales of the
+&lsquo;Ladies&rsquo; Magazine&rsquo; infinitely superior to any trash
+of modern literature.&nbsp; So do I; for I read them in childhood, and
+childhood has a very strong faculty of admiration, but a very weak one
+of criticism . . . I am pleased that you cannot quite decide whether
+I am an attorney&rsquo;s clerk or a novel-reading dress-maker.&nbsp;
+I will not help you at all in the discovery; and as to my handwriting,
+or the ladylike touches in my style and imagery, you must not draw any
+conclusion from that&mdash;I may employ an amanuensis.&nbsp; Seriously,
+sir, I am very much obliged to you for your kind and candid letter.&nbsp;
+I almost wonder you took the trouble to read and notice the novelette
+of an anonymous scribe, who had not even the manners to tell you whether
+he was a man or a woman, or whether his &lsquo;C. T.&rsquo; meant Charles
+Timms or Charlotte Tomkins.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>There are two or three things noticeable in the letter from which
+these extracts are taken.&nbsp; The first is the initials with which
+she had evidently signed the former one to which she alludes.&nbsp;
+About this time, to her more familiar correspondents, she occasionally
+calls herself &ldquo;Charles Thunder,&rdquo; making a kind of pseudonym
+for herself out of her Christian name, and the meaning of her Greek
+surname.&nbsp; In the next place, there is a touch of assumed smartness,
+very different from the simple, womanly, dignified letter which she
+had written to Southey, under nearly similar circumstances, three years
+before.&nbsp; I imagine the cause of this difference to be twofold.&nbsp;
+Southey, in his reply to her first letter, had appealed to the higher
+parts of her nature, in calling her to consider whether literature was,
+or was not, the best course for a woman to pursue.&nbsp; But the person
+to whom she addressed this one had evidently confined himself to purely
+literary criticisms, besides which, her sense of humour was tickled
+by the perplexity which her correspondent felt as to whether he was
+addressing a man or a woman.&nbsp; She rather wished to encourage the
+former idea; and, in consequence, possibly, assumed something of the
+flippancy which very probably existed in her brother&rsquo;s style of
+conversation, from whom she would derive her notions of young manhood,
+not likely, as far as refinement was concerned, to be improved by the
+other specimens she had seen, such as the curates whom she afterwards
+represented in &ldquo;Shirley.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>These curates were full of strong, High-Church feeling.&nbsp; Belligerent
+by nature, it was well for their professional character that they had,
+as clergymen, sufficient scope for the exercise of their warlike propensities.&nbsp;
+Mr. Bront&euml;, with all his warm regard for Church and State, had
+a great respect for mental freedom; and, though he was the last man
+in the world to conceal his opinions, he lived in perfect amity with
+all the respectable part of those who differed from him.&nbsp; Not so
+the curates.&nbsp; Dissent was schism, and schism was condemned in the
+Bible.&nbsp; In default of turbaned Saracens, they entered on a crusade
+against Methodists in broadcloth; and the consequence was that the Methodists
+and Baptists refused to pay the church-rates.&nbsp; Miss Bront&euml;
+thus describes the state of things at this time:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Little Haworth has been all in a bustle about
+church-rates, since you were here.&nbsp; We had a stirring meeting in
+the schoolroom.&nbsp; Papa took the chair, and Mr. C. and Mr. W. acted
+as his supporters, one on each side.&nbsp; There was violent opposition,
+which set Mr. C.&rsquo;s Irish blood in a ferment, and if papa had not
+kept him quiet, partly by persuasion and partly by compulsion, he would
+have given the Dissenters their kale through the reek&mdash;a Scotch
+proverb, which I will explain to you another time.&nbsp; He and Mr.
+W. both bottled up their wrath for that time, but it was only to explode
+with redoubled force at a future period.&nbsp; We had two sermons on
+dissent, and its consequences, preached last Sunday&mdash;one in the
+afternoon by Mr. W., and one in the evening by Mr. C.&nbsp; All the
+Dissenters were invited to come and hear, and they actually shut up
+their chapels, and came in a body; of course the church was crowded.&nbsp;
+Mr. W. delivered a noble, eloquent, High-Church, Apostolical-Succession
+discourse, in which he banged the Dissenters most fearlessly and unflinchingly.&nbsp;
+I thought they had got enough for one while, but it was nothing to the
+dose that was thrust down their throats in the evening.&nbsp; A keener,
+cleverer, bolder, and more heart-stirring harangue than that which Mr.
+C. delivered from Haworth pulpit, last Sunday evening, I never heard.&nbsp;
+He did not rant; he did not cant; he did not whine; he did not sniggle;
+he just got up and spoke with the boldness of a man who was impressed
+with the truth of what he was saying, who has no fear of his enemies,
+and no dread of consequences.&nbsp; His sermon lasted an hour, yet I
+was sorry when it was done.&nbsp; I do not say that I agree either with
+him, or with Mr. W., either in all or in half their opinions.&nbsp;
+I consider them bigoted, intolerant, and wholly unjustifiable on the
+ground of common sense.&nbsp; My conscience will not let me be either
+a Puseyite or a Hookist; <i>mais</i>, if I were a Dissenter, I would
+have taken the first opportunity of kicking, or of horse-whipping both
+the gentlemen for their stern, bitter attack on my religion and its
+teachers.&nbsp; But in spite of all this, I admired the noble integrity
+which could dictate so fearless an opposition against so strong an antagonist.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;P.S.&mdash;Mr. W. has given another lecture at the Keighley
+Mechanics&rsquo; Institution, and papa has also given a lecture; both
+are spoken of very highly in the newspapers, and it is mentioned as
+a matter of wonder that such displays of intellect should emanate from
+the village of Haworth, &lsquo;situated among the bogs and mountains,
+and, until very lately, supposed to be in a state of semi-barbarism.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Such are the words of the newspaper.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>To fill up the account of this outwardly eventless year, I may add
+a few more extracts from the letters entrusted to me.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;May 15th, 1840.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do not be over-persuaded to marry a man you can never respect&mdash;I
+do not say <i>love</i>; because, I think, if you can respect a person
+before marriage, moderate love at least will come after; and as to intense
+<i>passion</i>, I am convinced that that is no desirable feeling.&nbsp;
+In the first place, it seldom or never meets with a requital; and, in
+the second place, if it did, the feeling would be only temporary: it
+would last the honeymoon, and then, perhaps, give place to disgust,
+or indifference, worse, perhaps, than disgust.&nbsp; Certainly this
+would be the case on the man&rsquo;s part; and on the woman&rsquo;s&mdash;God
+help her, if she is left to love passionately and alone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am tolerably well convinced that I shall never marry at
+all.&nbsp; Reason tells me so, and I am not so utterly the slave of
+feeling but that I can <i>occasionally hear</i> her voice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;June 2nd, 1840.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;M. is not yet come to Haworth; but she is to come on the condition
+that I first go and stay a few days there.&nbsp; If all be well, I shall
+go next Wednesday.&nbsp; I may stay at G--- until Friday or Saturday,
+and the early part of the following week I shall pass with you, if you
+will have me&mdash;which last sentence indeed is nonsense, for as I
+shall be glad to see you, so I know you will be glad to see me.&nbsp;
+This arrangement will not allow much time, but it is the only practicable
+one which, considering all the circumstances, I can effect.&nbsp; Do
+not urge me to stay more than two or three days, because I shall be
+obliged to refuse you.&nbsp; I intend to walk to Keighley, there to
+take the coach as far as B---, then to get some one to carry my box,
+and to walk the rest of the way to G-.&nbsp; If I manage this, I think
+I shall contrive very well.&nbsp; I shall reach B. by about five o&rsquo;clock,
+and then I shall have the cool of the evening for the walk.&nbsp; I
+have communicated the whole arrangement to M.&nbsp; I desire exceedingly
+to see both her and you.&nbsp; Good-bye.</p>
+<p>C. B.<br />
+C. B.<br />
+C. B.<br />
+C. B.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you have any better plan to suggest I am open to conviction,
+provided your plan is practicable.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;August 20th, 1840.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have you seen anything of Miss H. lately?&nbsp; I wish they,
+or somebody else, would get me a situation.&nbsp; I have answered advertisements
+without number, but my applications have met with no success.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have got another bale of French books from G. containing
+upwards of forty volumes.&nbsp; I have read about half.&nbsp; They are
+like the rest, clever, wicked, sophistical, and immoral.&nbsp; The best
+of it is, they give one a thorough idea of France and Paris, and are
+the best substitute for French conversation that I have met with.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I positively have nothing more to say to you, for I am in
+a stupid humour.&nbsp; You must excuse this letter not being quite as
+long as your own.&nbsp; I have written to you soon, that you might not
+look after the postman in vain.&nbsp; Preserve this writing as a curiosity
+in caligraphy&mdash;I think it is exquisite&mdash;all brilliant black
+blots, and utterly illegible letters.&nbsp; &lsquo;CALIBAN.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;The wind bloweth where it listeth.&nbsp; Thou hearest
+the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, nor whither
+it goeth.&rsquo;&nbsp; That, I believe, is Scripture, though in what
+chapter or book, or whether it be correctly quoted, I can&rsquo;t possibly
+say.&nbsp; However, it behoves me to write a letter to a young woman
+of the name of E., with whom I was once acquainted, &lsquo;in life&rsquo;s
+morning march, when my spirit was young.&rsquo;&nbsp; This young woman
+wished me to write to her some time since, though I have nothing to
+say&mdash;I e&rsquo;en put it off, day by day, till at last, fearing
+that she will &lsquo;curse me by her gods,&rsquo; I feel constrained
+to sit down and tack a few lines together, which she may call a letter
+or not as she pleases.&nbsp; Now if the young woman expects sense in
+this production, she will find herself miserably disappointed.&nbsp;
+I shall dress her a dish of salmagundi&mdash;I shall cook a hash&mdash;compound
+a stew&mdash;toss up an <i>omelette souffl&egrave;e &agrave; la Fran&ccedil;aise</i>,
+and send it her with my respects.&nbsp; The wind, which is very high
+up in our hills of Judea, though, I suppose, down in the Philistine
+flats of B. parish it is nothing to speak of, has produced the same
+effects on the contents of my knowledge-box that a quaigh of usquebaugh
+does upon those of most other bipeds.&nbsp; I see everything <i>couleur
+de rose</i>, and am strongly inclined to dance a jig, if I knew how.&nbsp;
+I think I must partake of the nature of a pig or an ass&mdash;both which
+animals are strongly affected by a high wind.&nbsp; From what quarter
+the wind blows I cannot tell, for I never could in my life; but I should
+very much like to know how the great brewing-tub of Bridlington Bay
+works, and what sort of yeasty froth rises just now on the waves.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A woman of the name of Mrs. B., it seems, wants a teacher.&nbsp;
+I wish she would have me; and I have written to Miss W. to tell her
+so.&nbsp; Verily, it is a delightful thing to live here at home, at
+full liberty to do just what one pleases.&nbsp; But I recollect some
+scrubby old fable about grasshoppers and ants, by a scrubby old knave
+yclept &AElig;sop; the grasshoppers sang all the summer, and starved
+all the winter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A distant relation of mine, one Patrick Branwell, has set
+off to seek his fortune in the wild, wandering, adventurous, romantic,
+knight-errant-like capacity of clerk on the Leeds and Manchester Railroad.&nbsp;
+Leeds and Manchester&mdash;where are they?&nbsp; Cities in the wilderness,
+like Tadmor, alias Palmyra&mdash;are they not?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is one little trait respecting Mr. W. which lately came
+to my knowledge, which gives a glimpse of the better side of his character.&nbsp;
+Last Saturday night he had been sitting an hour in the parlour with
+Papa; and, as he went away, I heard Papa say to him &lsquo;What is the
+matter with you?&nbsp; You seem in very low spirits to-night.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Oh, I don&rsquo;t know.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ve been to see a poor young
+girl, who, I&rsquo;m afraid, is dying.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Indeed; what
+is her name?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Susan Bland, the daughter of John Bland,
+the superintendent.&rsquo;&nbsp; Now Susan Bland is my oldest and best
+scholar in the Sunday-school; and, when I heard that, I thought I would
+go as soon as I could to see her.&nbsp; I did go on Monday afternoon,
+and found her on her way to that &lsquo;bourn whence no traveller returns.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+After sitting with her some time, I happened to ask her mother, if she
+thought a little port wine would do her good.&nbsp; She replied that
+the doctor had recommended it, and that when Mr. W. was last there,
+he had brought them a bottle of wine and jar of preserves.&nbsp; She
+added, that he was always good-natured to poor folks, and seemed to
+have a deal of feeling and kindheartedness about him.&nbsp; No doubt,
+there are defects in his character, but there are also good qualities
+. . . God bless him!&nbsp; I wonder who, with his advantages, would
+be without his faults.&nbsp; I know many of his faulty actions, many
+of his weak points; yet, where I am, he shall always find rather a defender
+than an accuser.&nbsp; To be sure, my opinion will go but a very little
+way to decide his character; what of that?&nbsp; People should do right
+as far as their ability extends.&nbsp; You are not to suppose, from
+all this, that Mr. W. and I are on very amiable terms; we are not at
+all.&nbsp; We are distant, cold, and reserved.&nbsp; We seldom speak;
+and when we do, it is only to exchange the most trivial and common-place
+remarks.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The Mrs. B. alluded to in this letter, as in want of a governess,
+entered into a correspondence with Miss Bront&euml;, and expressed herself
+much pleased with the letters she received from her, with the &ldquo;style
+and candour of the application,&rdquo; in which Charlotte had taken
+care to tell her, that if she wanted a showy, elegant, or fashionable
+person, her correspondent was not fitted for such a situation.&nbsp;
+But Mrs. B. required her governess to give instructions in music and
+singing, for which Charlotte was not qualified: and, accordingly, the
+negotiation fell through.&nbsp; But Miss Bront&euml; was not one to
+sit down in despair after disappointment.&nbsp; Much as she disliked
+the life of a private governess, it was her duty to relieve her father
+of the burden of her support, and this was the only way open to her.&nbsp;
+So she set to advertising and inquiring with fresh vigour.</p>
+<p>In the meantime, a little occurrence took place, described in one
+of her letters, which I shall give, as it shows her instinctive aversion
+to a particular class of men, whose vices some have supposed she looked
+upon with indulgence.&nbsp; The extract tells all that need be known,
+for the purpose I have in view, of the miserable pair to whom it relates.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;You remember Mr. and Mrs. ---?&nbsp; Mrs. ---
+came here the other day, with a most melancholy tale of her wretched
+husband&rsquo;s drunken, extravagant, profligate habits.&nbsp; She asked
+Papa&rsquo;s advice; there was nothing she said but ruin before them.&nbsp;
+They owed debts which they could never pay.&nbsp; She expected Mr. ---&rsquo;s
+instant dismissal from his curacy; she knew, from bitter experience,
+that his vices were utterly hopeless.&nbsp; He treated her and her child
+savagely; with much more to the same effect.&nbsp; Papa advised her
+to leave him for ever, and go home, if she had a home to go to.&nbsp;
+She said, this was what she had long resolved to do; and she would leave
+him directly, as soon as Mr. B. dismissed him.&nbsp; She expressed great
+disgust and contempt towards him, and did not affect to have the shadow
+of regard in any way.&nbsp; I do not wonder at this, but I do wonder
+she should ever marry a man towards whom her feelings must always have
+been pretty much the same as they are now.&nbsp; I am morally certain
+no decent woman could experience anything but aversion towards such
+a man as Mr. ---.&nbsp; Before I knew, or suspected his character, and
+when I rather wondered at his versatile talents, I felt it in an uncontrollable
+degree.&nbsp; I hated to talk with him&mdash;hated to look at him; though
+as I was not certain that there was substantial reason for such a dislike,
+and thought it absurd to trust to mere instinct, I both concealed and
+repressed the feeling as much as I could; and, on all occasions, treated
+him with as much civility as I was mistress of.&nbsp; I was struck with
+Mary&rsquo;s expression of a similar feeling at first sight; she said,
+when we left him, &lsquo;That is a hideous man, Charlotte!&rsquo;&nbsp;
+I thought &lsquo;He is indeed.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<h2>CHAPTER X</h2>
+<p>Early in March, 1841, Miss Bront&euml; obtained her second and last
+situation as a governess.&nbsp; This time she esteemed herself fortunate
+in becoming a member of a kind-hearted and friendly household.&nbsp;
+The master of it, she especially regarded as a valuable friend, whose
+advice helped to guide her in one very important step of her life.&nbsp;
+But as her definite acquirements were few, she had to eke them out by
+employing her leisure time in needlework; and altogether her position
+was that of &ldquo;bonne&rdquo; or nursery governess, liable to repeated
+and never-ending calls upon her time.&nbsp; This description of uncertain,
+yet perpetual employment, subject to the exercise of another person&rsquo;s
+will at all hours of the day, was peculiarly trying to one whose life
+at home had been full of abundant leisure.&nbsp; <i>Idle</i> she never
+was in any place, but of the multitude of small talks, plans, duties,
+pleasures, &amp;c., that make up most people&rsquo;s days, her home
+life was nearly destitute.&nbsp; This made it possible for her to go
+through long and deep histories of feeling and imagination, for which
+others, odd as it sounds, have rarely time.&nbsp; This made it inevitable
+that&mdash;later on, in her too short career&mdash;the intensity of
+her feeling should wear out her physical health.&nbsp; The habit of
+&ldquo;making out,&rdquo; which had grown with her growth, and strengthened
+with her strength, had become a part of her nature.&nbsp; Yet all exercise
+of her strongest and most characteristic faculties was now out of the
+question.&nbsp; She could not (as while she was at Miss W---&rsquo;s)
+feel, amidst the occupations of the day, that when evening came, she
+might employ herself in more congenial ways.&nbsp; No doubt, all who
+enter upon the career of a governess have to relinquish much; no doubt,
+it must ever be a life of sacrifice; but to Charlotte Bront&euml; it
+was a perpetual attempt to force all her faculties into a direction
+for which the whole of her previous life had unfitted them.&nbsp; Moreover,
+the little Bront&euml;s had been brought up motherless; and from knowing
+nothing of the gaiety and the sportiveness of childhood&mdash;from never
+having experienced caresses or fond attentions themselves&mdash;they
+were ignorant of the very nature of infancy, or how to call out its
+engaging qualities.&nbsp; Children were to them the troublesome necessities
+of humanity; they had never been drawn into contact with them in any
+other way.&nbsp; Years afterwards, when Miss Bront&euml; came to stay
+with us, she watched our little girls perpetually; and I could not persuade
+her that they were only average specimens of well brought up children.&nbsp;
+She was surprised and touched by any sign of thoughtfulness for others,
+of kindness to animals, or of unselfishness on their part: and constantly
+maintained that she was in the right, and I in the wrong, when we differed
+on the point of their unusual excellence.&nbsp; All this must be borne
+in mind while reading the following letters.&nbsp; And it must likewise
+be borne in mind&mdash;by those who, surviving her, look back upon her
+life from their mount of observation&mdash;how no distaste, no suffering
+ever made her shrink from any course which she believed it to be her
+duty to engage in.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;March 3rd, 1841.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I told some time since, that I meant to get a situation, and
+when I said so my resolution was quite fixed.&nbsp; I felt that however
+often I was disappointed, I had no intention of relinquishing my efforts.&nbsp;
+After being severely baffled two or three times,&mdash;after a world
+of trouble, in the way of correspondence and interviews,&mdash;I have
+at length succeeded, and am fairly established in my new place.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;The house is not very large, but exceedingly comfortable
+and well regulated; the grounds are fine and extensive.&nbsp; In taking
+the place, I have made a large sacrifice in the way of salary, in the
+hope of securing comfort,&mdash;by which word I do not mean to express
+good eating and drinking, or warm fire, or a soft bed, but the society
+of cheerful faces, and minds and hearts not dug out of a lead-mine,
+or cut from a marble quarry.&nbsp; My salary is not really more than
+16<i>l</i>. per annum, though it is nominally 20<i>l</i>., but the expense
+of washing will be deducted therefrom.&nbsp; My pupils are two in number,
+a girl of eight, and a boy of six.&nbsp; As to my employers, you will
+not expect me to say much about their characters when I tell you that
+I only arrived here yesterday.&nbsp; I have not the faculty of telling
+an individual&rsquo;s disposition at first sight.&nbsp; Before I can
+venture to pronounce on a character, I must see it first under various
+lights and from various points of view.&nbsp; All I can say therefore
+is, both Mr. and Mrs. --- seem to me good sort of people.&nbsp; I have
+as yet had no cause to complain of want of considerateness or civility.&nbsp;
+My pupils are wild and unbroken, but apparently well-disposed.&nbsp;
+I wish I may be able to say as much next time I write to you.&nbsp;
+My earnest wish and endeavour will be to please them.&nbsp; If I can
+but feel that I am giving satisfaction, and if at the same time I can
+keep my health, I shall, I hope, be moderately happy.&nbsp; But no one
+but myself can tell how hard a governess&rsquo;s work is to me&mdash;for
+no one but myself is aware how utterly averse my whole mind and nature
+are for the employment.&nbsp; Do not think that I fail to blame myself
+for this, or that I leave any means unemployed to conquer this feeling.&nbsp;
+Some of my greatest difficulties lie in things that would appear to
+you comparatively trivial.&nbsp; I find it so hard to repel the rude
+familiarity of children.&nbsp; I find it so difficult to ask either
+servants or mistress for anything I want, however much I want it.&nbsp;
+It is less pain for me to endure the greatest inconvenience than to
+go into the kitchen to request its removal.&nbsp; I am a fool.&nbsp;
+Heaven knows I cannot help it!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now can you tell me whether it is considered improper for
+governesses to ask their friends to come and see them.&nbsp; I do not
+mean, of course, to stay, but just for a call of an hour or two?&nbsp;
+If it is not absolute treason, I do fervently request that you will
+contrive, in some way or other, to let me have a sight of your face.&nbsp;
+Yet I feel, at the same time, that I am making a very foolish and almost
+impracticable demand; yet this is only four miles from B---!&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;March 21st.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You must excuse a very short answer to your most welcome letter;
+for my time is entirely occupied.&nbsp; Mrs. --- expected a good deal
+of sewing from me.&nbsp; I cannot sew much during the day, on account
+of the children, who require the utmost attention.&nbsp; I am obliged,
+therefore, to devote the evenings to this business.&nbsp; Write to me
+often; very long letters.&nbsp; It will do both of us good.&nbsp; This
+place is far better than ---, but God knows, I have enough to do to
+keep a good heart in the matter.&nbsp; What you said has cheered me
+a little.&nbsp; I wish I could always act according to your advice.&nbsp;
+Home-sickness affects me sorely.&nbsp; I like Mr. --- extremely.&nbsp;
+The children are over-indulged, and consequently hard at times to manage.&nbsp;
+<i>Do, do</i>, do come and see me; if it be a breach of etiquette, never
+mind.&nbsp; If you can only stop an hour, come.&nbsp; Talk no more about
+my forsaking you; my darling, I could not afford to do it.&nbsp; I find
+it is not in my nature to get on in this weary world without sympathy
+and attachment in some quarter; and seldom indeed do we find it.&nbsp;
+It is too great a treasure to be ever wantonly thrown away when once
+secured.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Miss Bront&euml; had not been many weeks in her new situation before
+she had a proof of the kind-hearted hospitality of her employers.&nbsp;
+Mr. --- wrote to her father, and urgently invited him to come and make
+acquaintance with his daughter&rsquo;s new home, by spending a week
+with her in it; and Mrs. --- expressed great regret when one of Miss
+Bront&euml;&rsquo;s friends drove up to the house to leave a letter
+or parcel, without entering.&nbsp; So she found that all her friends
+might freely visit her, and that her father would be received with especial
+gladness.&nbsp; She thankfully acknowledged this kindness in writing
+to urge her friend afresh to come and see her; which she accordingly
+did.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;June, 1841.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can hardly fancy it possible, I dare say, that I cannot
+find a quarter of an hour to scribble a note in; but so it is; and when
+a note is written, it has to be carried a mile to the post, and that
+consumes nearly an hour, which is a large portion of the day.&nbsp;
+Mr. and Mrs. --- have been gone a week.&nbsp; I heard from them this
+morning.&nbsp; No time is fixed for their return, but I hope it will
+not be delayed long, or I shall miss the chance of seeing Anne this
+vacation.&nbsp; She came home, I understand, last Wednesday, and is
+only to be allowed three weeks&rsquo; vacation, because the family she
+is with are going to Scarborough.&nbsp; <i>I should like to see her</i>,
+to judge for myself of the state of her health.&nbsp; I dare not trust
+any other person&rsquo;s report, no one seems minute enough in their
+observations.&nbsp; I should very much have liked you to have seen her.&nbsp;
+I have got on very well with the servants and children so far; yet it
+is dreary, solitary work.&nbsp; You can tell as well as me the lonely
+feeling of being without a companion.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Soon after this was written, Mr. and Mrs. --- returned, in time to
+allow Charlotte to go and look after Anne&rsquo;s health, which, as
+she found to her intense anxiety, was far from strong.&nbsp; What could
+she do to nurse and cherish up this little sister, the youngest of them
+all?&nbsp; Apprehension about her brought up once more the idea of keeping
+a school.&nbsp; If, by this means, they three could live together, and
+maintain themselves, all might go well.&nbsp; They would have some time
+of their own, in which to try again and yet again at that literary career,
+which, in spite of all baffling difficulties, was never quite set aside
+as an ultimate object; but far the strongest motive with Charlotte was
+the conviction that Anne&rsquo;s health was so delicate that it required
+a degree of tending which none but her sister could give.&nbsp; Thus
+she wrote during those midsummer holidays.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Haworth, July 18th, 1841.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We waited long and anxiously for you, on the Thursday that
+you promised to come.&nbsp; I quite wearied my eyes with watching from
+the window, eye-glass in hand, and sometimes spectacles on nose.&nbsp;
+However, you are not to blame . . . and as to disappointment, why, all
+must suffer disappointment at some period or other of their lives.&nbsp;
+But a hundred things I had to say to you will now be forgotten, and
+never said.&nbsp; There is a project hatching in this house, which both
+Emily and I anxiously wished to discuss with you.&nbsp; The project
+is yet in its infancy, hardly peeping from its shell; and whether it
+will ever come out a fine full-fledged chicken, or will turn addle and
+die before it cheeps, is one of those considerations that are but dimly
+revealed by the oracles of futurity.&nbsp; Now, don&rsquo;t be nonplussed
+by all this metaphorical mystery.&nbsp; I talk of a plain and everyday
+occurrence, though, in Delphic style, I wrap up the information in figures
+of speech concerning eggs, chickens etceatera, etcaeterorum.&nbsp; To
+come to the point: Papa and aunt talk, by fits and starts, of our&mdash;id
+est, Emily, Anne, and myself&mdash;commencing a school!&nbsp; I have
+often, you know, said how much I wished such a thing; but I never could
+conceive where the capital was to come from for making such a speculation.&nbsp;
+I was well aware, indeed, that aunt had money, but I always considered
+that she was the last person who would offer a loan for the purpose
+in question.&nbsp; A loan, however, she <i>has</i> offered, or rather
+intimates that she perhaps <i>will</i> offer in case pupils can be secured,
+an eligible situation obtained, &amp;c.&nbsp; This sounds very fair,
+but still there are matters to be considered which throw something of
+a damp upon the scheme.&nbsp; I do not expect that aunt will sink more
+than 150<i>l</i>. in such a venture; and would it be possible to establish
+a respectable (not by any means a <i>showy</i>) school, and to commence
+housekeeping with a capital of only that amount?&nbsp; Propound the
+question to your sister, if you think she can answer it; if not, don&rsquo;t
+say a word on the subject.&nbsp; As to getting into debt, that is a
+thing we could none of us reconcile our mind to for a moment.&nbsp;
+We do not care how modest, how humble our commencement be, so it be
+made on sure grounds, and have a safe foundation.&nbsp; In thinking
+of all possible and impossible places where we could establish a school,
+I have thought of Burlington, or rather of the neighbourhood of Burlington.&nbsp;
+Do you remember whether there was any other school there besides that
+of Miss ---?&nbsp; This is, of course, a perfectly crude and random
+idea.&nbsp; There are a hundred reasons why it should be an impracticable
+one.&nbsp; We have no connections, no acquaintances there; it is far
+from home, &amp;c.&nbsp; Still, I fancy the ground in the East Riding
+is less fully occupied than in the West.&nbsp; Much inquiry and consideration
+will be necessary, of course, before any place is decided on; and I
+fear much time will elapse before any plan is executed . . . Write as
+soon as you can.&nbsp; I shall not leave my present situation till my
+future prospects assume a more fixed and definite aspect.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>A fortnight afterwards, we see that the seed has been sown which
+was to grow up into a plan materially influencing her future life.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;August 7th, 1841.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is Saturday evening; I have put the children to bed;
+now I am going to sit down and answer your letter.&nbsp; I am again
+by myself&mdash;housekeeper and governess&mdash;for Mr. and Mrs. ---
+are staying at ---.&nbsp; To speak truth, though I am solitary while
+they are away, it is still by far the happiest part of my time.&nbsp;
+The children are under decent control, the servants are very observant
+and attentive to me, and the occasional absence of the master and mistress
+relieves me from the duty of always endeavouring to seem cheerful and
+conversable.&nbsp; Martha ---, it appears, is in the way of enjoying
+great advantages; so is Mary, for you will be surprised to hear that
+she is returning immediately to the Continent with her brother; not,
+however, to stay there, but to take a month&rsquo;s tour and recreation.&nbsp;
+I have had a long letter from Mary, and a packet containing a present
+of a very handsome black silk scarf, and a pair of beautiful kid gloves,
+bought at Brussels.&nbsp; Of course, I was in one sense pleased with
+the gift&mdash;pleased that they should think of me so far off, amidst
+the excitements of one of the most splendid capitals of Europe; and
+yet it felt irksome to accept it.&nbsp; I should think Mary and Martha
+have not more than sufficient pocket-money to supply themselves.&nbsp;
+I wish they had testified their regard by a less expensive token.&nbsp;
+Mary&rsquo;s letters spoke of some of the pictures and cathedrals she
+had seen&mdash;pictures the most exquisite, cathedrals the most venerable.&nbsp;
+I hardly know what swelled to my throat as I read her letter: such a
+vehement impatience of restraint and steady work; such a strong wish
+for wings&mdash;wings such as wealth can furnish; such an urgent thirst
+to see, to know, to learn; something internal seemed to expand bodily
+for a minute.&nbsp; I was tantalised by the consciousness of faculties
+unexercised,&mdash;then all collapsed, and I despaired.&nbsp; My dear,
+I would hardly make that confession to any one but yourself; and to
+you, rather in a letter than <i>viv&acirc; voce</i>.&nbsp; These rebellious
+and absurd emotions were only momentary; I quelled them in five minutes.&nbsp;
+I hope they will not revive, for they were acutely painful.&nbsp; No
+further steps have been taken about the project I mentioned to you,
+nor probably will be for the present; but Emily, and Anne, and I, keep
+it in view.&nbsp; It is our polar star, and we look to it in all circumstances
+of despondency.&nbsp; I begin to suspect I am writing in a strain which
+will make you think I am unhappy.&nbsp; This is far from being the case;
+on the contrary, I know my place is a favourable one, for a governess.&nbsp;
+What dismays and haunts me sometimes, is a conviction that I have no
+natural knack for my vocation.&nbsp; If teaching only were requisite,
+it would be smooth and easy; but it is the living in other people&rsquo;s
+houses&mdash;the estrangement from one&rsquo;s real character&mdash;the
+adoption of a cold, rigid, apathetic exterior, that is painful . . .
+You will not mention our school project at present.&nbsp; A project
+not actually commenced is always uncertain.&nbsp; Write to me often,
+my dear Nell; you <i>know</i> your letters are valued.&nbsp; Your &lsquo;loving
+child&rsquo; (as you choose to call me so),</p>
+<p>C. B.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;P.S.&nbsp; I am well in health; don&rsquo;t fancy I am not,
+but I have one aching feeling at my heart (I must allude to it, though
+I had resolved not to).&nbsp; It is about Anne; she has so much to endure:
+far, far more than I ever had.&nbsp; When my thoughts turn to her, they
+always see her as a patient, persecuted stranger.&nbsp; I know what
+concealed susceptibility is in her nature, when her feelings are wounded.&nbsp;
+I wish I could be with her, to administer a little balm.&nbsp; She is
+more lonely&mdash;less gifted with the power of making friends, even
+than I am.&nbsp; &lsquo;Drop the subject.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>She could bear much for herself; but she could not patiently bear
+the sorrows of others, especially of her sisters; and again, of the
+two sisters, the idea of the little, gentle, youngest suffering in lonely
+patience, was insupportable to her.&nbsp; Something must be done.&nbsp;
+No matter if the desired end were far away; all time was lost in which
+she was not making progress, however slow, towards it.&nbsp; To have
+a school, was to have some portion of daily leisure, uncontrolled but
+by her own sense of duty; it was for the three sisters, loving each
+other with so passionate an affection, to be together under one roof,
+and yet earning their own subsistence; above all, it was to have the
+power of watching over these two whose life and happiness were ever
+to Charlotte far more than her own.&nbsp; But no trembling impatience
+should lead her to take an unwise step in haste.&nbsp; She inquired
+in every direction she could, as to the chances which a new school might
+have of success.&nbsp; In all there seemed more establishments like
+the one which the sisters wished to set up than could be supported.&nbsp;
+What was to be done?&nbsp; Superior advantages must be offered.&nbsp;
+But how?&nbsp; They themselves abounded in thought, power, and information;
+but these are qualifications scarcely fit to be inserted in a prospectus.&nbsp;
+Of French they knew something; enough to read it fluently, but hardly
+enough to teach it in competition with natives or professional masters.&nbsp;
+Emily and Anne had some knowledge of music; but here again it was doubtful
+whether, without more instruction, they could engage to give lessons
+in it.</p>
+<p>Just about this time, Miss W--- was thinking of relinquishing her
+school at Dewsbury Moor; and offered to give it up in favour of her
+old pupils, the Bront&euml;s.&nbsp; A sister of hers had taken the active
+management since the time when Charlotte was a teacher; but the number
+of pupils had diminished; and, if the Bront&euml;s undertook it, they
+would have to try and work it up to its former state of prosperity.&nbsp;
+This, again, would require advantages on their part which they did not
+at present possess, but which Charlotte caught a glimpse of.&nbsp; She
+resolved to follow the clue, and never to rest till she had reached
+a successful issue.&nbsp; With the forced calm of a suppressed eagerness,
+that sends a glow of desire through every word of the following letter,
+she wrote to her aunt thus.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Dear Aunt,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sept. 29th, 1841.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have heard nothing of Miss W--- yet since I wrote to her,
+intimating that I would accept her offer.&nbsp; I cannot conjecture
+the reason of this long silence, unless some unforeseen impediment has
+occurred in concluding the bargain.&nbsp; Meantime, a plan has been
+suggested and approved by Mr. and Mrs. --- &rdquo; (the father and mother
+of her pupils) &ldquo;and others, which I wish now to impart to you.&nbsp;
+My friends recommend me, if I desire to secure permanent success, to
+delay commencing the school for six months longer, and by all means
+to contrive, by hook or by crook, to spend the intervening time in some
+school on the continent.&nbsp; They say schools in England are so numerous,
+competition so great, that without some such step towards attaining
+superiority, we shall probably have a very hard struggle, and may fail
+in the end.&nbsp; They say, moreover, that the loan of 100<i>l</i>.,
+which you have been so kind as to offer us, will, perhaps, not be all
+required now, as Miss W--- will lend us the furniture; and that, if
+the speculation is intended to be a good and successful one, half the
+sum, at least, ought to be laid out in the manner I have mentioned,
+thereby insuring a more speedy repayment both of interest and principal.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I would not go to France or to Paris.&nbsp; I would go to
+Brussels, in Belgium.&nbsp; The cost of the journey there, at the dearest
+rate of travelling, would be 5<i>l</i>.; living is there little more
+than half as dear as it is in England, and the facilities for education
+are equal or superior to any other place in Europe.&nbsp; In half a
+year, I could acquire a thorough familiarity with French.&nbsp; I could
+improve greatly in Italian, and even get a dash of German, i.e., providing
+my health continued as good as it is now.&nbsp; Mary is now staying
+at Brussels, at a first-rate establishment there.&nbsp; I should not
+think of going to the Ch&acirc;teau de Kokleberg, where she is resident,
+as the terms are much too high; but if I wrote to her, she, with the
+assistance of Mrs. Jenkins, the wife of the British Chaplain, would
+be able to secure me a cheap, decent residence and respectable protection.&nbsp;
+I should have the opportunity of seeing her frequently; she would make
+me acquainted with the city; and, with the assistance of her cousins,
+I should probably be introduced to connections far more improving, polished,
+and cultivated, than any I have yet known.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;These are advantages which would turn to real account, when
+we actually commenced a school; and, if Emily could share them with
+me, we could take a footing in the world afterwards which we can never
+do now.&nbsp; I say Emily instead of Anne; for Anne might take her turn
+at some future period, if our school answered.&nbsp; I feel certain,
+while I am writing, that you will see the propriety of what I say.&nbsp;
+You always like to use your money to the best advantage.&nbsp; You are
+not fond of making shabby purchases; when you do confer a favour, it
+is often done in style; and depend upon it, 50<i>l</i>., or 100<i>l</i>.,
+thus laid out, would be well employed.&nbsp; Of course, I know no other
+friend in the world to whom I could apply on this subject except yourself.&nbsp;
+I feel an absolute conviction that, if this advantage were allowed us,
+it would be the making of us for life.&nbsp; Papa will, perhaps, think
+it a wild and ambitious scheme; but who ever rose in the world without
+ambition?&nbsp; When he left Ireland to go to Cambridge University,
+he was as ambitious as I am now.&nbsp; I want us <i>all</i> to get on.&nbsp;
+I know we have talents, and I want them to be turned to account.&nbsp;
+I look to you, aunt, to help us.&nbsp; I think you will not refuse.&nbsp;
+I know, if you consent, it shall not be my fault if you ever repent
+your kindness.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>This letter was written from the house in which she was residing
+as governess.&nbsp; It was some little time before an answer came.&nbsp;
+Much had to be talked over between the father and aunt in Haworth Parsonage.&nbsp;
+At last consent was given.&nbsp; Then, and not till then, she confided
+her plan to an intimate friend.&nbsp; She was not one to talk over-much
+about any project, while it remained uncertain&mdash;to speak about
+her labour, in any direction, while its result was doubtful.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Nov. 2nd, 1841.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now let us begin to quarrel.&nbsp; In the first place, I must
+consider whether I will commence operations on the defensive, or the
+offensive.&nbsp; The defensive, I think.&nbsp; You say, and I see plainly,
+that your feelings have been hurt by an apparent want of confidence
+on my part.&nbsp; You heard from others of Miss W---&rsquo;s overtures
+before I communicated them to you myself.&nbsp; This is true.&nbsp;
+I was deliberating on plans important to my future prospects.&nbsp;
+I never exchanged a letter with you on the subject.&nbsp; True again.&nbsp;
+This appears strange conduct to a friend, near and dear, long-known,
+and never found wanting.&nbsp; Most true.&nbsp; I cannot give you my
+<i>excuses</i> for this behaviour; this word <i>excuse</i> implies confession
+of a fault, and I do not feel that I have been in fault.&nbsp; The plain
+fact is, I <i>was</i> not, I am not now, certain of my destiny.&nbsp;
+On the contrary, I have been most uncertain, perplexed with contradictory
+schemes and proposals.&nbsp; My time, as I have often told you, is fully
+occupied; yet I had many letters to write, which it was absolutely necessary
+should be written.&nbsp; I knew it would avail nothing to write to you
+then to say I was in doubt and uncertainty&mdash;hoping this, fearing
+that, anxious, eagerly desirous to do what seemed impossible to be done.&nbsp;
+When I thought of you in that busy interval, it was to resolve, that
+you should know all when my way was clear, and my grand end attained.&nbsp;
+If I could, I would always work in silence and obscurity, and let my
+efforts be known by their results.&nbsp; Miss W--- did most kindly propose
+that I should come to Dewsbury Moor and attempt to revive the school
+her sister had relinquished.&nbsp; She offered me the use of her furniture.&nbsp;
+At first, I received the proposal cordially, and prepared to do my utmost
+to bring about success; but a fire was kindled in my very heart, which
+I could not quench.&nbsp; I so longed to increase my attainments&mdash;to
+become something better than I am; a glimpse of what I felt, I showed
+to you in one of my former letters&mdash;only a glimpse; Mary cast oil
+upon the flames&mdash;encouraged me, and in her own strong, energetic
+language, heartened me on.&nbsp; I longed to go to Brussels; but how
+could I get there?&nbsp; I wished for one, at least, of my sisters to
+share the advantage with me.&nbsp; I fixed on Emily.&nbsp; She deserved
+the reward, I knew.&nbsp; How could the point be managed?&nbsp; In extreme
+excitement, I wrote a letter home, which carried the day.&nbsp; I made
+an appeal to aunt for assistance, which was answered by consent.&nbsp;
+Things are not settled; yet it is sufficient to say we have a <i>chance</i>
+of going for half a year.&nbsp; Dewsbury Moor is relinquished.&nbsp;
+Perhaps, fortunately so.&nbsp; In my secret soul, I believe there is
+no cause to regret it.&nbsp; My plans for the future are bounded to
+this intention: if I once get to Brussels, and if my health is spared,
+I will do my best to make the utmost of every advantage that shall come
+within my reach.&nbsp; When the half-year is expired, I will do what
+I can.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Believe me, though I was born in April, the month
+of cloud and sunshine, I am not changeful.&nbsp; My spirits are unequal,
+and sometimes I speak vehemently, and sometimes I say nothing at all;
+but I have a steady regard for you, and if you will let the cloud and
+shower pass by, be sure the sun is always behind, obscured, but still
+existing.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>At Christmas she left her situation, after a parting with her employers
+which seems to have affected and touched her greatly.&nbsp; &ldquo;They
+only made too much of me,&rdquo; was her remark, after leaving this
+family; &ldquo;I did not deserve it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>All four children hoped to meet together at their father&rsquo;s
+house this December.&nbsp; Branwell expected to have a short leave of
+absence from his employment as a clerk on the Leeds and Manchester Railway,
+in which he had been engaged for five months.&nbsp; Anne arrived before
+Christmas-day.&nbsp; She had rendered herself so valuable in her difficult
+situation, that her employers vehemently urged her to return, although
+she had announced her resolution to leave them; partly on account of
+the harsh treatment she had received, and partly because her stay at
+home, during her sisters&rsquo; absence in Belgium, seemed desirable,
+when the age of the three remaining inhabitants of the parsonage was
+taken into consideration.</p>
+<p>After some correspondence and much talking over plans at home, it
+seemed better, in consequence of letters which they received from Brussels
+giving a discouraging account of the schools there, that Charlotte and
+Emily should go to an institution at Lille, in the north of France,
+which was highly recommended by Baptist Noel, and other clergymen.&nbsp;
+Indeed, at the end of January, it was arranged that they were to set
+off for this place in three weeks, under the escort of a French lady,
+then visiting in London.&nbsp; The terms were 50<i>l</i>. each pupil,
+for board and French alone, but a separate room was to be allowed for
+this sum; without this indulgence, it was lower.&nbsp; Charlotte writes:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;January 20th, 1842.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I consider it kind in aunt to consent to an extra sum for
+a separate room.&nbsp; We shall find it a great privilege in many ways.&nbsp;
+I regret the change from Brussels to Lille on many accounts, chiefly
+that I shall not see Martha.&nbsp; Mary has been indefatigably kind
+in providing me with information.&nbsp; She has grudged no labour, and
+scarcely any expense, to that end.&nbsp; Mary&rsquo;s price is above
+rubies.&nbsp; I have, in fact, two friends&mdash;you and her&mdash;staunch
+and true, in whose faith and sincerity I have as strong a belief as
+I have in the Bible.&nbsp; I have bothered you both&mdash;you especially;
+but you always get the tongs and heap coals of fire upon my head.&nbsp;
+I have had letters to write lately to Brussels, to Lille, and to London.&nbsp;
+I have lots of chemises, nightgowns, pocket-handkerchiefs, and pockets
+to make; besides clothes to repair.&nbsp; I have been, every week since
+I came home, expecting to see Branwell, and he has never been able to
+get over yet.&nbsp; We fully expect him, however, next Saturday.&nbsp;
+Under these circumstances how can I go visiting?&nbsp; You tantalize
+me to death with talking of conversations by the fireside.&nbsp; Depend
+upon it, we are not to have any such for many a long month to come.&nbsp;
+I get an interesting impression of old age upon my face; and when you
+see me next I shall certainly wear caps and spectacles.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+<p>I am not aware of all the circumstances which led to the relinquishment
+of the Lille plan.&nbsp; Brussels had had from the first a strong attraction
+for Charlotte; and the idea of going there, in preference to any other
+place, had only been given up in consequence of the information received
+of the second-rate character of its schools.&nbsp; In one of her letters
+reference has been made to Mrs. Jenkins, the wife of the chaplain of
+the British Embassy.&nbsp; At the request of his brother&mdash;a clergyman,
+living not many miles from Haworth, and an acquaintance of Mr. Bront&euml;&rsquo;s&mdash;she
+made much inquiry, and at length, after some discouragement in her search,
+heard of a school which seemed in every respect desirable.&nbsp; There
+was an English lady who had long lived in the Orleans family, amidst
+the various fluctuations of their fortunes, and who, when the Princess
+Louise was married to King Leopold, accompanied her to Brussels, in
+the capacity of reader.&nbsp; This lady&rsquo;s granddaughter was receiving
+her education at the pensionnat of Madame H&eacute;ger; and so satisfied
+was the grandmother with the kind of instruction given, that she named
+the establishment, with high encomiums, to Mrs. Jerkins; and, in consequence,
+it was decided that, if the terms suited, Miss Bront&euml; and Emily
+should proceed thither.&nbsp; M. H&eacute;ger informs me that, on receipt
+of a letter from Charlotte, making very particular inquiries as to the
+possible amount of what are usually termed &ldquo;extras,&rdquo; he
+and his wife were so much struck by the simple earnest tone of the letter,
+that they said to each other:&mdash;&ldquo;These are the daughters of
+an English pastor, of moderate means, anxious to learn with an ulterior
+view of instructing others, and to whom the risk of additional expense
+is of great consequence.&nbsp; Let us name a specific sum, within which
+all expenses shall be included.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was accordingly done; the agreement was concluded, and the Bront&euml;s
+prepared to leave their native county for the first time, if we except
+the melancholy and memorable residence at Cowan Bridge.&nbsp; Mr. Bront&euml;
+determined to accompany his daughters.&nbsp; Mary and her brother, who
+were experienced in foreign travelling, were also of the party.&nbsp;
+Charlotte first saw London in the day or two they now stopped there;
+and, from an expression in one of her subsequent letters, they all,
+I believe, stayed at the Chapter Coffee House, Paternoster Row&mdash;a
+strange, old-fashioned tavern, of which I shall have more to say hereafter.</p>
+<p>Mary&rsquo;s account of their journey is thus given.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In passing through London, she seemed to think our business
+was and ought to be, to see all the pictures and statues we could.&nbsp;
+She knew the artists, and know where other productions of theirs were
+to be found.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t remember what we saw except St. Paul&rsquo;s.&nbsp;
+Emily was like her in these habits of mind, but certainly never took
+her opinion, but always had one to offer . . . I don&rsquo;t know what
+Charlotte thought of Brussels.&nbsp; We arrived in the dark, and went
+next morning to our respective schools to see them.&nbsp; We were, of
+course, much preoccupied, and our prospects gloomy.&nbsp; Charlotte
+used to like the country round Brussels.&nbsp; &lsquo;At the top of
+every hill you see something.&rsquo;&nbsp; She took, long solitary walks
+on the occasional holidays.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bront&euml; took his daughters to the Rue d&rsquo;Isabelle, Brussels;
+remained one night at Mr. Jenkins&rsquo;; and straight returned to his
+wild Yorkshire village.</p>
+<p>What a contrast to that must the Belgian capital have presented to
+those two young women thus left behind!&nbsp; Suffering acutely from
+every strange and unaccustomed contact&mdash;far away from their beloved
+home, and the dear moors beyond&mdash;their indomitable will was their
+great support.&nbsp; Charlotte&rsquo;s own words, with regard to Emily,
+are:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;After the age of twenty, having meantime studied
+alone with diligence and perseverance, she went with me to an establishment
+on the continent.&nbsp; The same suffering and conflict ensued, heightened
+by the strong recoil of her upright heretic and English spirit from
+the gentle Jesuitry of the foreign and Romish system.&nbsp; Once more
+she seemed sinking, but this time she rallied through the mere force
+of resolution: with inward remorse and shame she looked back on her
+former failure, and resolved to conquer, but the victory cost her dear.&nbsp;
+She was never happy till she carried her hard-won knowledge back to
+the remote English village, the old parsonage-house, and desolate Yorkshire
+hills.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>They wanted learning.&nbsp; They came for learning.&nbsp; They would
+learn.&nbsp; Where they had a distinct purpose to be achieved in intercourse
+with their fellows, they forgot themselves; at all other times they
+were miserably shy.&nbsp; Mrs. Jenkins told me that she used to ask
+them to spend Sundays and holidays with her, until she found that they
+felt more pain than pleasure from such visits.&nbsp; Emily hardly ever
+uttered more than a monosyllable.&nbsp; Charlotte was sometimes excited
+sufficiently to speak eloquently and well&mdash;on certain subjects;
+but before her tongue was thus loosened, she had a habit of gradually
+wheeling round on her chair, so as almost to conceal her face from the
+person to whom she was speaking.</p>
+<p>And yet there was much in Brussels to strike a responsive chord in
+her powerful imagination.&nbsp; At length she was seeing somewhat of
+that grand old world of which she had dreamed.&nbsp; As the gay crowds
+passed by her, so had gay crowds paced those streets for centuries,
+in all their varying costumes.&nbsp; Every spot told an historic tale,
+extending back into the fabulous ages when Jan and Jannika, the aboriginal
+giant and giantess, looked over the wall, forty feet high, of what is
+now the Rue Villa Hermosa, and peered down upon the new settlers who
+were to turn them out of the country in which they had lived since the
+deluge.&nbsp; The great solemn Cathedral of St. Gudule, the religious
+paintings, the striking forms and ceremonies of the Romish Church&mdash;all
+made a deep impression on the girls, fresh from the bare walls and simple
+worship of Haworth Church.&nbsp; And then they were indignant with themselves
+for having been susceptible of this impression, and their stout Protestant
+hearts arrayed themselves against the false Duessa that had thus imposed
+upon them.</p>
+<p>The very building they occupied as pupils, in Madame H&eacute;ger&rsquo;s
+pensionnat, had its own ghostly train of splendid associations, marching
+for ever, in shadowy procession, through and through the ancient rooms,
+and shaded alleys of the gardens.&nbsp; From the splendour of to-day
+in the Rue Royale, if you turn aside, near the statue of the General
+Beliard, you look down four flights of broad stone steps upon the Rue
+d&rsquo;Isabelle.&nbsp; The chimneys of the houses in it are below your
+feet.&nbsp; Opposite to the lowest flight of steps, there is a large
+old mansion facing you, with a spacious walled garden behind&mdash;and
+to the right of it.&nbsp; In front of this garden, on the same side
+as the mansion, and with great boughs of trees sweeping over their lowly
+roofs, is a row of small, picturesque, old-fashioned cottages, not unlike,
+in degree and uniformity, to the almshouses so often seen in an English
+country town.&nbsp; The Rue d&rsquo;Isabelle looks as though it had
+been untouched by the innovations of the builder for the last three
+centuries; and yet any one might drop a stone into it from the back
+windows of the grand modern hotels in the Rue Royale, built and furnished
+in the newest Parisian fashion.</p>
+<p>In the thirteenth century, the Rue d&rsquo;Isabelle was called the
+Foss&eacute;-aux-Chiens; and the kennels for the ducal hounds occupied
+the place where Madame H&eacute;ger&rsquo;s pensionnat now stands.&nbsp;
+A hospital (in the ancient large meaning of the word) succeeded to the
+kennel.&nbsp; The houseless and the poor, perhaps the leprous, were
+received, by the brethren of a religious order, in a building on this
+sheltered site; and what had been a fosse for defence, was filled up
+with herb-gardens and orchards for upwards of a hundred years.&nbsp;
+Then came the aristocratic guild of the cross-bow men&mdash;that company
+the members whereof were required to prove their noble descent&mdash;untainted
+for so many generations, before they could be admitted into the guild;
+and, being admitted, were required to swear a solemn oath, that no other
+pastime or exercise should take up any part of their leisure, the whole
+of which was to be devoted to the practice of the noble art of shooting
+with the cross-bow.&nbsp; Once a year a grand match was held, under
+the patronage of some saint, to whose church-steeple was affixed the
+bird, or semblance of a bird, to be hit by the victor. <a name="citation5"></a><a href="#footnote5">{5}</a>&nbsp;
+The conqueror in the game was Roi des Arbal&eacute;triers for the coming
+year, and received a jewelled decoration accordingly, which he was entitled
+to wear for twelve months; after which he restored it to the guild,
+to be again striven for.&nbsp; The family of him who died during the
+year that he was king, were bound to present the decoration to the church
+of the patron saint of the guild, and to furnish a similar prize to
+be contended for afresh.&nbsp; These noble cross-bow men of the middle
+ages formed a sort of armed guard to the powers in existence, and almost
+invariably took the aristocratic, in preference to the democratic side,
+in the numerous civil dissensions of the Flemish towns.&nbsp; Hence
+they were protected by the authorities, and easily obtained favourable
+and sheltered sites for their exercise-ground.&nbsp; And thus they came
+to occupy the old fosse, and took possession of the great orchard of
+the hospital, lying tranquil and sunny in the hollow below the rampart.</p>
+<p>But, in the sixteenth century, it became necessary to construct a
+street through the exercise-ground of the &ldquo;Arbal&eacute;triers
+du Grand Serment,&rdquo; and, after much delay, the company were induced
+by the beloved Infanta Isabella to give up the requisite plot of ground.&nbsp;
+In recompense for this, Isabella&mdash;who herself was a member of the
+guild, and had even shot down the bird, and been queen in 1615&mdash;made
+many presents to the arbal&eacute;triers; and, in return, the grateful
+city, which had long wanted a nearer road to St. Gudule, but been baffled
+by the noble archers, called the street after her name.&nbsp; She, as
+a sort of indemnification to the arbal&eacute;triers, caused a &ldquo;great
+mansion&rdquo; to be built for their accommodation in the new Rue d&rsquo;Isabelle.&nbsp;
+This mansion was placed in front of their exercise-ground, and was of
+a square shape.&nbsp; On a remote part of the walls, may still be read&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>PHILLIPPO IIII.&nbsp; HISPAN.&nbsp; REGE.&nbsp; ISABELLA-CLARA-EUGENIA
+HISPAN.&nbsp; INFANS.&nbsp; MAGN&AElig; GULD&AElig; REGINA GULD&AElig;
+FRATRIBUS POSUIT.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In that mansion were held all the splendid feasts of the Grand Serment
+des Arbal&eacute;triers.&nbsp; The master-archer lived there constantly,
+in order to be ever at hand to render his services to the guild.&nbsp;
+The great saloon was also used for the court balls and festivals, when
+the archers were not admitted.&nbsp; The Infanta caused other and smaller
+houses to be built in her new street, to serve as residences for her
+&ldquo;garde noble;&rdquo; and for her &ldquo;garde bourgeoise,&rdquo;
+a small habitation each, some of which still remain, to remind us of
+English almshouses.&nbsp; The &ldquo;great mansion,&rdquo; with its
+quadrangular form; the spacious saloon&mdash;once used for the archducal
+balls, where the dark, grave Spaniards mixed with the blond nobility
+of Brabant and Flanders&mdash;now a schoolroom for Belgian girls; the
+cross-bow men&rsquo;s archery-ground&mdash;all are there&mdash;the pensionnat
+of Madame H&eacute;ger.</p>
+<p>This lady was assisted in the work of instruction by her husband&mdash;a
+kindly, wise, good, and religious man&mdash;whose acquaintance I am
+glad to have made, and who has furnished me with some interesting details,
+from his wife&rsquo;s recollections and his own, of the two Miss Bront&euml;s
+during their residence in Brussels.&nbsp; He had the better opportunities
+of watching them, from his giving lessons in the French language and
+literature in the school.&nbsp; A short extract from a letter, written
+to me by a French lady resident in Brussels, and well qualified to judge,
+will help to show the estimation in which he is held.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Je ne connais pas personnellement M. H&eacute;ger, mais je
+sais qu&rsquo;il est peu de caract&egrave;res aussi nobles, aussi admirables
+que le sien.&nbsp; Il est un des membres les plus z&eacute;l&eacute;s
+de cette Soci&eacute;t&eacute; de S. Vincent de Paul dont je t&rsquo;ai
+d&eacute;j&agrave; parl&eacute;, et ne se contente pas de servir les
+pauvres et les malades, mais leur consacre encore les soir&eacute;es.&nbsp;
+Apr&egrave;s des journ&eacute;es absorb&eacute;es tout enti&egrave;res
+par les devoirs que sa place lui impose, il r&eacute;unit les pauvres,
+les ouvriers, leur donne des cours gratuits, et trouve encore le moyen
+de les amuser en les instruisant.&nbsp; Ce d&eacute;vouement te dira
+assez que M. H&eacute;ger est profondement et ouvertement religieux.&nbsp;
+Il a des mani&egrave;res franches et avenantes; il se fait aimer de
+tous ceux qui l&rsquo;approchent, et surtout des enfants.&nbsp; Il a
+la parole facile, et possde &agrave; un haut degr&eacute; l&rsquo;&eacute;loquence
+du bon sens et du coeur.&nbsp; Il n&rsquo;est point auteur.&nbsp; Homme
+de z&egrave;le et de conscience, il vient de se d&eacute;mettre des
+fonctions &eacute;lev&eacute;es et lucratives qu&rsquo;il exer&ccedil;ait
+&agrave; l&rsquo;Ath&eacute;n&eacute;e, celles de Pr&eacute;fet des
+Etudes, parce qu&rsquo;il ne peut y r&eacute;aliser le bien qu&rsquo;il
+avait esp&eacute;r&eacute;, introduire l&rsquo;enseignement religieux
+dans le programme des &eacute;tudes.&nbsp; J&rsquo;ai vu une fois Madame
+H&eacute;ger, qui a quelque chose de froid et de compass&eacute; dans
+son maintien, et qui pr&eacute;vient peu en sa faveur.&nbsp; Je la crois
+pourtant aim&eacute;e et appr&eacute;ci&eacute;e par ses &eacute;l&egrave;ves.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There were from eighty to a hundred pupils in the pensionnat, when
+Charlotte and Emily Bront&euml; entered in February 1842.</p>
+<p>M. H&eacute;ger&rsquo;s account is that they knew nothing of French.&nbsp;
+I suspect they knew as much (or as little), for all conversational purposes,
+as any English girls do, who have never been abroad, and have only learnt
+the idioms and pronunciation from an Englishwoman.&nbsp; The two sisters
+clung together, and kept apart from the herd of happy, boisterous, well-befriended
+Belgian girls, who, in their turn, thought the new English pupils wild
+and scared-looking, with strange, odd, insular ideas about dress; for
+Emily had taken a fancy to the fashion, ugly and preposterous even during
+its reign, of gigot sleves, and persisted in wearing them long after
+they were &ldquo;gone out.&rdquo;&nbsp; Her petticoats, too, had not
+a curve or a wave in them, but hung down straight and long, clinging
+to her lank figure.&nbsp; The sisters spoke to no one but from necessity.&nbsp;
+They were too full of earnest thought, and of the exile&rsquo;s sick
+yearning, to be ready for careless conversation or merry game.&nbsp;
+M. H&eacute;ger, who had done little but observe, during the few first
+weeks of their residence in the Rue d&rsquo;Isabelle, perceived that
+with their unusual characters, and extraordinary talents, a different
+mode must be adopted from that in which he generally taught French to
+English girls.&nbsp; He seems to have rated Emily&rsquo;s genius as
+something even higher than Charlotte&rsquo;s; and her estimation of
+their relative powers was the same.&nbsp; Emily had a head for logic,
+and a capability of argument, unusual in a man, and rare indeed in a
+woman, according to M. H&eacute;ger.&nbsp; Impairing the force of this
+gift, was a stubborn tenacity of will, which rendered her obtuse to
+all reasoning where her own wishes, or her own sense of right, was concerned.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;She should have been a man&mdash;a great navigator,&rdquo; said
+M. H&eacute;ger in speaking of her.&nbsp; &ldquo;Her powerful reason
+would have deduced new spheres of discovery from the knowledge of the
+old; and her strong imperious will would never have been daunted by
+opposition or difficulty; never have given way but with life.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And yet, moreover, her faculty of imagination was such that, if she
+had written a history, her view of scenes and characters would have
+been so vivid, and so powerfully expressed, and supported by such a
+show of argument, that it would have dominated over the reader, whatever
+might have been his previous opinions, or his cooler perceptions of
+its truth.&nbsp; But she appeared egotistical and exacting compared
+to Charlotte, who was always unselfish (this is M. H&eacute;ger&rsquo;s
+testimony); and in the anxiety of the elder to make her younger sister
+contented she allowed her to exercise a kind of unconscious tyranny
+over her.</p>
+<p>After consulting with his wife, M. H&eacute;ger told them that he
+meant to dispense with the old method of grounding in grammar, vocabulary,
+&amp;c., and to proceed on a new plan&mdash;something similar to what
+he had occasionally adopted with the elder among his French and Belgian
+pupils.&nbsp; He proposed to read to them some of the master-pieces
+of the most celebrated French authors (such as Casimir de la Vigne&rsquo;s
+poem on the &ldquo;Death of Joan of Arc,&rdquo; parts of Bossuet, the
+admirable translation of the noble letter of St. Ignatius to the Roman
+Christians in the &ldquo;Biblioth&egrave;que Choisie des P&egrave;res
+de l&rsquo;Eglise,&rdquo; &amp;c.), and after having thus impressed
+the complete effect of the whole, to analyse the parts with them, pointing
+out in what such or such an author excelled, and where were the blemishes.&nbsp;
+He believed that he had to do with pupils capable, from their ready
+sympathy with the intellectual, the refined, the polished, or the noble,
+of catching the echo of a style, and so reproducing their own thoughts
+in a somewhat similar manner.</p>
+<p>After explaining his plan to them, he awaited their reply.&nbsp;
+Emily spoke first; and said that she saw no good to be derived from
+it; and that, by adopting it, they should lose all originality of thought
+and expression.&nbsp; She would have entered into an argument on the
+subject, but for this, M. H&eacute;ger had no time.&nbsp; Charlotte
+then spoke; she also doubted the success of the plan; but she would
+follow out M. H&eacute;ger&rsquo;s advice, because she was bound to
+obey him while she was his pupil.&nbsp; Before speaking of the results,
+it may be desirable to give an extract from one of her letters, which
+shows some of her first impressions of her new life.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Brussels, 1842 (May?).</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was twenty-six years old a week or two since; and at this
+ripe time of life I am a school-girl, and, on the whole, very happy
+in that capacity.&nbsp; It felt very strange at first to submit to authority
+instead of exercising it&mdash;to obey orders instead of giving them;
+but I like that state of things.&nbsp; I returned to it with the same
+avidity that a cow, that has long been kept on dry hay, returns to fresh
+grass.&nbsp; Don&rsquo;t laugh at my simile.&nbsp; It is natural to
+me to submit, and very unnatural to command.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is a large school, in which there are about forty externes,
+or day pupils, and twelve pensionnaires, or boarders.&nbsp; Madame H&eacute;ger,
+the head, is a lady of precisely the same cast of mind, degree of cultivation,
+and quality of intellect as Miss ---.&nbsp; I think the severe points
+are a little softened, because she has not been disappointed, and consequently
+soured.&nbsp; In a word, she is a married instead of a maiden lady.&nbsp;
+There are three teachers in the school&mdash;Mademoiselle Blanche, Mademoiselle
+Sophie, and Mademoiselle Marie.&nbsp; The two first have no particular
+character.&nbsp; One is an old maid, and the other will be one.&nbsp;
+Mademoiselle Marie is talented and original, but of repulsive and arbitrary
+manners, which have made the whole school, except myself and Emily,
+her bitter enemies.&nbsp; No less than seven masters attend, to teach
+the different branches of education&mdash;French, Drawing, Music, Singing,
+Writing, Arithmetic, and German.&nbsp; All in the house are Catholics
+except ourselves, one other girl, and the gouvernante of Madame&rsquo;s
+children, an Englishwoman, in rank something between a lady&rsquo;s
+maid and a nursery governess.&nbsp; The difference in country and religion
+makes a broad line of demarcation between us and all the rest.&nbsp;
+We are completely isolated in the midst of numbers.&nbsp; Yet I think
+I am never unhappy; my present life is so delightful, so congenial to
+my own nature, compared to that of a governess.&nbsp; My time, constantly
+occupied, passes too rapidly.&nbsp; Hitherto both Emily and I have had
+good health, and therefore we have been able to work well.&nbsp; There
+is one individual of whom I have not yet spoken&mdash;M. H&eacute;ger,
+the husband of Madame.&nbsp; He is professor of rhetoric, a man of power
+as to mind, but very choleric and irritable in temperament.&nbsp; He
+is very angry with me just at present, because I have written a translation
+which he chose to stigmatize as &lsquo;<i>peu correct</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+He did not tell me so, but wrote the word on the margin of my book,
+and asked, in brief stern phrase, how it happened that my compositions
+were always better than my translations? adding that the thing seemed
+to him inexplicable.&nbsp; The fact is, some weeks ago, in a high-flown
+humour, he forbade me to use either dictionary or grammar in translating
+the most difficult English compositions into French.&nbsp; This makes
+the task rather arduous, and compels me every now and then to introduce
+an English word, which nearly plucks the eyes out of his head when he
+sees it.&nbsp; Emily and he don&rsquo;t draw well together at all.&nbsp;
+Emily works like a horse, and she has had great difficulties to contend
+with&mdash;far greater than I have had.&nbsp; Indeed, those who come
+to a French school for instruction ought previously to have acquired
+a considerable knowledge of the French language, otherwise they will
+lose a great deal of time, for the course of instruction is adapted
+to natives and not to foreigners; and in these large establishments
+they will not change their ordinary course for one or two strangers.&nbsp;
+The few private lessons that M. H&eacute;ger has vouchsafed to give
+us, are, I suppose, to be considered a great favour; and I can perceive
+they have already excited much spite and jealousy in the school.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will abuse this letter for being short and dreary, and
+there are a hundred things which I want to tell you, but I have not
+time.&nbsp; Brussels is a beautiful city.&nbsp; The Belgians hate the
+English.&nbsp; Their external morality is more rigid than ours.&nbsp;
+To lace the stays without a handkerchief on the neck is considered a
+disgusting piece of indelicacy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The passage in this letter where M. H&eacute;ger is represented as
+prohibiting the use of dictionary or grammar, refers, I imagine, to
+the time I have mentioned, when he determined to adopt a new method
+of instruction in the French language, of which they were to catch the
+spirit and rhythm rather from the ear and the heart, as its noblest
+accents fell upon them, than by over-careful and anxious study of its
+grammatical rules.&nbsp; It seems to me a daring experiment on the part
+of their teacher; but, doubtless, he knew his ground; and that it answered
+is evident in the composition of some of Charlotte&rsquo;s <i>devoirs</i>,
+written about this time.&nbsp; I am tempted, in illustration of this
+season of mental culture, to recur to a conversation which I had with
+M. H&eacute;ger on the manner in which he formed his pupils&rsquo; style,
+and to give a proof of his success, by copying a <i>devoir</i> of Charlotte&rsquo;s
+with his remarks upon it.</p>
+<p>He told me that one day this summer (when the Bront&euml;s had been
+for about four months receiving instruction from him) he read to them
+Victor Hugo&rsquo;s celebrated portrait of Mirabeau, &ldquo;mais, dans
+ma le&ccedil;on je me bornais &agrave; ce qui concerne <i>Mirabeau orateur</i>.&nbsp;
+C&rsquo;est apr&egrave;s l&rsquo;analyse de ce morceau, consid&eacute;r&eacute;
+surtout du point de vue du fond, de la disposition de ce qu&rsquo;on
+pourrait appeler <i>la charpente</i> qu&rsquo;ont &eacute;t&eacute;
+faits les deux portraits que je vous donne.&rdquo;&nbsp; He went on
+to say that he had pointed out to them the fault in Victor Hugo&rsquo;s
+style as being exaggeration in conception, and, at the same time, he
+had made them notice the extreme beauty of his &ldquo;nuances&rdquo;
+of expression.&nbsp; They were then dismissed to choose the subject
+of a similar kind of portrait.&nbsp; This selection M. H&eacute;ger
+always left to them; for &ldquo;it is necessary,&rdquo; he observed,
+&ldquo;before sitting down to write on a subject, to have thoughts and
+feelings about it.&nbsp; I cannot tell on what subject your heart and
+mind have been excited.&nbsp; I must leave that to you.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The marginal comments, I need hardly say, are M. H&eacute;ger&rsquo;s;
+the words in italics are Charlotte&rsquo;s, for which he substitutes
+a better form of expression, which is placed between brackets. <a name="citation6"></a><a href="#footnote6">{6}</a></p>
+<h3>IMITATION.</h3>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Le 31 Juillet, 1842.</p>
+<p>PORTRAIT DE PIERRE L&rsquo;HERMITE.&nbsp; CHARLOTTE BRONT&Euml;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;De temps en temps, il para&icirc;t sur la terre des hommes
+destin&eacute;s &agrave; &ecirc;tre les instruments [pr&eacute;destin&eacute;s]
+{Pourquoi cette suppression?} de grands changements moraux ou politiques.&nbsp;
+Quelquefois c&rsquo;est un conqu&eacute;rant, un Alexandre ou un Attila,
+qui passe comme un ouragan, et purifie l&rsquo;atmosph&egrave;re moral,
+comme l&rsquo;orage purifie l&rsquo;atmosph&egrave;re physique; quelquefois,
+c&rsquo;est un r&eacute;volutionnaire, un Cromwell, ou un Robespierre,
+qui fait expier par un roi {les fautes et} les vices de toute une dynastie;
+quelquefois c&rsquo;est un enthousiaste religieux comme Mahomet, ou
+Pierre l&rsquo;Hermite, qui, avec le seul levier de la pens&eacute;e,
+soul&egrave;ve des nations enti&egrave;res, les d&eacute;racine et les
+transplante dans des climats nouveaux, <i>peuplant l&rsquo;Asie avec
+les habitants de l&rsquo;Europe</i>.&nbsp; Pierre l&rsquo;Hermite &eacute;tait
+gentilhomme de Picardie, en France, {Invtile, quand vous ecrivez er
+fran&ccedil;ais} pourquoi donc n&rsquo;a-t-il pass&eacute; sa vie comma
+les autres gentilhommes, ses contemporains, ont pass&eacute; la leur,
+&agrave; table, &agrave; la chasse, dans son lit, sans s&rsquo;inqui&eacute;ter
+de Saladin, ou de ses Sarrasins?&nbsp; N&rsquo;est-ce pas, parce qu&rsquo;il
+y a dans certaines natures, <i>une ardour</i> [un foyer d&rsquo;activit&eacute;]
+indomptable qui ne leur permet pas de rester inactives, <i>qui les force
+&agrave; se remuer afin d&rsquo;exercer les facultes puissantes, qui
+m&ecirc;me en dormant sont pr&ecirc;tes, comme Sampson, &agrave; briser
+les noeuds qui les retiennent</i>?</p>
+<p>{Vous avez commenc&eacute; &agrave; parler de Pierre: vous &ecirc;tes
+entr&eacute;e dans le sujet: marchez au but.}</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pierre prit la profession des armes; <i>si son ardeur avait
+&eacute;t&eacute; de cette esp&egrave;ce</i> [s&rsquo;il n&rsquo;avait
+eu que cette ardeur vulgaire] qui provient d&rsquo;une robuste sant&eacute;,
+<i>il aurait</i> [c&rsquo;eut] &eacute;t&eacute; un brave militaire,
+et rien de plus; mais son ardeur &eacute;tait celle de l&rsquo;&acirc;me,
+sa flamme &eacute;tait pure et elle s&rsquo;&eacute;levait vers le ciel.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Sans doute</i> [Il est vrai que] la jeunesse de Pierre
+<i>&eacute;tait</i> [f&eacute;t] troubl&eacute;e par passions orageuses;
+les natures puissantes sont extr&egrave;mes en tout, elles ne connaissent
+la ti&eacute;deur ni dans le bien, ni dans le mal; Pierre donc chercha
+d&rsquo;abord avidement la gloire qui se fl&eacute;trit et les plaisirs
+qui trompent, mais <i>il fit bient&ocirc;t la d&eacute;couverte</i>
+[bient&ocirc;t il s&rsquo;aper&ccedil;ut] que ce qu&rsquo;il poursuivait
+n&rsquo;&eacute;tait qe&rsquo;une illusion &agrave; laquelle il ne pourrait
+jamais atteindre; {Vnutile, quand vous avez dit illusion} il retourna
+donc sur ses pas, il recommen&ccedil;a le voyage de la vie, mais cette
+fois il &eacute;vita le chemin spacieux qui m&egrave;ne &agrave; la
+perdition et il prit le chemin &eacute;troit qui m&egrave;ne &agrave;
+la vie; <i>puisque</i> [comme] le trajet &eacute;tait long et difficile
+il jeta la casque et les armes du soldat, et se v&ecirc;tit de l&rsquo;habit
+simple du moine.&nbsp; A la vie militaire succ&eacute;da la vie monastique,
+car les extr&ecirc;mes se touchent, et <i>chez l&rsquo;homme sinc&egrave;re</i>
+la sinc&eacute;rit&eacute; du repentir am&egrave;ne [n&eacute;cessairement
+&agrave; la suite] <i>avec lui</i> la rigueur de la p&eacute;nitence.&nbsp;
+[Voil&agrave; donc Pierre devenu moine!]</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mais <i>Pierre</i> [il] avait en lui un principe qui l&rsquo;emp&ecirc;chait
+de rester long-temps inactif, ses id&eacute;es, sur quel sujet <i>qu&rsquo;il
+soit</i> [que ce f&ucirc;t] ne pouvaient pas &ecirc;tre born&eacute;es;
+il ne lui suffisait pas que lui-m&ecirc;me f&ucirc;t religieux, que
+lui-m&ecirc;me f&ucirc;t convaincu de la r&eacute;alit&eacute; de Christianism&eacute;
+(sic), il fallait que toute l&rsquo;Europe, que toute l&rsquo;Asie,
+partage&acirc;t sa conviction et profess&acirc;t la croyance de la Croix.&nbsp;
+La Pi&eacute;t&eacute; [fervente] &eacute;lev&eacute;e par la G&eacute;nie,
+nourrie par la Solitude, <i>fit na&icirc;tre une esp&egrave;ce d&rsquo;inspiration</i>
+[exalta son &acirc;me jusqu&rsquo;&agrave; l&rsquo;inspiration] <i>dans
+son ame</i>, et lorsqu&rsquo;il quitta sa cellule et reparut dans le
+monde, il portait comme Mo&iuml;se l&rsquo;empreinte de la Divinit&eacute;
+sur son front, et <i>tout</i> [tous] reconnurent en lui la v&eacute;ritable
+ap&ocirc;tre de la Croix.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mahomet n&rsquo;avait jamais remu&eacute; les molles nations
+de l&rsquo;Orient comme alors Pierre remua les peuples aust&egrave;res
+de l&rsquo;Occident; il fallait que cette &eacute;loquence f&ucirc;t
+d&rsquo;une force presque miraculeuse <i>qui pouvait</i> [presqu&rsquo;elle]
+persuad<i>er</i> [ait] aux rois de vendre leurs royaumes <i>afin de
+procurer</i> [pour avoir] des armes et des soldats <i>pour aider</i>
+[&agrave; offrir] &agrave; Pierre dans la guerre sainte qu&rsquo;il
+voulait livrer aux infid&egrave;les.&nbsp; La puissance de Pierre [l&rsquo;Hermite]
+n&rsquo;&eacute;tait nullement une puissance physique, car la nature,
+ou pour mieux dire, Dieu est impartial dans la distribution de ses dons;
+il accorde &agrave; l&rsquo;un de ses enfants la gr&acirc;ce, la beaut&eacute;,
+les perfections corporelles, &agrave; l&rsquo;autre l&rsquo;esprit,
+la grandeur morale.&nbsp; Pierre donc &eacute;tait un homme petit, d&rsquo;une
+physionomie peu agr&eacute;able; mais il avait ce courage, cette constance,
+cet enthousiasme, cette &eacute;nergie de sentiment qui &eacute;crase
+toute opposition, et qui fait que la volont&eacute; d&rsquo;un seul
+homme devient la loi de toute une nation.&nbsp; Pour se former une juste
+id&eacute;e de l&rsquo;influence qu&rsquo;exer&ccedil;a cet homme sur
+les <i>caract&egrave;res</i> [choses] et les id&eacute;es de son temps,
+il faut se le repr&eacute;senter au milieu de l&rsquo;arm&eacute;e des
+crois&eacute;es dans son double r&ocirc;le de proph&egrave;te et de
+guerrier; le pauvre hermite, v&ecirc;tu <i>du pauvre</i> [de l&rsquo;humble]
+habit gris est l&agrave; plus puissant qieun roi; il est entour&eacute;
+<i>d&rsquo;une</i> [de la] multitude [avide] une multitude qui ne voit
+que lui, tandis qui lui, il ne voit que le ciel; ses yeux lev&eacute;s
+semblent dire, &lsquo;Je vois Dieu et les anges, et j&rsquo;ai perdu
+de vue la terre!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Dans ce moment le</i> [mais ce] pauvre <i>habit</i> [froc]
+gris est pour lui comme le manteau d&rsquo;Elijah; il l&rsquo;enveloppe
+d&rsquo;inspiration; <i>il</i> [Pierre] lit dans l&rsquo;avenir; il
+voit J&eacute;rusalem d&eacute;livr&eacute;e; [il voit] le saint s&eacute;pulcre
+libre; il voit le Croissant argent est arrach&eacute; du Temple, et
+l&rsquo;Oriflamme et la Croix rouge sont &eacute;tabli &agrave; sa place;
+non-seulement Pierre voit ces merveilles, mais il les fait voir &agrave;
+tous ceux qui l&rsquo;entourent; il ravive l&rsquo;esp&eacute;rance
+et le courage dans [tous ces corps &eacute;puis&eacute;s de fatigues
+et de privations].&nbsp; La bataille ne sera livr&eacute;e que demain,
+mais la victoire est d&eacute;cid&eacute;e ce soir.&nbsp; Pierre a promis;
+et les Crois&eacute;s se fient &agrave; sa parole, comme les Isra&euml;lites
+se fiaient &agrave; celle de Mo&iuml;se et de Josu&eacute;.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>As a companion portrait to this, Emily chose to depict Harold on
+the eve of the battle of Hastings.&nbsp; It appears to me that her <i>devoir</i>
+is superior to Charlotte&rsquo;s in power and in imagination, and fully
+equal to it in language; and that this, in both cases, considering how
+little practical knowledge of French they had when they arrived at Brussels
+in February, and that they wrote without the aid of dictionary or grammar,
+is unusual and remarkable.&nbsp; We shall see the progress Charlotte
+had made, in ease and grace of style, a year later.</p>
+<p>In the choice of subjects left to her selection, she frequently took
+characters and scenes from the Old Testament, with which all her writings
+show that she was especially familiar.&nbsp; The picturesqueness and
+colour (if I may so express it), the grandeur and breadth of its narrations,
+impressed her deeply.&nbsp; To use M. H&eacute;ger&rsquo;s expression,
+&ldquo;Elle &eacute;tait nourrie de la Bible.&rdquo;&nbsp; After he
+had read De la Vigne&rsquo;s poem on Joan of Arc, she chose the &ldquo;Vision
+and Death of Moses on Mount Nebo&rdquo; to write about; and, in looking
+over this <i>devoir</i>, I was much struck with one or two of M. H&eacute;ger&rsquo;s
+remarks.&nbsp; After describing, in a quiet and simple manner, the circumstances
+under which Moses took leave of the Israelites, her imagination becomes
+warmed, and she launches out into a noble strain, depicting the glorious
+futurity of the Chosen People, as, looking down upon the Promised Land,
+he sees their prosperity in prophetic vision.&nbsp; But, before reaching
+the middle of this glowing description, she interrupts herself to discuss
+for a moment the doubts that have been thrown on the miraculous relations
+of the Old Testament.&nbsp; M. H&eacute;ger remarks, &ldquo;When you
+are writing, place your argument first in cool, prosaic language; but
+when you have thrown the reins on the neck of your imagination, do not
+pull her up to reason.&rdquo;&nbsp; Again, in the vision of Moses, he
+sees the maidens leading forth their flocks to the wells at eventide,
+and they are described as wearing flowery garlands.&nbsp; Here the writer
+is reminded of the necessity of preserving a certain verisimilitude:
+Moses might from his elevation see mountains and plains, groups of maidens
+and herds of cattle, but could hardly perceive the details of dress,
+or the ornaments of the head.</p>
+<p>When they had made further progress, M. H&eacute;ger took up a more
+advanced plan, that of synthetical teaching.&nbsp; He would read to
+them various accounts of the same person or event, and make them notice
+the points of agreement and disagreement.&nbsp; Where they were different,
+he would make them seek the origin of that difference by causing them
+to examine well into the character and position of each separate writer,
+and how they would be likely to affect his conception of truth.&nbsp;
+For instance, take Cromwell.&nbsp; He would read Bossuet&rsquo;s description
+of him in the &ldquo;Oraison Fun&egrave;bre de la Reine d&rsquo;Angleterre,&rdquo;
+and show how in this he was considered entirely from the religious point
+of view, as an instrument in the hands of God, preordained to His work.&nbsp;
+Then he would make them read Guizot, and see how, in this view, Cromwell
+was endowed with the utmost power of free-will, but governed by no higher
+motive than that of expediency; while Carlyle regarded him as a character
+regulated by a strong and conscientious desire to do the will of the
+Lord.&nbsp; Then he would desire them to remember that the Royalist
+and Commonwealth men had each their different opinions of the great
+Protector.&nbsp; And from these conflicting characters, he would require
+them to sift and collect the elements of truth, and try to unite them
+into a perfect whole.</p>
+<p>This kind of exercise delighted Charlotte.&nbsp; It called into play
+her powers of analysis, which were extraordinary, and she very soon
+excelled in it.</p>
+<p>Wherever the Bront&euml;s could be national they were so, with the
+same tenacity of attachment which made them suffer as they did whenever
+they left Haworth.&nbsp; They were Protestant to the backbone in other
+things beside their religion, but pre-eminently so in that.&nbsp; Touched
+as Charlotte was by the letter of St. Ignatius before alluded to, she
+claimed equal self-devotion, and from as high a motive, for some of
+the missionaries of the English Church sent out to toil and to perish
+on the poisonous African coast, and wrote as an &ldquo;imitation,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Lettre d&rsquo;un Missionnaire, Sierra L&eacute;one, Afrique.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Something of her feeling, too, appears in the following letter:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Brussels, 1842.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I consider it doubtful whether I shall come home in September
+or not.&nbsp; Madame H&eacute;ger has made a proposal for both me and
+Emily to stay another half-year, offering to dismiss her English master,
+and take me as English teacher; also to employ Emily some part of each
+day in teaching music to a certain number of the pupils.&nbsp; For these
+services we are to be allowed to continue our studies in French and
+German, and to have board, &amp;c., without paying for it; no salaries,
+however, are offered.&nbsp; The proposal is kind, and in a great selfish
+city like Brussels, and a great selfish school, containing nearly ninety
+pupils (boarders and day pupils included), implies a degree of interest
+which demands gratitude in return.&nbsp; I am inclined to accept it.&nbsp;
+What think you?&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t deny I sometimes wish to be in England,
+or that I have brief attacks of home sickness; but, on the whole, I
+have borne a very valiant heart so far; and I have been happy in Brussels,
+because I have always been fully occupied with the employments that
+I like.&nbsp; Emily is making rapid progress in French, German, music,
+and drawing.&nbsp; Monsieur and Madame H&eacute;ger begin to recognise
+the valuable parts of her character, under her singularities.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If the national character of the Belgians is to be measured
+by the character of most of the girls is this school, it in a character
+singularly cold, selfish, animal, and inferior.&nbsp; They are very
+mutinous and difficult for the teachers to manage; and their principles
+are rotten to the core.&nbsp; We avoid them, which it is not difficult
+to do, as we have the brand of Protestantism and Anglicism upon us.&nbsp;
+People talk of the danger which Protestants expose themselves to in
+going to reside in Catholic countries, and thereby running the chance
+of changing their faith.&nbsp; My advice to all Protestants who are
+tempted to do anything so besotted as turn Catholics, is, to walk over
+the sea on to the Continent; to attend mass sedulously for a time; to
+note well the mummeries thereof; also the idiotic, mercenary aspect
+of all the priests; and then, if they are still disposed to consider
+Papistry in any other light than a most feeble, childish piece of humbug,
+let them turn Papists at once&mdash;that&rsquo;s all.&nbsp; I consider
+Methodism, Quakerism, and the extremes of High and Low Churchism foolish,
+but Roman Catholicism beats them all.&nbsp; At the same time, allow
+me to tell you, that there are some Catholics who are as good as any
+Christians can be to whom the Bible is a sealed book, and much better
+than many Protestants.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>When the Bront&euml;s first went to Brussels, it was with the intention
+of remaining there for six months, or until the <i>grandes vacances</i>
+began in September.&nbsp; The duties of the school were then suspended
+for six weeks or two months, and it seemed a desirable period for their
+return.&nbsp; But the proposal mentioned in the foregoing letter altered
+their plans.&nbsp; Besides, they were happy in the feeling that they
+were making progress in all the knowledge they had so long been yearning
+to acquire.&nbsp; They were happy, too, in possessing friends whose
+society had been for years congenial to them, and in occasional meetings
+with these, they could have the inexpressible solace to residents in
+a foreign country&mdash;and peculiarly such to the Bront&euml;s&mdash;of
+talking over the intelligence received from their respective homes&mdash;referring
+to past, or planning for future days.&nbsp; &ldquo;Mary&rdquo; and her
+sister, the bright, dancing, laughing Martha, were parlour-boarders
+in an establishment just beyond the barriers of Brussels.&nbsp; Again,
+the cousins of these friends were resident in the town; and at their
+house Charlotte and Emily were always welcome, though their overpowering
+shyness prevented their more valuable qualities from being known, and
+generally kept them silent.&nbsp; They spent their weekly holiday with
+this family, for many months; but at the end of the time, Emily was
+as impenetrable to friendly advances as at the beginning; while Charlotte
+was too physically weak (as &ldquo;Mary&rdquo; has expressed it) to
+&ldquo;gather up her forces&rdquo; sufficiently to express any difference
+or opposition of opinion, and had consequently an assenting and deferential
+manner, strangely at variance with what they knew of her remarkable
+talents and decided character.&nbsp; At this house, the T.&rsquo;s and
+the Bront&euml;s could look forward to meeting each other pretty frequently.&nbsp;
+There was another English family where Charlotte soon became a welcome
+guest, and where, I suspect, she felt herself more at her ease than
+either at Mrs. Jenkins&rsquo;, or the friends whom I have first mentioned.</p>
+<p>An English physician, with a large family of daughters, went to reside
+at Brussels, for the sake of their education.&nbsp; He placed them at
+Madame H&eacute;ger&rsquo;s school in July, 1842, not a month before
+the beginning of the <i>grandes vacances</i> on August 15th.&nbsp; In
+order to make the most of their time, and become accustomed to the language,
+these English sisters went daily, through the holidays, to the pensionnat
+in the Rue d&rsquo;Isabelle.&nbsp; Six or eight boarders remained, besides
+the Miss Bront&euml;s.&nbsp; They were there during the whole time,
+never even having the break to their monotonous life, which passing
+an occasional day with a friend would have afforded them; but devoting
+themselves with indefatigable diligence to the different studies in
+which they were engaged.&nbsp; Their position in the school appeared,
+to these new comers, analogous to what is often called that of a parlour-boarder.&nbsp;
+They prepared their French, drawing, German, and literature for their
+various masters; and to these occupations Emily added that of music,
+in which she was somewhat of a proficient; so much so as to be qualified
+to give instruction in it to the three younger sisters of my informant.</p>
+<p>The school was divided into three classes.&nbsp; In the first were
+from fifteen to twenty pupils; in the second, sixty was about the average
+number&mdash;all foreigners, excepting the two Bront&euml;s and one
+other; in the third, there were from twenty to thirty pupils.&nbsp;
+The first and second classes occupied a long room, divided by a wooden
+partition; in each division were four long ranges of desks; and at the
+end was the <i>estrade</i>, or platform, for the presiding instructor.&nbsp;
+On the last row, in the quietest corner, sat Charlotte and Emily, side
+by side, so deeply absorbed in their studies as to be insensible to
+any noise or movement around them.&nbsp; The school-hours were from
+nine to twelve (the luncheon hour), when the boarders and half-boarders&mdash;perhaps
+two-and-thirty girls&mdash;went to the refectoire (a room with two long
+tables, having an oil-lamp suspended over each), to partake of bread
+and fruit; the <i>externes</i>, or morning pupils, who had brought their
+own refreshment with them, adjourning to eat it in the garden.&nbsp;
+From one to two, there was fancy-work&mdash;a pupil reading aloud some
+light literature in each room; from two to four, lessons again.&nbsp;
+At four, the externes left; and the remaining girls dined in the refectoire,
+M. and Madame H&eacute;ger presiding.&nbsp; From five to six there was
+recreation, from six to seven, preparation for lessons; and, after that
+succeeded the <i>lecture pieuse</i>&mdash;Charlotte&rsquo;s nightmare.&nbsp;
+On rare occasions, M. H&eacute;ger himself would come in, and substitute
+a book of a different and more interesting kind.&nbsp; At eight, there
+was a slight meal of water and <i>pistolets</i> (the delicious little
+Brussels rolls), which was immediately followed by prayers, and then
+to bed.</p>
+<p>The principal bedroom was over the long classe, or schoolroom.&nbsp;
+There were six or eight narrow beds on each side of the apartment, every
+one enveloped in its white draping curtain; a long drawer, beneath each,
+served for a wardrobe, and between each was a stand for ewer, basin,
+and looking-glass.&nbsp; The beds of the two Miss Bront&euml;s were
+at the extreme end of the room, almost as private and retired as if
+they had been in a separate apartment.</p>
+<p>During the hours of recreation, which were always spent in the garden,
+they invariably walked together, and generally kept a profound silence;
+Emily, though so much the taller, leaning on her sister.&nbsp; Charlotte
+would always answer when spoken to, taking the lead in replying to any
+remark addressed to both; Emily rarely spoke to any one.&nbsp; Charlotte&rsquo;s
+quiet, gentle manner never changed.&nbsp; She was never seen out of
+temper for a moment; and occasionally, when she herself had assumed
+the post of English teacher, and the impertinence or inattention of
+her pupils was most irritating, a slight increase of colour, a momentary
+sparkling of the eye, and more decided energy of manner, were the only
+outward tokens she gave of being conscious of the annoyance to which
+she was subjected.&nbsp; But this dignified endurance of hers subdued
+her pupils, in the long run, far more than the voluble tirades of the
+other mistresses.&nbsp; My informant adds:&mdash;&ldquo;The effect of
+this manner was singular.&nbsp; I can speak from personal experience.&nbsp;
+I was at that time high-spirited and impetuous, not respecting the French
+mistresses; yet, to my own astonishment, at one word from her, I was
+perfectly tractable; so much so, that at length, M. and Madame H&eacute;ger
+invariably preferred all their wishes to me through her; the other pupils
+did not, perhaps, love her as I did, she was so quiet and silent; but
+all respected her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With the exception of that part which describes Charlotte&rsquo;s
+manner as English teacher&mdash;an office which she did not assume for
+some months later&mdash;all this description of the school life of the
+two Bront&euml;s refers to the commencement of the new scholastic year
+in October 1842; and the extracts I have given convey the first impression
+which the life at a foreign school, and the position of the two Miss
+Bront&euml;s therein, made upon an intelligent English girl of sixteen.&nbsp;
+I will make a quotation from &ldquo;Mary&rsquo;s&rdquo; letter referring
+to this time.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The first part of her time at Brussels was not uninteresting.&nbsp;
+She spoke of new people and characters, and foreign ways of the pupils
+and teachers.&nbsp; She knew the hopes and prospects of the teachers,
+and mentioned one who was very anxious to marry, &lsquo;she was getting
+so old.&rsquo;&nbsp; She used to get her father or brother (I forget
+which) to be the bearer of letters to different single men, who she
+thought might be persuaded to do her the favour, saying that her only
+resource was to become a sister of charity if her present employment
+failed and that she hated the idea.&nbsp; Charlotte naturally looked
+with curiosity to people of her own condition.&nbsp; This woman almost
+frightened her.&nbsp; &lsquo;She declares there is nothing she can turn
+to, and laughs at the idea of delicacy,&mdash;and she is only ten years
+older than I am!&rsquo;&nbsp; I did not see the connection till she
+said, &lsquo;Well, Polly, I should hate being a sister of charity; I
+suppose that would shock some people, but I should.&rsquo;&nbsp; I thought
+she would have as much feeling as a nurse as most people, and more than
+some.&nbsp; She said she did not know how people could bear the constant
+pressure of misery, and never to change except to a new form of it.&nbsp;
+It would be impossible to keep one&rsquo;s natural feelings.&nbsp; I
+promised her a better destiny than to go begging any one to marry her,
+or to lose her natural feelings as a sister of charity.&nbsp; She said,
+&lsquo;My youth is leaving me; I can never do better than I have done,
+and I have done nothing yet.&rsquo;&nbsp; At such times she seemed to
+think that most human beings were destined by the pressure of worldly
+interests to lose one faculty and feeling after another &lsquo;till
+they went dead altogether.&nbsp; I hope I shall be put in my grave as
+soon as I&rsquo;m dead; I don&rsquo;t want to walk about so.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Here we always differed.&nbsp; I thought the degradation of nature she
+feared was a consequence of poverty, and that she should give her attention
+to earning money.&nbsp; Sometimes she admitted this, but could find
+no means of earning money.&nbsp; At others she seemed afraid of letting
+her thoughts dwell on the subject, saying it brought on the worst palsy
+of all.&nbsp; Indeed, in her position, nothing less than entire constant
+absorption in petty money matters could have scraped together a provision.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course artists and authors stood high with Charlotte, and
+the best thing after their works would have been their company.&nbsp;
+She used very inconsistently to rail at money and money-getting, and
+then wish she was able to visit all the large towns in Europe, see all
+the sights and know all the celebrities.&nbsp; This was her notion of
+literary fame,&mdash;a passport to the society of clever people . .
+. When she had become acquainted with the people and ways at Brussels
+her life became monotonous, and she fell into the same hopeless state
+as at Miss W---&rsquo;s, though in a less degree.&nbsp; I wrote to her,
+urging her to go home or elsewhere; she had got what she wanted (French),
+and there was at least novelty in a new place, if no improvement.&nbsp;
+That if she sank into deeper gloom she would soon not have energy to
+go, and she was too far from home for her friends to hear of her condition
+and order her home as they had done from Miss W---&rsquo;s.&nbsp; She
+wrote that I had done her a great service, that she should certainly
+follow my advice, and was much obliged to me.&nbsp; I have often wondered
+at this letter.&nbsp; Though she patiently tolerated advice, she could
+always quietly put it aside, and do as she thought fit.&nbsp; More than
+once afterwards she mentioned the &lsquo;service&rsquo; I had done her.&nbsp;
+She sent me 10<i>l</i>. to New Zealand, on hearing some exaggerated
+accounts of my circumstances, and told me she hoped it would come in
+seasonably; it was a debt she owed me &lsquo;for the service I had done
+her.&rsquo;&nbsp; I should think 10<i>l</i>. was a quarter of her income.&nbsp;
+The &lsquo;service&rsquo; was mentioned as an apology, but kindness
+was the real motive.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The first break in this life of regular duties and employments came
+heavily and sadly.&nbsp; Martha&mdash;pretty, winning, mischievous,
+tricksome Martha&mdash;was taken ill suddenly at the Ch&acirc;teau de
+Koekelberg.&nbsp; Her sister tended her with devoted love; but it was
+all in vain; in a few days she died.&nbsp; Charlotte&rsquo;s own short
+account of this event is as follows:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Martha T.&rsquo;s illness was unknown to me till the day before
+she died.&nbsp; I hastened to Koekelberg the next morning&mdash;unconscious
+that she was in great danger&mdash;and was told that it was finished.&nbsp;
+She had died in the night.&nbsp; Mary was taken away to Bruxelles.&nbsp;
+I have seen Mary frequently since.&nbsp; She is in no ways crushed by
+the event; but while Martha was ill, she was to her more than a mother&mdash;more
+than a sister: watching, nursing, cherishing her so tenderly, so unweariedly.&nbsp;
+She appears calm and serious now; no bursts of violent emotion; no exaggeration
+of distress.&nbsp; I have seen Martha&rsquo;s grave&mdash;the place
+where her ashes lie in a foreign country.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Who that has read &ldquo;Shirley&rdquo; does not remember the few
+lines&mdash;perhaps half a page&mdash;of sad recollection?</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;He has no idea that little Jessy will die young,
+she is so gay, and chattering, and arch&mdash;original even now; passionate
+when provoked, but most affectionate if caressed; by turns gentle and
+rattling; exacting yet generous; fearless . . . yet reliant on any who
+will help her.&nbsp; Jessy, with her little piquant face, engaging prattle,
+and winning ways, is made to be a pet.</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you know this place?&nbsp; No, you never saw it; but you
+recognise the nature of these trees, this foliage&mdash;the cypress,
+the willow, the yew.&nbsp; Stone crosses like these are not unfamiliar
+to you, nor are these dim garlands of everlasting flowers.&nbsp; Here
+is the place: green sod and a grey marble head-stone&mdash;Jessy sleeps
+below.&nbsp; She lived through an April day; much loved was she, much
+loving.&nbsp; She often, in her brief life, shed tears&mdash;she had
+frequent sorrows; she smiled between, gladdening whatever saw her.&nbsp;
+Her death was tranquil and happy in Rose&rsquo;s guardian arms, for
+Rose had been her stay and defence through many trials; the dying and
+the watching English girls were at that hour alone in a foreign country,
+and the soil of that country gave Jessy a grave.</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, Jessy, I will write about you no more.&nbsp; This is
+an autumn evening, wet and wild.&nbsp; There is only one cloud in the
+sky; but it curtains it from pole to pole.&nbsp; The wind cannot rest;
+it hurries sobbing over hills of sullen outline, colourless with twilight
+and mist.&nbsp; Rain has beat all day on that church tower&rdquo; (Haworth):
+&ldquo;it rises dark from the stony enclosure of its graveyard: the
+nettles, the long grass, and the tombs all drip with wet.&nbsp; This
+evening reminds me too forcibly of another evening some years ago: a
+howling, rainy autumn evening too&mdash;when certain who had that day
+performed a pilgrimage to a grave new made in a heretic cemetery, sat
+near a wood fire on the hearth of a foreign dwelling.&nbsp; They were
+merry and social, but they each knew that a gap, never to be filled,
+had been made in their circle.&nbsp; They knew they had lost something
+whose absence could never be quite atoned for, so long as they lived;
+and they knew that heavy falling rain was soaking into the wet earth
+which covered their lost darling; and that the sad, sighing gale was
+mourning above her buried head.&nbsp; The fire warmed them; Life and
+Friendship yet blessed them: but Jessy lay cold, coffined, solitary&mdash;only
+the sod screening her from the storm.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>This was the first death that had occurred in the small circle of
+Charlotte&rsquo;s immediate and intimate friends since the loss of her
+two sisters long ago.&nbsp; She was still in the midst of her deep sympathy
+with &ldquo;Mary,&rdquo; when word came from home that her aunt, Miss
+Branwell, was ailing&mdash;was very ill.&nbsp; Emily and Charlotte immediately
+resolved to go home straight, and hastily packed up for England, doubtful
+whether they should ever return to Brussels or not, leaving all their
+relations with M. and Madame H&eacute;ger, and the pensionnat, uprooted,
+and uncertain of any future existence.&nbsp; Even before their departure,
+on the morning after they received the first intelligence of illness&mdash;when
+they were on the very point of starting&mdash;came a second letter,
+telling them of their aunt&rsquo;s death.&nbsp; It could not hasten
+their movements, for every arrangement had been made for speed.&nbsp;
+They sailed from Antwerp; they travelled night and day, and got home
+on a Tuesday morning.&nbsp; The funeral and all was over, and Mr. Bront&euml;
+and Anne were sitting together, in quiet grief for the loss of one who
+had done her part well in their household for nearly twenty years, and
+earned the regard and respect of many who never knew how much they should
+miss her till she was gone.&nbsp; The small property which she had accumulated,
+by dint of personal frugality and self-denial, was bequeathed to her
+nieces.&nbsp; Branwell, her darling, was to have had his share; but
+his reckless expenditure had distressed the good old lady, and his name
+was omitted in her will.</p>
+<p>When the first shock was over, the three sisters began to enjoy the
+full relish of meeting again, after the longest separation they had
+had in their lives.&nbsp; They had much to tell of the past, and much
+to settle for the future.&nbsp; Anne had been for some little time in
+a situation, to which she was to return at the end of the Christmas
+holidays.&nbsp; For another year or so they were again to be all three
+apart; and, after that, the happy vision of being together and opening
+a school was to be realised.&nbsp; Of course they did not now look forward
+to settling at Burlington, or any other place which would take them
+away from their father; but the small sum which they each independently
+possessed would enable them to effect such alterations in the parsonage-house
+at Haworth as would adapt it to the reception of pupils.&nbsp; Anne&rsquo;s
+plans for the interval were fixed.&nbsp; Emily quickly decided to be
+the daughter to remain at home.&nbsp; About Charlotte there was much
+deliberation and some discussion.</p>
+<p>Even in all the haste of their sudden departure from Brussels, M.
+H&eacute;ger had found time to write a letter of sympathy to Mr. Bront&euml;
+on the loss which he had just sustained; a letter containing such a
+graceful appreciation of the daughters&rsquo; characters, under the
+form of a tribute of respect to their father, that I should have been
+tempted to copy it, even had there not also been a proposal made in
+it respecting Charlotte, which deserves a place in the record of her
+life.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Au R&eacute;v&eacute;rend Monsieur Bront&euml;,
+Pasteur &Eacute;vang&eacute;lique, &amp;c, &amp;c.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Samedi, 5 Obre.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;MONSIEUR,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Un &eacute;v&egrave;nement bien triste d&eacute;cide mesdemoiselles
+vas filles &agrave; retourner brusquement en Angleterre, ce d&eacute;part
+qui nous afflige beaucoup a cependant ma compl&egrave;te approbation;
+il est bien naturel qu&rsquo;elles cherchent &agrave; vous consoler
+de ce que le ciel vient de vous &ocirc;ter, on se serrant autour de
+vous, poui mieux vous faire appr&eacute;cier ce que le ciel vous a donn&eacute;
+et ce qu&rsquo;il vous laisse encore.&nbsp; J&rsquo;esp&egrave;re que
+vous me pardonnerez, Monsieur, de profiter de cette circonstance pour
+vous faire parvenir l&rsquo;expression de mon respect; je n&rsquo;ai
+pas l&rsquo;honneur de vous conna&icirc;tre personnellement, et cependant
+j&rsquo;&eacute;prouve pour votre personne un sentiment de sinc&egrave;re
+v&eacute;n&eacute;ration, car en jugeant un p&egrave;re de famille par
+ses enfants on ne risque pas de se tromper, et sous ce rapport l&rsquo;&eacute;ducation
+et les sentiments que nous avons trouv&eacute;s dans mesdemoiselles
+vos filles n&rsquo;ont pu que nous donner une tr&egrave;s-haute id&eacute;e
+de votre m&eacute;rite et de votre caract&egrave;re.&nbsp; Vous apprendrez
+sans doute avec plaisir que vos enfants ont fait du progr&egrave;s tr&egrave;sremarquable
+dans toutes les branches de l&rsquo;enseignenient, et que ces progr&egrave;s
+sont enti&eacute;rement d&ucirc; &agrave; leur amour pour le travail
+et &agrave; leur pers&eacute;v&eacute;rance; nous n&rsquo;avons eu que
+bien peu &agrave; faire avec de pareilles &eacute;l&eacute;ves; leur
+avancement est votre &oelig;uvre bien plus que la n&ocirc;tre; nous
+n&rsquo;avons pas eu &agrave; leur apprendre le prix du temps et de
+l&rsquo;instruction, elles avaient appris tout cela dans la maison paternelle,
+et nous n&rsquo;avons eu, pour notre part, que le faible m&eacute;rite
+de diriger leurs efforts et de fournir un aliment convenable &agrave;
+la louable activit&eacute; que vos filles ont puis&eacute;es dans votre
+exemple et dans vos le&ccedil;ons.&nbsp; Puissent les &eacute;loges
+m&eacute;rit&eacute;es que nous donnons &agrave; vos enfants vous &ecirc;tre
+de quelque consolation dans le malheur que vous afflige; c&rsquo;est
+l&agrave; notre espoir en vous &eacute;crivant, et ce sera, pour Mesdemoiselles
+Charlotte et Emily, une douce et belle r&eacute;compense de leurs travaux.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;En perdant nos deux ch&eacute;res &eacute;l&eacute;ves, nous
+ne devons pas vous cacher que nous &eacute;prouvons &agrave; la fois
+et du chagrin et de l&rsquo;inqui&eacute;tude; nous sommes afflig&eacute;s
+parce que cette brusque s&eacute;paration vient briser l&rsquo;affection
+presque paternelle que nous leur avons vou&eacute;e, et notre peine
+s&rsquo;augmente &agrave; la vue de tant de travaux interrompues, de
+tant de choses bien commenc&eacute;es, et qui ne demandent que quelque
+temps encore pour &ecirc;tre men&eacute;es &agrave; bonne fin.&nbsp;
+Dans un an, chacune de vos demoiselles e&ucirc;t &eacute;t&eacute; enti&egrave;rement
+pr&eacute;munie contre les &eacute;ventualit&eacute;s de l&rsquo;avenir;
+chacune d&rsquo;elles acqu&eacute;rait &agrave; la fois et l&rsquo;instruction
+et la science d&rsquo;enseignement; Mlle Emily allait apprendre le piano;
+recevoir les le&ccedil;ons du meilleur professeur que nous ayons en
+Belgique, et d&eacute;j&agrave; elle avait elle-m&ecirc;me de petites
+&eacute;l&egrave;ves; elle perdait donc &agrave; la fois un reste d&rsquo;ignorance
+et un reste plus g&ecirc;nant encore de timidit&eacute;; Mlle Charlotte
+commen&ccedil;ait &agrave; donner des le&ccedil;ons en fran&ccedil;ais,
+et d&rsquo;acqu&eacute;rir cette assurance, cet aplomb si n&eacute;cessaire
+dans l&rsquo;enseignement; encore un an tout au plus et l&rsquo;&oelig;uvre
+&eacute;tait achev&eacute;e et bien achev&eacute;e.&nbsp; Alors nous
+aurions pu, si cela vous e&ucirc;t convenu, offrir &agrave; mesdemoiselles
+vos filles ou du moins &agrave; l&rsquo;une des deux une position qui
+e&ucirc;t &eacute;t&eacute; dans ses go&ugrave;ts, et qui lui e&ucirc;t
+donn&eacute; cette douce ind&eacute;pendance si difficile &agrave; trouver
+pour une jeune personne.&nbsp; Ce n&rsquo;est pas, croyez le bien, Monsieur,
+ce n&rsquo;est pas ici pour nous une question d&rsquo;int&eacute;r&ecirc;t
+personnel, c&rsquo;est une question d&rsquo;affection; vous me pardonnerez
+si nous vous parlons de vos enfants, si nous nous occupons de leur avenir,
+comme si elles faisaient partie de notre famille; leurs qualit&eacute;s
+personnelles, leur bon vouloir, leur z&egrave;le extr&ecirc;me sont
+les seules causes qui nous poussent &agrave; nous hasarder de la sorte.&nbsp;
+Nous savons, Monsieur, que vous peserez plus m&ucirc;rement et plus
+sagement que nous la cons&eacute;quence qu&rsquo;aurait pour l&rsquo;avenir
+une interruption compl&egrave;te dans les &eacute;tudes de vos deux
+filles; vous d&eacute;ciderez ce qu&rsquo;il faut faire, et vous nous
+pardonnerez notre franchise, si vous daignez consid&eacute;rer que le
+motif qui nous fait agir est une affection bien d&eacute;sint&eacute;ress&eacute;e
+et qui s&rsquo;affligerait beaucoup de devoir d&eacute;j&agrave; se
+r&eacute;signer &agrave; n&rsquo;&ecirc;tre plus utile &agrave; vos
+chers enfants.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Agr&eacute;ez, je vous prie, Monsieur, l&rsquo;expression
+respectueuse de mes sentiments de haute consid&eacute;ration.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;C. H&Eacute;GER.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>There was so much truth, as well as so much kindness in this letter&mdash;it
+was so obvious that a second year of instruction would be far more valuable
+than the first, that there was no long hesitation before it was decided
+that Charlotte should return to Brussels.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, they enjoyed their Christmas all together inexpressibly.&nbsp;
+Branwell was with them; that was always a pleasure at this time; whatever
+might be his faults, or even his vices, his sisters yet held him up
+as their family hope, as they trusted that he would some day be their
+family pride.&nbsp; They blinded themselves to the magnitude of the
+failings of which they were now and then told, by persuading themselves
+that such failings were common to all men of any strength of character;
+for, till sad experience taught them better, they fell into the usual
+error of confounding strong passions with strong character.</p>
+<p>Charlotte&rsquo;s friend came over to see her, and she returned the
+visit.&nbsp; Her Brussels life must have seemed like a dream, so completely,
+in this short space of time, did she fall back into the old household
+ways; with more of household independence than she could ever have had
+during her aunt&rsquo;s lifetime.&nbsp; Winter though it was, the sisters
+took their accustomed walks on the snow-covered moors; or went often
+down the long road to Keighley, for such books as had been added to
+the library there during their absence from England.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+<p>Towards the end of January, the time came for Charlotte to return
+to Brussels.&nbsp; Her journey thither was rather disastrous.&nbsp;
+She had to make her way alone; and the train from Leeds to London, which
+should have reached Euston-square early in the afternoon, was so much
+delayed that it did not get in till ten at night.&nbsp; She had intended
+to seek out the Chapter Coffee-house, where she had stayed before, and
+which would have been near the place where the steam-boats lay; but
+she appears to have been frightened by the idea of arriving at an hour
+which, to Yorkshire notions, was so late and unseemly; and taking a
+cab, therefore, at the station, she drove straight to the London Bridge
+Wharf, and desired a waterman to row her to the Ostend packet, which
+was to sail the next morning.&nbsp; She described to me, pretty much
+as she has since described it in &ldquo;Villette,&rdquo; her sense of
+loneliness, and yet her strange pleasure in the excitement of the situation,
+as in the dead of that winter&rsquo;s night she went swiftly over the
+dark river to the black hull&rsquo;s side, and was at first refused
+leave to ascend to the deck.&nbsp; &ldquo;No passengers might sleep
+on board,&rdquo; they said, with some appearance of disrespect.&nbsp;
+She looked back to the lights and subdued noises of London&mdash;that
+&ldquo;Mighty Heart&rdquo; in which she had no place&mdash;and, standing
+up in the rocking boat, she asked to speak to some one in authority
+on board the packet.&nbsp; He came, and her quiet simple statement of
+her wish, and her reason for it, quelled the feeling of sneering distrust
+in those who had first heard her request; and impressed the authority
+so favourably that he allowed her to come on board, and take possession
+of a berth.&nbsp; The next morning she sailed; and at seven on Sunday
+evening she reached the Rue d&rsquo;Isabelle once more; having only
+left Haworth on Friday morning at an early hour.</p>
+<p>Her salary was 16<i>l</i>. a year; out of which she had to pay for
+her German lessons, for which she was charged as much (the lessons being
+probably rated by time) as when Emily learnt with her and divided the
+expense, viz., ten francs a month.&nbsp; By Miss Bront&euml;&rsquo;s
+own desire, she gave her English lessons in the <i>classe</i>, or schoolroom,
+without the supervision of Madame or M. H&eacute;ger.&nbsp; They offered
+to be present, with a view to maintain order among the unruly Belgian
+girls; but she declined this, saying that she would rather enforce discipline
+by her own manner and character than be indebted for obedience to the
+presence of a <i>gendarme</i>.&nbsp; She ruled over a new schoolroom,
+which had been built on the space in the play-ground adjoining the house.&nbsp;
+Over that First Class she was <i>surveillante</i> at all hours; and
+henceforward she was called <i>Mademoiselle</i> Charlotte by M. H&eacute;ger&rsquo;s
+orders.&nbsp; She continued her own studies, principally attending to
+German, and to Literature; and every Sunday she went alone to the German
+and English chapels.&nbsp; Her walks too were solitary, and principally
+taken in the all&eacute;e d&eacute;fendue, where she was secure from
+intrusion.&nbsp; This solitude was a perilous luxury to one of her temperament;
+so liable as she was to morbid and acute mental suffering.</p>
+<p>On March 6th, 1843, she writes thus:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;I am settled by this time, of course.&nbsp; I
+am not too much overloaded with occupation; and besides teaching English,
+I have time to improve myself in German.&nbsp; I ought to consider myself
+well off, and to be thankful for my good fortunes.&nbsp; I hope I am
+thankful; and if I could always keep up my spirits and never feel lonely,
+or long for companionship, or friendship, or whatever they call it,
+I should do very well.&nbsp; As I told you before, M. and Madame H&eacute;ger
+are the only two persons in the house for whom I really experience regard
+and esteem, and of course, I cannot be always with them, nor even very
+often.&nbsp; They told me, when I first returned, that I was to consider
+their sitting-room my sitting-room also, and to go there whenever I
+was not engaged in the schoolroom.&nbsp; This, however, I cannot do.&nbsp;
+In the daytime it is a public room, where music-masters and mistresses
+are constantly passing in and out; and in the evening, I will not, and
+ought not to intrude on M. and Madame H&eacute;ger and their children.&nbsp;
+Thus I am a good deal by myself, out of school-hours; but that does
+not signify.&nbsp; I now regularly give English lessons to M. H&eacute;ger
+and his brother-in-law.&nbsp; They get on with wonderful rapidity; especially
+the first.&nbsp; He already begins to speak English very decently.&nbsp;
+If you could see and hear the efforts I make to teach them to pronounce
+like Englishmen, and their unavailing attempts to imitate, you would
+laugh to all eternity.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Carnival is just over, and we have entered upon the gloom
+and abstinence of Lent.&nbsp; The first day of Lent we had coffee without
+milk for breakfast; vinegar and vegetables, with a very little salt
+fish, for dinner; and bread for supper.&nbsp; The Carnival was nothing
+but masking and mummery.&nbsp; M. H&eacute;ger took me and one of the
+pupils into the town to see the masks.&nbsp; It was animating to see
+the immense crowds, and the general gaiety, but the masks were nothing.&nbsp;
+I have been twice to the D.&rsquo;s&rdquo; (those cousins of &ldquo;Mary&rsquo;s&rdquo;
+of whom I have before made mention).&nbsp; &ldquo;When she leaves Bruxelles,
+I shall have nowhere to go to.&nbsp; I have had two letters from Mary.&nbsp;
+She does not tell me she has been ill, and she does not complain; but
+her letters are not the letters of a person in the enjoyment of great
+happiness.&nbsp; She has nobody to be as good to her as M. H&eacute;ger
+is to me; to lend her books; to converse with her sometimes, &amp;c.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good-bye.&nbsp; When I say so, it seems to me that you will
+hardly hear me; all the waves of the Channel heaving and roaring between
+must deaden the sound.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>From the tone of this letter, it may easily be perceived that the
+Brussels of 1843 was a different place from that of 1842.&nbsp; Then
+she had Emily for a daily and nightly solace and companion.&nbsp; She
+had the weekly variety of a visit to the family of the D.s; and she
+had the frequent happiness of seeing &ldquo;Mary&rdquo; and Martha.&nbsp;
+Now Emily was far away in Haworth&mdash;where she or any other loved
+one, might die, before Charlotte, with her utmost speed, could reach
+them, as experience, in her aunt&rsquo;s case, had taught her.&nbsp;
+The D.s were leaving Brussels; so, henceforth, her weekly holiday would
+have to be passed in the Rue d&rsquo;Isabelle, or so she thought.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Mary&rdquo; was gone off on her own independent course; Martha
+alone remained&mdash;still and quiet for ever, in the cemetery beyond
+the Porte de Louvain.&nbsp; The weather, too, for the first few weeks
+after Charlotte&rsquo;s return, had been piercingly cold; and her feeble
+constitution was always painfully sensitive to an inclement season.&nbsp;
+Mere bodily pain, however acute, she could always put aside; but too
+often ill-health assailed her in a part far more to be dreaded.&nbsp;
+Her depression of spirits, when she was not well, was pitiful in its
+extremity.&nbsp; She was aware that it was constitutional, and could
+reason about it; but no reasoning prevented her suffering mental agony,
+while the bodily cause remained in force.</p>
+<p>The H&eacute;gers have discovered, since the publication of &ldquo;Villette,&rdquo;
+that at this beginning of her career as English teacher in their school,
+the conduct of her pupils was often impertinent and mutinous in the
+highest degree.&nbsp; But of this they were unaware at the time, as
+she had declined their presence, and never made any complaint.&nbsp;
+Still it must have been a depressing thought to her at this period,
+that her joyous, healthy, obtuse pupils were so little answerable to
+the powers she could bring to bear upon them; and though from their
+own testimony, her patience, firmness, and resolution, at length obtained
+their just reward, yet with one so weak in health and spirits, the reaction
+after such struggles as she frequently had with her pupils, must have
+been very sad and painful.</p>
+<p>She thus writes to her friend E.:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;April, 1843.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is there any talk of your coming to Brussels?&nbsp; During
+the bitter cold weather we had through February, and the principal part
+of March, I did not regret that you had not accompanied me.&nbsp; If
+I had seen you shivering as I shivered myself, if I had seen your hands
+and feet as red and swelled as mine were, my discomfort would just have
+been doubled.&nbsp; I can do very well under this sort of thing; it
+does not fret me; it only makes me numb and silent; but if you were
+to pass a winter in Belgium, you would be ill.&nbsp; However, more genial
+weather is coming now, and I wish you were here.&nbsp; Yet I never have
+pressed you, and never would press you too warmly to come.&nbsp; There
+are privations and humiliations to submit to; there is monotony and
+uniformity of life; and, above all, there is a constant sense of solitude
+in the midst of numbers.&nbsp; The Protestant, the foreigner, is a solitary
+being, whether as teacher or pupil.&nbsp; I do not say this by way of
+complaining of my own lot; for though I acknowledge that there are certain
+disadvantages in my present position, what position on earth is without
+them?&nbsp; And, whenever I turn back to compare what I am with what
+I was&mdash;my place here with my place at Mrs. ---&rsquo;s for instance&mdash;I
+am thankful.&nbsp; There was an observation in your last letter which
+excited, for a moment, my wrath.&nbsp; At first, I thought it would
+be folly to reply to it, and I would let it die.&nbsp; Afterwards, I
+determined to give one answer, once for all.&nbsp; &lsquo;Three or four
+people,&rsquo; it seems, &lsquo;have the idea that the future <i>&eacute;poux</i>
+of Mademoiselle Bront&euml; is on the Continent.&rsquo;&nbsp; These
+people are wiser than I am.&nbsp; They could not believe that I crossed
+the sea merely to return as teacher to Madame H&eacute;gers.&nbsp; I
+must have some more powerful motive than respect for my master and mistress,
+gratitude for their kindness, &amp;c., to induce me to refuse a salary
+of 50<i>l</i>. in England, and accept one of 16<i>l</i>. in Belgium.&nbsp;
+I must, forsooth, have some remote hope of entrapping a husband somehow,
+or somewhere.&nbsp; If these charitable people knew the total seclusion
+of the life I lead,&mdash;that I never exchange a word with any other
+man than Monsieur H&eacute;ger, and seldom indeed with him,&mdash;they
+would, perhaps, cease to suppose that any such chimerical and groundless
+notion had influenced my proceedings.&nbsp; Have I said enough to clear
+myself of so silly an imputation?&nbsp; Not that it is a crime to marry,
+or a crime to wish to be married; but it is an imbecility, which I reject
+with contempt, for women, who have neither fortune nor beauty, to make
+marriage the principal object of their wishes and hopes, and the aim
+of all their actions; not to be able to convince themselves that they
+are unattractive, and that they had better be quiet, and think of other
+things than wedlock.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The following is an extract, from one of the few letters which have
+been preserved, of her correspondence with her sister Emily:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;May 29, 1843</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I get on here from day to day in a Robinson-Crusoe-like sort
+of way, very lonely, but that does not signify.&nbsp; In other respects,
+I have nothing substantial to complain of, nor is this a cause for complaint.&nbsp;
+I hope you are well.&nbsp; Walk out often on the moors.&nbsp; My love
+to Tabby.&nbsp; I hope she keeps well.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>And about this time she wrote to her father,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;June 2nd, 1818,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was very glad to hear from home.&nbsp; I had begun to get
+low-spirited at not receiving any news, and to entertain indefinite
+fears that something was wrong.&nbsp; You do not say anything about
+your own health, but I hope you are well, and Emily also.&nbsp; I am
+afraid she will have a good deal of hard work to do now that Hannah&rdquo;
+(a servant-girl who had been assisting Tabby) &ldquo;is gone.&nbsp;
+I am exceedingly glad to hear that you still keep Tabby&rdquo; (considerably
+upwards of seventy).&nbsp; &ldquo;It is an act of great charity to her,
+and I do not think it will be unrewarded, for she is very faithful,
+and will always serve you, when she has occasion, to the best of her
+abilities; besides, she will be company for Emily, who, without her,
+would be very lonely.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I gave a <i>devoir</i>, written after she had been four months under
+M. H&eacute;ger&rsquo;s tuition.&nbsp; I will now copy out another,
+written nearly a year later, during which the progress made appears
+to me very great.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;31 Mai, 1843.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;SUR LA MORT DE NAPOL&Eacute;ON.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Napol&eacute;on naquit en Corse et mourut &agrave; Ste. H&eacute;l&egrave;ne.&nbsp;
+Entre ces deux &icirc;les rien qu&rsquo;un vaste et br&ucirc;lant d&eacute;sert
+et l&rsquo;oc&eacute;an immense.&nbsp; Il naquit fils d&rsquo;un simple
+gentilhomme, et mourut empereur, mais sans couronne et dans les fers.&nbsp;
+Entre son berceau et sa tombe qu&rsquo;y a-t-il? la carri&egrave;re
+d&rsquo;un soldat parvenu, des champs de bataille, une mer de sang,
+un tr&ocirc;ne, puis du sang encore, et des fers.&nbsp; Sa vie, c&rsquo;est
+l&rsquo;arc en ciel; les deux points extr&ecirc;mes touchent la terre,
+la comble lumi-neuse mesure les cieux.&nbsp; Sur Napol&eacute;on au
+berceau une m&egrave;re brillait; dans la maison paternelle il avait
+des fr&egrave;res et des soeurs; plus tard dans son palais il eut une
+femme qui l&rsquo;aimait.&nbsp; Mais sur son lit de mort Napol&eacute;on
+est seul; plus de m&egrave;re, ni de fr&egrave;re, ni de soeur, ni de
+femme, ni d&rsquo;enfant!!&nbsp; D&rsquo;autres ont dit et rediront
+ses exploits, moi, je m&rsquo;arr&ecirc;te &agrave; contempler l&rsquo;abandonnement
+de sa derni&egrave;re heure!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Il est l&agrave;, exil&eacute; et captif, encha&icirc;n&eacute;
+sur un &eacute;cueil.&nbsp; Nouveau Prom&eacute;th&eacute;e il subit
+le ch&acirc;timent de son orgueil!&nbsp; Prom&eacute;th&eacute;e avait
+voulu &ecirc;tre Dieu et Cr&eacute;ateur; il d&eacute;roba le feu du
+Ciel pour animer le corps qu&rsquo;il avait form&eacute;.&nbsp; Et lui,
+Buonaparte, il a voulu cr&eacute;er, non pas un homme, mais un empire,
+et pour donner une existence, une &acirc;me, &agrave; son &oelig;uvre
+gigantesque, il n&rsquo;a pas h&eacute;sit&eacute; &agrave; arracher
+la vie &agrave; des nations enti&egrave;res.&nbsp; Jupiter indign&eacute;
+de l&rsquo;impi&eacute;t&eacute; de Prom&eacute;th&eacute;e, le riva
+vivant &agrave; la cime du Caucase.&nbsp; Ainsi, pour punir l&rsquo;ambition
+rapace de Buonaparte, la Providence l&rsquo;a encha&icirc;n&eacute;,
+jusqu&rsquo;&agrave; ce que la mort s&rsquo;en suivit, sur un roc isol&eacute;
+de l&rsquo;Atlantique.&nbsp; Peut-&ecirc;tre l&agrave; aussi a-t-il
+senti lui fouillant le flanc cet insatiable vautour dont parle la fable,
+peut-&ecirc;tre a-t-il souffert aussi cette soif du coeur, cette faim
+de l&rsquo;&acirc;me, qui torturent l&rsquo;exil&eacute;, loin de sa
+famille et de sa patrie.&nbsp; Mais parler ainsi n&rsquo;est-ce pas
+attribuer gratuitement &agrave; Napol&eacute;on une humaine faiblesse
+qu&rsquo;il n&rsquo;&eacute;prouva jamais?&nbsp; Quand donc s&rsquo;est-il
+laiss&eacute; encha&icirc;ner par un lien d&rsquo;affection?&nbsp; Sans
+doute d&rsquo;autres conqu&eacute;rants ont h&eacute;sit&eacute; dans
+leur carri&egrave;re de gloire, arr&ecirc;t&eacute;s par un obstacle
+d&rsquo;amour ou d&rsquo;amiti&eacute;, retenus par la main d&rsquo;une
+femme, rapp&eacute;les par la voix d&rsquo;un ami&mdash;lui, jamais!&nbsp;
+Il n&rsquo;eut pas besoin, comme Ulysse, de se lier au m&acirc;t du
+navire, ni de se boucher les oreilles avec de la cire; il ne redoutait
+pas le chant des Sir&egrave;nes&mdash;il le d&eacute;daignait; il se
+fit marbre et fer pour ex&eacute;cuter ses grands projets.&nbsp; Napol&eacute;on
+ne se regardait pas comme un homme, mais comme l&rsquo;incarnation d&rsquo;un
+peuple.&nbsp; Il n&rsquo;aimait pas; il ne consid&eacute;rait ses amis
+et ses proches que comme des instruments auxquels il tint, tant qu&rsquo;ils
+furent utiles, et qu&rsquo;il jeta de c&ocirc;t&eacute; quand ils cess&egrave;rent
+de l&rsquo;&ecirc;tre.&nbsp; Qu&rsquo;on ne se permette donc pas d&rsquo;approcher
+du s&eacute;pulcre du Corse avec sentiments de piti&eacute;, ou de souiller
+de larmes la pierre qui couvre ses restes, son &acirc;me r&eacute;pudierait
+tout cela.&nbsp; On a dit, je le sais, qu&rsquo;elle fut cruelle la
+main qui le s&eacute;para de sa femme et de son enfant.&nbsp; Non, c&rsquo;&eacute;tait
+une main qui, comme la sienne, ne tremblait ni de passion ni de crainte,
+c&rsquo;&eacute;tait la main d&rsquo;un homme froid, convaincu, qui
+avait su deviner Buonaparte; et voici ce que disait cet homme que la
+d&eacute;faite n&rsquo;a pu humilier, ni la victoire enorgueiller.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Marie-Louise n&rsquo;est pas la femme de Napol&eacute;on; c&rsquo;est
+la France que Napol&eacute;on a &eacute;pous&eacute;e; c&rsquo;est la
+France qu&rsquo;il aime, leur union enfante la perte de l&rsquo;Europe;
+voil&agrave; la divorce que je veux; voil&agrave; l&rsquo;union qu&rsquo;il
+faut briser.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;La voix des timides et des tra&icirc;tres protesta contre
+cette sentence.&nbsp; &lsquo;C&rsquo;est abuser de droit de la victoire!&nbsp;
+C&rsquo;est fouler aux pieds le vaincu!&nbsp; Que l&rsquo;Angleterre
+se montre cl&eacute;mente, qu&rsquo;elle ouvre ses bras pour recevoir
+comme h&ocirc;te son ennemi d&eacute;sarm&eacute;.&rsquo;&nbsp; L&rsquo;Angleterre
+aurait peut-&ecirc;tre &eacute;cout&eacute; ce conseii, car partout
+et toujours il y a des &acirc;mes faibles et timor&eacute;es bient&ocirc;t
+s&eacute;duites par la flatterie ou effray&eacute;es par le reproche.&nbsp;
+Mais la Providence permit qu&rsquo;un homme se trouv&acirc;t qui n&rsquo;a
+jamais su ce que c&rsquo;est que la crainte; qui aima sa patrie mieux
+que sa renomm&eacute;e; imp&eacute;n&eacute;trable devant les menaces,
+inaccessible aux louanges, il se pr&eacute;senta devant le conseil de
+la nation, et levant son front tranquille en haut, il osa dire: &lsquo;Que
+la trahison se taise! car c&rsquo;est trahir que de conseiller de temporiser
+avec Buonaparte.&nbsp; Moi je sais ce que sont ces guerres dont l&rsquo;Europe
+saigne encore, comme une victime sous le couteau du boucher.&nbsp; Il
+faut en finir avec Napol&eacute;on Buonaparte.&nbsp; Vous vous effrayez
+&agrave; tort d&rsquo;un mot si dur!&nbsp; Je n&rsquo;ai pas de magnanimit&eacute;,
+dit-on?&nbsp; Soit! que m&rsquo;importe ce qu&rsquo;on dit de moi?&nbsp;
+Je n&rsquo;ai pas ici &agrave; me faire une r&eacute;putation de h&eacute;ros
+magnanime, mais &agrave; gu&eacute;rir, si la cure est possible, l&rsquo;Europe
+qui se meurt, &eacute;puis&eacute;e de ressources et de sang, l&rsquo;Europe
+dont vous n&eacute;gligez les vrais int&eacute;r&ecirc;ts, pr&eacute;-occup&eacute;s
+que vous &ecirc;tes d&rsquo;une vaine renomm&eacute;e de cl&eacute;mence.&nbsp;
+Vous &ecirc;tes faibles!&nbsp; Eh bien! je viens vous aider.&nbsp; Envoyez
+Buonaparte &agrave; Ste. H&eacute;l&egrave;ne! n&rsquo;h&eacute;sitez
+pas, ne cherchez pas un autre endroit; c&rsquo;&eacute;st le seul convenable.&nbsp;
+Je vous le dis, j&rsquo;ai r&eacute;fl&eacute;chi pour vous; c&rsquo;est
+l&agrave; qu&rsquo;il doit &ecirc;tr&eacute; et non pas ailleurs.&nbsp;
+Quant &agrave; Napol&eacute;on, homme, soldat, je n&rsquo;ai rien contre
+lui; c&rsquo;est un lion royal, aupr&egrave;s de qui vous n&rsquo;&ecirc;tes
+que des chacals.&nbsp; Mais Napol&eacute;on Empereur, c&rsquo;est autre
+chose, je l&rsquo;extirperai du sol de l&rsquo;Europe.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Et celui qui parla ainsi toujours sut garder sa promesse, celle-l&agrave;
+comme toutes les autres.&nbsp; Je l&rsquo;ai dit, et je le r&eacute;p&egrave;te,
+cet homme est l&rsquo;&eacute;gal de Napol&eacute;on par le g&eacute;nie;
+comme trempe de caract&egrave;re, comme droiture, comme &eacute;l&eacute;vation
+de pens&eacute;e et de but, il est d&rsquo;une tout autre esp&egrave;ce.&nbsp;
+Napol&eacute;on Buonaparte &eacute;tait avide de renomm&eacute;e et
+de gloire; Arthur Wellesley ne se soucie ni de l&rsquo;une ni de l&rsquo;autre;
+l&rsquo;opinion publique, la popularit&eacute;, &eacute;taient choses
+de grand valeur aux yeux de Napol&eacute;on; pour Wellington l&rsquo;opinion
+publique est une rumeur, un rien que le souffle de son inflexible volont&eacute;
+fait dispara&icirc;tre comme une bulle de savon.&nbsp; Napol&eacute;on
+flattait le peuple; Wellington le brusqne; l&rsquo;un cherchait les
+applau-dissements, l&rsquo;autre ne se soucie que du t&eacute;moignage
+de sa conscience; quand elle approuve, c&rsquo;est assez; toute autre
+louange l&rsquo;obs&egrave;de.&nbsp; Aussi ce peuple, qui adorait Buonaparte
+s&rsquo;irritait, s&rsquo;insurgeait contre la morgue de Wellington:
+parfois il lui t&eacute;moigna sa col&egrave;re et sa haine par des
+grognements, par des hurlements de b&ecirc;tes fauves; et alors, avec
+une impassibilit&eacute; de s&eacute;nateur romain, le moderne Coriolan
+toisait du regard l&rsquo;&eacute;meute furieuse; il croisait ses bras
+nerveux sur sa large poitrine, et seul, debout sur son seuil, il attendait,
+il bravait cette temp&ecirc;te populaire dont les flots venaient mourir
+&agrave; quelques pas de lui: et quand la foule, honteuse de sa rebellion,
+venait l&eacute;cher les pieds du ma&icirc;tre, le hautain patricien
+m&eacute;prisait l&rsquo;hommage d&rsquo;aujourd&rsquo;hui comme la
+haine d&rsquo;hier, et dans les rues de Londres, et devant son palais
+ducal d&rsquo;Apsley, il repoussait d&rsquo;un genre plein de froid
+d&eacute;dain l&rsquo;incommode empressement du peuple enthousiaste.&nbsp;
+Cette fiert&eacute; n&eacute;anmoins n&rsquo;excluait pas en lui une
+rare modestie; partout il se soustrait &agrave; l&rsquo;&eacute;loge;
+se d&eacute;robe au pan&eacute;gyrique; jamais il ne parle de ses exploits,
+et jamais il ne souffre qu&rsquo;un autre lui en parle en sa pr&eacute;sence.&nbsp;
+Son caract&egrave;re &eacute;gale en grandeur et surpasse en v&eacute;rit&eacute;
+celui de tout autre h&eacute;ros ancien ou moderne.&nbsp; La gloire
+de Napol&eacute;on cr&ucirc;t en une nuit, comme la vigne de Jonas,
+et il suffit d&rsquo;un jour pour la fl&eacute;trir; la gloire de Wellington
+est comme les vieux ch&ecirc;nes qui ombragent le ch&acirc;teau de ses
+p&egrave;res sur les rives du Shannon; le ch&ecirc;ne cro&icirc;t lentement;
+il lui faut du temps pour pousser vers le ciel ses branches noueuses,
+et pour enfoncer dans le sol ces racines profondes qui s&rsquo;enchev&ecirc;trent
+dans les fondements solides de la terre; mais alors, l&rsquo;arbre s&eacute;culaire,
+in&eacute;branlable comme le roc o&ugrave; il a sa base, brave et la
+faux du temps et l&rsquo;effort des vents et des temp&ecirc;tes.&nbsp;
+Il faudra peut-&ecirc;tre un si&egrave;cle &agrave; l&rsquo;Angleterre
+pour qu&rsquo;elle connaise la valeur de son h&eacute;ros.&nbsp; Dans
+un si&egrave;cle, l&rsquo;Europe enti&egrave;re saura combien Wellington
+a des droits &agrave; sa reconnaissance.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>How often in writing this paper &ldquo;in a strange land,&rdquo;
+must Miss Bront&euml; have thought of the old childish disputes in the
+kitchen of Haworth parsonage, touching the respective merits of Wellington
+and Buonaparte!&nbsp; Although the title given to her <i>devoir</i>
+is, &ldquo;On the Death of Napoleon,&rdquo; she seems yet to have considered
+it a point of honour rather to sing praises to an English hero than
+to dwell on the character of a foreigner, placed as she was among those
+who cared little either for an England or for Wellington.&nbsp; She
+now felt that she had made great progress towards obtaining proficiency
+in the French language, which had been her main object in coming to
+Brussels.&nbsp; But to the zealous learner &ldquo;Alps on Alps arise.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+No sooner is one difficulty surmounted than some other desirable attainment
+appears, and must be laboured after.&nbsp; A knowledge of German now
+became her object; and she resolved to compel herself to remain in Brussels
+till that was gained.&nbsp; The strong yearning to go home came upon
+her; the stronger self-denying will forbade.&nbsp; There was a great
+internal struggle; every fibre of her heart quivered in the strain to
+master her will; and, when she conquered herself, she remained, not
+like a victor calm and supreme on the throne, but like a panting, torn,
+and suffering victim.&nbsp; Her nerves and her spirits gave way.&nbsp;
+Her health became much shaken.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Brussels, August 1st, 1843.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I complain in this letter, have mercy and don&rsquo;t blame
+me, for, I forewarn you, I am in low spirits, and that earth and heaven
+are dreary and empty to me at this moment.&nbsp; In a few days our vacation
+will begin; everybody is joyous and animated at the prospect, because
+everybody is to go home.&nbsp; I know that I am to stay here during
+the five weeks that the holidays last, and that I shall be much alone
+during that time, and consequently get downcast, and find both days
+and nights of a weary length.&nbsp; It is the first time in my life
+that I have really dreaded the vacation.&nbsp; Alas!&nbsp; I can hardly
+write, I have such a dreary weight at my heart; and I do so wish to
+go home.&nbsp; Is not this childish?&nbsp; Pardon me, for I cannot help
+it.&nbsp; However, though I am not strong enough to bear up cheerfully,
+I can still bear up; and I will continue to stay (D. V.) some months
+longer, till I have acquired German; and then I hope to see all your
+faces again.&nbsp; Would that the vacation were well over! it will pass
+so slowly.&nbsp; Do have the Christian charity to write me a long, long
+letter; fill it with the minutest details; nothing will be uninteresting.&nbsp;
+Do not think it is because people are unkind to me that I wish to leave
+Belgium; nothing of the sort.&nbsp; Everybody is abundantly civil, but
+home-sickness keeps creeping over me.&nbsp; I cannot shake it off.&nbsp;
+Believe me, very merrily, vivaciously, gaily, yours,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;C.B.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The <i>grandes vacances</i> began soon after the date of this letter,
+when she was left in the great deserted pensionnat, with only one teacher
+for a companion.&nbsp; This teacher, a Frenchwoman, had always been
+uncongenial to her; but, left to each other&rsquo;s sole companionship,
+Charlotte soon discovered that her associate was more profligate, more
+steeped in a kind of cold, systematic sensuality, than she had before
+imagined it possible for a human being to be; and her whole nature revolted
+from this woman&rsquo;s society.&nbsp; A low nervous fever was gaining
+upon Miss Bront&euml;.&nbsp; She had never been a good sleeper, but
+now she could not sleep at all.&nbsp; Whatever had been disagreeable,
+or obnoxious, to her during the day, was presented when it was over
+with exaggerated vividness to her disordered fancy.&nbsp; There were
+causes for distress and anxiety in the news from home, particularly
+as regarded Branwell.&nbsp; In the dead of the night, lying awake at
+the end of the long deserted dormitory, in the vast and silent house,
+every fear respecting those whom she loved, and who were so far off
+in another country, became a terrible reality, oppressing her and choking
+up the very life-blood in her heart.&nbsp; Those nights were times of
+sick, dreary, wakeful misery; precursors of many such in after years.</p>
+<p>In the daytime, driven abroad by loathing of her companion and by
+the weak restlessness of fever, she tried to walk herself into such
+a state of bodily fatigue as would induce sleep.&nbsp; So she went out,
+and with weary steps would traverse the Boulevards and the streets,
+sometimes for hours together; faltering and resting occasionally on
+some of the many benches placed for the repose of happy groups, or for
+solitary wanderers like herself.&nbsp; Then up again&mdash;anywhere
+but to the pensionnat&mdash;out to the cemetery where Martha lay&mdash;out
+beyond it, to the hills whence there is nothing to be seen but fields
+as far as the horizon.&nbsp; The shades of evening made her retrace
+her footsteps&mdash;sick for want of food, but not hungry; fatigued
+with long continued exercise&mdash;yet restless still, and doomed to
+another weary, haunted night of sleeplessness.&nbsp; She would thread
+the streets in the neighbourhood of the Rue d&rsquo;Isabelle, and yet
+avoid it and its occupant, till as late an hour as she dared be out.&nbsp;
+At last, she was compelled to keep her bed for some days, and this compulsory
+rest did her good.&nbsp; She was weak, but less depressed in spirits
+than she had been, when the school re-opened, and her positive practical
+duties recommenced.</p>
+<p>She writes thus:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;October 13th, 1843</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mary is getting on well, as she deserves to do.&nbsp; I often
+hear from her.&nbsp; Her letters and yours are one of my few pleasures.&nbsp;
+She urges me very much to leave Brussels and go to her; but, at present,
+however tempted to take such a step, I should not feel justified in
+doing so.&nbsp; To leave a certainty for a complete uncertainty, would
+be to the last degree imprudent.&nbsp; Notwithstanding that, Brussels
+is indeed desolate to me now.&nbsp; Since the D.s left, I have had no
+friend.&nbsp; I had, indeed, some very kind acquaintances in the family
+of a Dr. ---, but they, too, are gone now.&nbsp; They left in the latter
+part of August, and I am completely alone.&nbsp; I cannot count the
+Belgians anything.&nbsp; It is a curious position to be so utterly solitary
+in the midst of numbers.&nbsp; Sometimes the solitude oppresses me to
+an excess.&nbsp; One day, lately, I felt as if I could bear it no longer,
+and I went to Madame H&eacute;ger, and gave her notice.&nbsp; If it
+had depended on her, I should certainly have soon been at liberty; but
+M. H&eacute;ger, having heard of what was in agitation, sent for me
+the day after, and pronounced with vehemence his decision, that I should
+not leave.&nbsp; I could not, at that time, have persevered in my intention
+without exciting him to anger; so I promised to stay a little while
+longer.&nbsp; How long that will be, I do not know.&nbsp; I should not
+like to return to England to do nothing.&nbsp; I am too old for that
+now; but if I could hear of a favourable opportunity for commencing
+a school, I think I should embrace it.&nbsp; We have as yet no fires
+here, and I suffer much from cold; otherwise, I am well in health.&nbsp;
+Mr. --- will take this letter to England.&nbsp; He is a pretty-looking
+and pretty behaved young man, apparently constructed without a backbone;
+by which I don&rsquo;t allude to his corporal spine, which is all right
+enough, but to his character.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;I get on here after a fashion; but now that Mary
+D. has left Brussels, I have nobody to speak to, for I count the Belgians
+as nothing.&nbsp; Sometimes I ask myself how long shall I stay here;
+but as yet I have only asked the question; I have not answered it.&nbsp;
+However, when I have acquired as much German as I think fit, I think
+I shall pack up bag and baggage and depart.&nbsp; Twinges of home-sickness
+cut me to the heart, every now and then.&nbsp; To-day the weather is
+glaring, and I am stupified with a bad cold and headache.&nbsp; I have
+nothing to tell you.&nbsp; One day is like another in this place.&nbsp;
+I know you, living in the country, can hardly believe it is possible
+life can be monotonous in the centre of a brilliant capital like Brussels;
+but so it is.&nbsp; I feel it most on holidays, when all the girls and
+teachers go out to visit, and it sometimes happens that I am left, during
+several hours, quite alone, with four great desolate schoolrooms at
+my disposition.&nbsp; I try to read, I try to write; but in vain.&nbsp;
+I then wander about from room to room, but the silence and loneliness
+of all the house weighs down one&rsquo;s spirits like lead.&nbsp; You
+will hardly believe that Madame H&eacute;ger (good and kind as I have
+described her) never comes near me on these occasions.&nbsp; I own,
+I was astonished the first time I was left alone thus; when everybody
+else was enjoying the pleasures of a f&ecirc;te day with their friends,
+and she knew I was quite by myself, and never took the least notice
+of me.&nbsp; Yet, I understand, she praises me very much to everybody,
+and says what excellent lessons I give.&nbsp; She is not colder to me
+than she is to the other teachers; but they are less dependent on her
+than I am.&nbsp; They have relations and acquaintances in Bruxelles.&nbsp;
+You remember the letter she wrote me, when I was in England?&nbsp; How
+kind and affectionate that was? is it not odd?&nbsp; In the meantime,
+the complaints I make at present are a sort of relief which I permit
+myself.&nbsp; In all other respects I am well satisfied with my position,
+and you may say so to people who inquire after me (if any one does).&nbsp;
+Write to me, dear, whenever you can.&nbsp; You do a good deed when you
+send me a letter, for you comfort a very desolate heart.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>One of the reasons for the silent estrangement between Madame H&eacute;ger
+and Miss Bront&euml;, in the second year of her residence at Brussels,
+is to be found in the fact, that the English Protestant&rsquo;s dislike
+of Romanism increased with her knowledge of it, and its effects upon
+those who professed it; and when occasion called for an expression of
+opinion from Charlotte Bront&euml;, she was uncompromising truth.&nbsp;
+Madame H&eacute;ger, on the opposite side, was not merely a Roman Catholic,
+she was <i>d&eacute;vote</i>.&nbsp; Not of a warm or impulsive temperament,
+she was naturally governed by her conscience, rather than by her affections;
+and her conscience was in the hands of her religious guides.&nbsp; She
+considered any slight thrown upon her Church as blasphemy against the
+Holy Truth; and, though she was not given to open expression of her
+thoughts and feelings, yet her increasing coolness of behaviour showed
+how much her most cherished opinions had been wounded.&nbsp; Thus, although
+there was never any explanation of Madame H&eacute;ger&rsquo;s change
+of manner, this may be given as one great reason why, about this time,
+Charlotte was made painfully conscious of a silent estrangement between
+them; an estrangement of which, perhaps, the former was hardly aware.&nbsp;
+I have before alluded to intelligence from home, calculated to distress
+Charlotte exceedingly with fears respecting Branwell, which I shall
+speak of more at large when the realisation of her worst apprehensions
+came to affect the daily life of herself and her sisters.&nbsp; I allude
+to the subject again here, in order that the reader may remember the
+gnawing, private cares, which she had to bury in her own heart; and
+the pain of which could only be smothered for a time under the diligent
+fulfilment of present duty.&nbsp; Another dim sorrow was faintly perceived
+at this time.&nbsp; Her father&rsquo;s eyesight began to fail; it was
+not unlikely that he might shortly become blind; more of his duty must
+devolve on a curate, and Mr. Bront&euml;, always liberal, would have
+to pay at a higher rate than he had heretofore done for this assistance.</p>
+<p>She wrote thus to Emily:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dec.1st, 1843.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is Sunday morning.&nbsp; They are at their idolatrous
+&lsquo;messe,&rsquo; and I am here, that is in the Refectoire.&nbsp;
+I should like uncommonly to be in the dining-room at home, or in the
+kitchen, or in the back kitchen.&nbsp; I should like even to be cutting
+up the hash, with the clerk and some register people at the other table,
+and you standing by, watching that I put enough flour, not too much
+pepper, and, above all, that I save the best pieces of the leg of mutton
+for Tiger and Keeper, the first of which personages would be jumping
+about the dish and carving-knife, and the latter standing like a devouring
+flame on the kitchen-floor.&nbsp; To complete the picture, Tabby blowing
+the fire, in order to boil the potatoes to a sort of vegetable glue!&nbsp;
+How divine are these recollections to me at this moment!&nbsp; Yet I
+have no thought of coming home just now.&nbsp; I lack a real pretext
+for doing so; it is true this place is dismal to me, but I cannot go
+home without a fixed prospect when I get there; and this prospect must
+not be a situation; that would be jumping out of the frying-pan into
+the fire.&nbsp; <i>You</i> call yourself idle! absurd, absurd! . . .
+Is papa well?&nbsp; Are you well? and Tabby?&nbsp; You ask about Queen
+Victoria&rsquo;s visit to Brussels.&nbsp; I saw her for an instant flashing
+through the Rue Royale in a carriage and six, surrounded by soldiers.&nbsp;
+She was laughing and talking very gaily.&nbsp; She looked a little stout,
+vivacious lady, very plainly dressed, not much dignity or pretension
+about her.&nbsp; The Belgians liked her very well on the whole.&nbsp;
+They said she enlivened the sombre court of King Leopold, which is usually
+as gloomy as a conventicle.&nbsp; Write to me again soon.&nbsp; Tell
+me whether papa really wants me very much to come home, and whether
+you do likewise.&nbsp; I have an idea that I should be of no use there&mdash;a
+sort of aged person upon the parish.&nbsp; I pray, with heart and soul,
+that all may continue well at Haworth; above all in our grey half-inhabited
+house.&nbsp; God bless the walls thereof!&nbsp; Safety, health, happiness,
+and prosperity to you, papa, and Tabby.&nbsp; Amen.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;C. B.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Towards the end of this year (1843) various reasons conspired with
+the causes of anxiety which have been mentioned, to make her feel that
+her presence was absolutely and imperatively required at home, while
+she had acquired all that she proposed to herself in coming to Brussels
+the second time; and was, moreover, no longer regarded with the former
+kindliness of feeling by Madame H&eacute;ger.&nbsp; In consequence of
+this state of things, working down with sharp edge into a sensitive
+mind, she suddenly announced to that lady her immediate intention of
+returning to England.&nbsp; Both M. and Madame H&eacute;ger agreed that
+it would be for the best, when they learnt only that part of the case
+which she could reveal to them&mdash;namely, Mr. Bront&euml;&rsquo;s
+increasing blindness.&nbsp; But as the inevitable moment of separation
+from people and places, among which she had spent so many happy hours,
+drew near, her spirits gave way; she had the natural presentiment that
+she saw them all for the last time, and she received but a dead kind
+of comfort from being reminded by her friends that Brussels and Haworth
+were not so very far apart; that access from one place to the other
+was not so difficult or impracticable as her tears would seem to predicate;
+nay, there was some talk of one of Madame H&eacute;ger&rsquo;s daughters
+being sent to her as a pupil, if she fulfilled her intention of trying
+to begin a school.&nbsp; To facilitate her success in this plan, should
+she ever engage in it, M. H&eacute;ger gave her a kind of diploma, dated
+from, and sealed with the seal of the Ath&eacute;n&eacute;e Royal de
+Bruxelles, certifying that she was perfectly capable of teaching the
+French language, having well studied the grammar and composition thereof,
+and, moreover, having prepared herself for teaching by studying and
+practising the best methods of instruction.&nbsp; This certificate is
+dated December 29th 1843, and on the 2nd of January, 1844, she arrived
+at Haworth.</p>
+<p>On the 23rd of the month she writes as follows:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Every one asks me what I am going to do, now that I am returned
+home; and every one seems to expect that I should immediately commence
+a school.&nbsp; In truth, it is what I should wish to do.&nbsp; I desire
+it above all things.&nbsp; I have sufficient money for the undertaking,
+and I hope now sufficient qualifications to give me a fair chance of
+success; yet I cannot yet permit myself to enter upon life&mdash;to
+touch the object which seems now within my reach, and which I have been
+so long straining to attain.&nbsp; You will ask me why?&nbsp; It is
+on papa&rsquo;s account; he is now, as you know, getting old, and it
+grieves me to tell you that he is losing his sight.&nbsp; I have felt
+for some months that I ought not to be away from him; and I feel now
+that it would be too selfish to leave him (at least, as long as Branwell
+and Anne are absent), in order to pursue selfish interests of my own.&nbsp;
+With the help of God, I will try to deny myself in this matter, and
+to wait.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suffered much before I left Brussels.&nbsp; I think, however
+long I live, I shall not forget what the parting with M. H&eacute;ger
+cost me.&nbsp; It grieved me so much to grieve him who has been so true,
+kind, and disinterested a friend.&nbsp; At parting he gave me a kind
+of diploma certifying my abilities as a teacher, sealed with the seal
+of the Ath&eacute;n&eacute;e Royal, of which he is professor.&nbsp;
+I was surprised also at the degree of regret expressed by my Belgian
+pupils, when they knew I was going to leave.&nbsp; I did not think it
+had been in their phlegmatic nature . . . I do not know whether you
+feel as I do, but there are times now when it appears to me as if all
+my ideas and feelings, except a few friendships and affections, are
+changed from what they used to be; something in me, which used to be
+enthusiasm, is tamed down and broken.&nbsp; I have fewer illusions;
+what I wish for now is active exertion&mdash;a stake in life.&nbsp;
+Haworth seems such a lonely, quiet spot, buried away from the world.&nbsp;
+I no longer regard myself as young&mdash;indeed, I shall soon be twenty-eight;
+and it seems as if I ought to be working and braving the rough realities
+of the world, as other people do.&nbsp; It is, however, my duty to restrain
+this feeling at present, and I will endeavour to do so.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Of course her absent sister and brother obtained a holiday to welcome
+her return home, and in a few weeks she was spared to pay a visit to
+her friend at B.&nbsp; But she was far from well or strong, and the
+short journey of fourteen miles seems to have fatigued her greatly.</p>
+<p>Soon after she came back to Haworth, in a letter to one of the household
+in which she had been staying, there occurs this passage:&mdash;&ldquo;Our
+poor little cat has been ill two days, and is just dead.&nbsp; It is
+piteous to see even an animal lying lifeless.&nbsp; Emily is sorry.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+These few words relate to points in the characters of the two sisters,
+which I must dwell upon a little.&nbsp; Charlotte was more than commonly
+tender in her treatment of all dumb creatures, and they, with that fine
+instinct so often noticed, were invariably attracted towards her.&nbsp;
+The deep and exaggerated consciousness of her personal defects&mdash;the
+constitutional absence of hope, which made her slow to trust in human
+affection, and, consequently, slow to respond to any manifestation of
+it&mdash;made her manner shy and constrained to men and women, and even
+to children.&nbsp; We have seen something of this trembling distrust
+of her own capability of inspiring affection, in the grateful surprise
+she expresses at the regret felt by her Belgian pupils at her departure.&nbsp;
+But not merely were her actions kind, her words and tones were ever
+gentle and caressing, towards animals: and she quickly noticed the least
+want of care or tenderness on the part of others towards any poor brute
+creature.&nbsp; The readers of &ldquo;Shirley&rdquo; may remember that
+it is one of the tests which the heroine applies to her lover.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Do you know what soothsayers I would consult?&rdquo;
+. . . &ldquo;The little Irish beggar that comes barefoot to my door;
+the mouse that steals out of the cranny in my wainscot; the bird in
+frost and snow that pecks at my window for a crumb; the dog that licks
+my hand and sits beside my knee.&nbsp; I know somebody to whose knee
+the black cat loves to climb, against whose shoulder and cheek it likes
+to purr.&nbsp; The old dog always comes out of his kennel and wags his
+tail, and whines affectionately when somebody passes.&rdquo;&nbsp; [For
+&ldquo;somebody&rdquo; and &ldquo;he,&rdquo; read &ldquo;Charlotte Bront&euml;&rdquo;
+and &ldquo;she.&rdquo;]&nbsp; &ldquo;He quietly strokes the cat, and
+lets her sit while he conveniently can; and when he must disturb her
+by rising, he puts her softly down, and never flings her from him roughly:
+he always whistles to the dog, and gives him a caress.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The feeling, which in Charlotte partook of something of the nature
+of an affection, was, with Emily, more of a passion.&nbsp; Some one
+speaking of her to me, in a careless kind of strength of expression,
+said, &ldquo;she never showed regard to any human creature; all her
+love was reserved for animals.&rdquo;&nbsp; The helplessness of an animal
+was its passport to Charlotte&rsquo;s heart; the fierce, wild, intractability
+of its nature was what often recommended it to Emily.&nbsp; Speaking
+of her dead sister, the former told me that from her many traits in
+Shirley&rsquo;s character were taken; her way of sitting on the rug
+reading, with her arm round her rough bull-dog&rsquo;s neck; her calling
+to a strange dog, running past, with hanging head and lolling tongue,
+to give it a merciful draught of water, its maddened snap at her, her
+nobly stern presence of mind, going right into the kitchen, and taking
+up one of Tabby&rsquo;s red-hot Italian irons to sear the bitten place,
+and telling no one, till the danger was well-nigh over, for fear of
+the terrors that might beset their weaker minds.&nbsp; All this, looked
+upon as a well-invented fiction in &ldquo;Shirley,&rdquo; was written
+down by Charlotte with streaming eyes; it was the literal true account
+of what Emily had done.&nbsp; The same tawny bull-dog (with his &ldquo;strangled
+whistle&rdquo;), called &ldquo;Tartar&rdquo; in &ldquo;Shirley,&rdquo;
+was &ldquo;Keeper&rdquo; in Haworth parsonage; a gift to Emily.&nbsp;
+With the gift came a warning.&nbsp; Keeper was faithful to the depths
+of his nature as long as he was with friends; but he who struck him
+with a stick or whip, roused the relentless nature of the brute, who
+flew at his throat forthwith, and held him there till one or the other
+was at the point of death.&nbsp; Now Keeper&rsquo;s household fault
+was this.&nbsp; He loved to steal upstairs, and stretch his square,
+tawny limbs, on the comfortable beds, covered over with delicate white
+counterpanes.&nbsp; But the cleanliness of the parsonage arrangements
+was perfect; and this habit of Keeper&rsquo;s was so objectionable,
+that Emily, in reply to Tabby&rsquo;s remonstrances, declared that,
+if he was found again transgressing, she herself, in defiance of warning
+and his well-known ferocity of nature, would beat him so severely that
+he would never offend again.&nbsp; In the gathering dusk of an autumn
+evening, Tabby came, half-triumphantly, half-tremblingly, but in great
+wrath, to tell Emily that Keeper was lying on the best bed, in drowsy
+voluptuousness.&nbsp; Charlotte saw Emily&rsquo;s whitening face, and
+set mouth, but dared not speak to interfere; no one dared when Emily&rsquo;s
+eyes glowed in that manner out of the paleness of her face, and when
+her lips were so compressed into stone.&nbsp; She went upstairs, and
+Tabby and Charlotte stood in the gloomy passage below, full of the dark
+shadows of coming night.&nbsp; Down-stairs came Emily, dragging after
+her the unwilling Keeper, his hind legs set in a heavy attitude of resistance,
+held by the &ldquo;scuft of his neck,&rdquo; but growling low and savagely
+all the time.&nbsp; The watchers would fain have spoken, but durst not,
+for fear of taking off Emily&rsquo;s attention, and causing her to avert
+her head for a moment from the enraged brute.&nbsp; She let him go,
+planted in a dark corner at the bottom of the stairs; no time was there
+to fetch stick or rod, for fear of the strangling clutch at her throat&mdash;her
+bare clenched fist struck against his red fierce eyes, before he had
+time to make his spring, and, in the language of the turf, she &ldquo;punished
+him&rdquo; till his eyes were swelled up, and the half-blind, stupified
+beast was led to his accustomed lair, to have his swollen head fomented
+and cared for by the very Emily herself.&nbsp; The generous dog owed
+her no grudge; he loved her dearly ever after; he walked first among
+the mourners to her funeral; he slept moaning for nights at the door
+of her empty room, and never, so to speak, rejoiced, dog fashion, after
+her death.&nbsp; He, in his turn, was mourned over by the surviving
+sister.&nbsp; Let us somehow hope, in half Red Indian creed, that he
+follows Emily now; and, when he rests, sleeps on some soft white bed
+of dreams, unpunished when he awakens to the life of the land of shadows.</p>
+<p>Now we can understand the force of the words, &ldquo;Our poor little
+cat is dead.&nbsp; Emily is sorry.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+<p>The moors were a great resource this spring; Emily and Charlotte
+walked out on them perpetually, &ldquo;to the great damage of our shoes,
+but I hope, to the benefit of our health.&rdquo;&nbsp; The old plan
+of school-keeping was often discussed in these rambles; but in-doors
+they set with vigour to shirt-making for the absent Branwell, and pondered
+in silence over their past and future life.&nbsp; At last they came
+to a determination.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have seriously entered into the enterprise of keeping a
+school&mdash;or rather, taking a limited number of pupils at home.&nbsp;
+That is, I have begun in good earnest to seek for pupils.&nbsp; I wrote
+to Mrs. --- &rdquo; (the lady with whom she had lived as governess,
+just before going to Brussels), &ldquo;not asking her for her daughter&mdash;I
+cannot do that&mdash;but informing her of my intention.&nbsp; I received
+an answer from Mr. --- expressive of, I believe, sincere regret that
+I had not informed them a month sooner, in which case, he said, they
+would gladly have sent me their own daughter, and also Colonel S.&rsquo;s,
+but that now both were promised to Miss C.&nbsp; I was partly disappointed
+by this answer, and partly gratified; indeed, I derived quite an impulse
+of encouragement from the warm assurance that if I had but applied a
+little sooner they would certainly have sent me their daughter.&nbsp;
+I own I had misgivings that nobody would be willing to send a child
+for education to Haworth.&nbsp; These misgivings are partly done away
+with.&nbsp; I have written also to Mrs. B., and have enclosed the diploma
+which M. H&eacute;ger gave me before I left Brussels.&nbsp; I have not
+yet received her answer, but I wait for it with some anxiety.&nbsp;
+I do not expect that she will send me any of her children, but if she
+would, I dare say she could recommend me other pupils.&nbsp; Unfortunately,
+she knows us only very slightly.&nbsp; As soon as I can get an assurance
+of only <i>one</i> pupil, I will have cards of terms printed, and will
+commence the repairs necessary in the house.&nbsp; I wish all that to
+be done before winter.&nbsp; I think of fixing the board and English
+education at 25<i>l</i>. per annum.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Again, at a later date, July 24th, in the same year, she writes:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am driving on with my small matter as well as I can.&nbsp;
+I have written to all the friends on whom I have the slightest claim,
+and to some on whom I have no claim; Mrs. B., for example.&nbsp; On
+her, also, I have actually made bold to call.&nbsp; She was exceedingly
+polite; regretted that her children were already at school at Liverpool;
+thought the undertaking a most praiseworthy one, but feared I should
+have some difficulty in making it succeed on account of the <i>situation</i>.&nbsp;
+Such is the answer I receive from almost every one.&nbsp; I tell them
+the <i>retired situation</i> is, in some points of view, an advantage;
+that were it in the midst of a large town I could not pretend to take
+pupils on terms so moderate (Mrs. B. remarked that she thought the terms
+very moderate), but that, as it is, not having house-rent to pay, we
+can offer the same privileges of education that are to be had in expensive
+seminaries, at little more than half their price; and as our number
+must be limited, we can devote a large share of time and pains to each
+pupil.&nbsp; Thank you for the very pretty little purse you have sent
+me.&nbsp; I make to you a curious return in the shape of half a dozen
+cards of terms.&nbsp; Make such use of them as your judgment shall dictate.&nbsp;
+You will see that I have fixed the sum at 35<i>l</i>., which I think
+is the just medium, considering advantages and disadvantages.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was written in July; August, September, and October passed away,
+and no pupils were to be heard of.&nbsp; Day after day, there was a
+little hope felt by the sisters until the post came in.&nbsp; But Haworth
+village was wild and lonely, and the Bront&euml;s but little known,
+owing to their want of connections.&nbsp; Charlotte writes on the subject,
+in the early winter months, to this effect&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;I, Emily, and Anne, are truly obliged to you for
+the efforts you have made in our behalf; and if you have not been successful,
+you are only like ourselves.&nbsp; Every one wishes us well; but there
+are no pupils to be had.&nbsp; We have no present intention, however,
+of breaking our hearts on the subject, still less of feeling mortified
+at defeat.&nbsp; The effort must be beneficial, whatever the result
+may be, because it teaches us experience, and an additional knowledge
+of this world.&nbsp; I send you two more circulars.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>A month later, she says:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;We have made no alterations yet in our house.&nbsp;
+It would be folly to do so, while there is so little likelihood of our
+ever getting pupils.&nbsp; I fear you are giving yourself too much trouble
+on our account.&nbsp; Depend upon it, if you were to persuade a mamma
+to bring her child to Haworth, the aspect of the place would frighten
+her, and she would probably take the dear girl back with her, instanter.&nbsp;
+We are glad that we have made the attempt, and we will not be cast down
+because it has not succeeded.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>There were, probably, growing up in each sister&rsquo;s heart, secret
+unacknowledged feelings of relief, that their plan had not succeeded.&nbsp;
+Yes! a dull sense of relief that their cherished project had been tried
+and had failed.&nbsp; For that house, which was to be regarded as an
+occasional home for their brother, could hardly be a fitting residence
+for the children of strangers.&nbsp; They had, in all likelihood, become
+silently aware that his habits were such as to render his society at
+times most undesirable.&nbsp; Possibly, too, they had, by this time,
+heard distressing rumours concerning the cause of that remorse and agony
+of mind, which at times made him restless and unnaturally merry, at
+times rendered him moody and irritable.</p>
+<p>In January, 1845, Charlotte says:&mdash;&ldquo;Branwell has been
+quieter and less irritable, on the whole, this time than he was in summer.&nbsp;
+Anne is, as usual, always good, mild, and patient.&rdquo;&nbsp; The
+deep-seated pain which he was to occasion to his relations had now taken
+a decided form, and pressed heavily on Charlotte&rsquo;s health and
+spirits.&nbsp; Early in this year, she went to H. to bid good-bye to
+her dear friend &ldquo;Mary,&rdquo; who was leaving England for Australia.</p>
+<p>Branwell, I have mentioned, had obtained the situation of a private
+tutor.&nbsp; Anne was also engaged as governess in the same family,
+and was thus a miserable witness to her brother&rsquo;s deterioration
+of character at this period.&nbsp; Of the causes of this deterioration
+I cannot speak; but the consequences were these.&nbsp; He went home
+for his holidays reluctantly, stayed there as short a time as possible,
+perplexing and distressing them all by his extraordinary conduct&mdash;at
+one time in the highest spirits, at another, in the deepest depression&mdash;accusing
+himself of blackest guilt and treachery, without specifying what they
+were; and altogether evincing an irritability of disposition bordering
+on insanity.</p>
+<p>Charlotte and Emily suffered acutely from his mysterious behaviour.&nbsp;
+He expressed himself more than satisfied with his situation; he was
+remaining in it for a longer time than he had ever done in any kind
+of employment before; so that for some time they could not conjecture
+that anything there made him so wilful, and restless, and full of both
+levity and misery.&nbsp; But a sense of something wrong connected with
+him, sickened and oppressed them.&nbsp; They began to lose all hope
+in his future career.&nbsp; He was no longer the family pride; an indistinct
+dread, caused partly by his own conduct, partly by expressions of agonising
+suspicion in Anne&rsquo;s letters home, was creeping over their minds
+that he might turn out their deep disgrace.&nbsp; But, I believe, they
+shrank from any attempt to define their fears, and spoke of him to each
+other as little as possible.&nbsp; They could not help but think, and
+mourn, and wonder.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Feb. 20th, 1845.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I spent a week at H., not very pleasantly; headache, sickliness,
+and flatness of spirits, made me a poor companion, a sad drag on the
+vivacious and loquacious gaiety of all the other inmates of the house.&nbsp;
+I never was fortunate enough to be able to rally, for as much as a single
+hour, while I was there.&nbsp; I am sure all, with the exception perhaps
+of Mary, were very glad when I took my departure.&nbsp; I begin to perceive
+that I have too little life in me, now-a-days, to be fit company for
+any except very quiet people.&nbsp; Is it age, or what else, that changes
+me so?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Alas! she hardly needed to have asked this question.&nbsp; How could
+she be otherwise than &ldquo;flat-spirited,&rdquo; &ldquo;a poor companion,&rdquo;
+and a &ldquo;sad drag&rdquo; on the gaiety of those who were light-hearted
+and happy!&nbsp; Her honest plan for earning her own livelihood had
+fallen away, crumbled to ashes; after all her preparations, not a pupil
+had offered herself; and, instead of being sorry that this wish of many
+years could not be realised, she had reason to be glad.&nbsp; Her poor
+father, nearly sightless, depended upon her cares in his blind helplessness;
+but this was a sacred pious charge, the duties of which she was blessed
+in fulfilling.&nbsp; The black gloom hung over what had once been the
+brightest hope of the family&mdash;over Branwell, and the mystery in
+which his wayward conduct was enveloped.&nbsp; Somehow and sometime,
+he would have to turn to his home as a hiding place for shame; such
+was the sad foreboding of his sisters.&nbsp; Then how could she be cheerful,
+when she was losing her dear and noble &ldquo;Mary,&rdquo; for such
+a length of time and distance of space that her heart might well prophesy
+that it was &ldquo;for ever&rdquo;?&nbsp; Long before, she had written
+of Mary T., that she &ldquo;was full of feelings noble, warm, generous,
+devoted, and profound.&nbsp; God bless her!&nbsp; I never hope to see
+in this world a character more truly noble.&nbsp; She would die willingly
+for one she loved.&nbsp; Her intellect and attainments are of the very
+highest standard.&rdquo;&nbsp; And this was the friend whom she was
+to lose!&nbsp; Hear that friend&rsquo;s account of their final interview:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When I last saw Charlotte (Jan. 1845), she told me she had
+quite decided to stay at home.&nbsp; She owned she did not like it.&nbsp;
+Her health was weak.&nbsp; She said she should like any change at first,
+as she had liked Brussels at first, and she thought that there must
+be some possibility for some people of having a life of more variety
+and more communion with human kind, but she saw none for her.&nbsp;
+I told her very warmly, that she ought not to stay at home; that to
+spend the next five years at home, in solitude and weak health, would
+ruin her; that she would never recover it.&nbsp; Such a dark shadow
+came over her face when I said, &lsquo;Think of what you&rsquo;ll be
+five years hence!&rsquo; that I stopped, and said, &lsquo;Don&rsquo;t
+cry, Charlotte!&rsquo;&nbsp; She did not cry, but went on walking up
+and down the room, and said in a little while, &lsquo;But I intend to
+stay, Polly.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A few weeks after she parted from Mary, she gives this account of
+her days at Haworth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;March 24th, 1845.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can hardly tell you how time gets on at Haworth.&nbsp; There
+is no event whatever to mark its progress.&nbsp; One day resembles another;
+and all have heavy, lifeless physiognomies.&nbsp; Sunday, baking-day,
+and Saturday, are the only ones that have any distinctive mark.&nbsp;
+Meantime, life wears away.&nbsp; I shall soon be thirty; and I have
+done nothing yet.&nbsp; Sometimes I get melancholy at the prospect before
+and behind me.&nbsp; Yet it is wrong and foolish to repine.&nbsp; Undoubtedly,
+my duty directs me to stay at home for the present.&nbsp; There was
+a time when Haworth was a very pleasant place to me; it is not so now.&nbsp;
+I feel as if we were all buried here.&nbsp; I long to travel; to work;
+to live a life of action.&nbsp; Excuse me, dear, for troubling you with
+my fruitless wishes.&nbsp; I will put by the rest, and not trouble you
+with them.&nbsp; You must write to me.&nbsp; If you knew how welcome
+your letters are, you would write very often.&nbsp; Your letters, and
+the French newspapers, are the only messengers that come to me from
+the outer world beyond our moors; and very welcome messengers they are.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>One of her daily employments was to read to her father, and it required
+a little gentle diplomacy on her part to effect this duty; for there
+were times when the offer of another to do what he had been so long
+accustomed to do for himself, only reminded him too painfully of the
+deprivation under which he was suffering.&nbsp; And, in secret, she,
+too, dreaded a similar loss for herself.&nbsp; Long-continued ill health,
+a deranged condition of the liver, her close application to minute drawing
+and writing in her younger days, her now habitual sleeplessness at nights,
+the many bitter noiseless tears she had shed over Branwell&rsquo;s mysterious
+and distressing conduct&mdash;all these causes were telling on her poor
+eyes; and about this time she thus writes to M. H&eacute;ger:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Il n&rsquo;y a rien que je crains comme le d&eacute;soeuvrement,
+l&rsquo;inertie, la l&eacute;thargie des facult&eacute;s.&nbsp; Quand
+le corps est paresseux l&rsquo;esprit souffre cruellement; je ne conna&icirc;trais
+pas cette l&eacute;thargie, si je pouvais &eacute;crire.&nbsp; Autrefois
+je passais des journ&eacute;es, des semaines, des mois entiers &agrave;
+&eacute;crire, et pas tout-&agrave;-fait sans fruit, puisque Southey
+et Coleridge, deux de nos meilleurs auteurs, &agrave; qui j&rsquo;ai
+envoy&eacute; certains manuscrits, en ont bien voulu t&eacute;moigner
+leur approbation; mais &agrave; pr&eacute;sent, j&rsquo;ai la vue trop
+faible; si j&rsquo;&eacute;crivais beaueoup je deviendrais aveugle.&nbsp;
+Cette faiblesse de vue est pour moi une terrible privation; sans cela,
+savez-vous ce que je ferais, Monsieur?&nbsp; J&rsquo;&eacute;crirais
+un livre et je le d&eacute;dierais &agrave; mon ma&icirc;tre de litt&eacute;rature,
+au seul ma&icirc;tre que j&rsquo;aie jamais eu&mdash;&agrave; vous,
+Monsieur!&nbsp; Je vous ai dit souvent en fran&ccedil;ais combien je
+vous respecte, combien je suis redevable &agrave; votre bont&eacute;,
+&agrave; vos conseils.&nbsp; Je voudrais le dire une fois en anglais.&nbsp;
+Cela ne se peut pas; il ne faut pas y penser.&nbsp; La carri&egrave;re
+des lettres m&rsquo;est ferm&eacute;e . . . N&rsquo;oubliez pas de me
+dire comment vous vous portez, comment Madame et les enfants se portent.&nbsp;
+Je compte bient&ocirc;t avoir de vos nouvelles; cette id&eacute;e me
+souris, car le souvenir de vos bont&eacute;s ne s&rsquo;effacera jamais
+de ma m&eacute;moire, et tant que ce souvenir durera, le respect que
+vous m&rsquo;avez inspir&eacute; durera aussi.&nbsp; Agr&eacute;ez,
+Monsieur,&rdquo; &amp;c.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>It is probable, that even her sisters and most intimate friends did
+not know of this dread of ultimate blindness which beset her at this
+period.&nbsp; What eyesight she had to spare she reserved for the use
+of her father.&nbsp; She did but little plain-sewing; not more writing
+than could be avoided, and employed herself principally in knitting.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;April 2nd, 1845.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see plainly it is proved to us that there is scarcely a
+draught of unmingled happiness to be had in this world.&nbsp; ---&rsquo;s
+illness comes with ---&rsquo;s marriage.&nbsp; Mary T. finds herself
+free, and on that path to adventure and exertion to which she has so
+long been seeking admission.&nbsp; Sickness, hardship, danger are her
+fellow travellers&mdash;her inseparable companions.&nbsp; She may have
+been out of the reach of these S. W. N. W. gales, before they began
+to blow, or they may have spent their fury on land, and not ruffled
+the sea much.&nbsp; If it has been otherwise, she has been sorely tossed,
+while we have been sleeping in our beds, or lying awake thinking about
+her.&nbsp; Yet these real, material dangers, when once past, leave in
+the mind the satisfaction of having struggled with difficulty, and overcome
+it.&nbsp; Strength, courage, and experience are their invariable results;
+whereas, I doubt whether suffering purely mental has any good result,
+unless it be to make us by comparison less sensitive to physical suffering
+. . . Ten years ago, I should have laughed at your account of the blunder
+you made in mistaking the bachelor doctor for a married man.&nbsp; I
+should have certainly thought you scrupulous over-much, and wondered
+how you could possibly regret being civil to a decent individual, merely
+because he happened to be single, instead of double.&nbsp; Now, however,
+I can perceive that your scruples are founded on common sense.&nbsp;
+I know that if women wish to escape the stigma of husband-seeking, they
+must act and look like marble or clay&mdash;cold, expressionless, bloodless;
+for every appearance of feeling, of joy, sorrow, friendliness, antipathy,
+admiration, disgust, are alike construed by the world into the attempt
+to hook a husband.&nbsp; Never mind! well-meaning women have their own
+consciences to comfort them after all.&nbsp; Do not, therefore, be too
+much afraid of showing yourself as you are, affectionate and good-hearted;
+do not too harshly repress sentiments and feelings excellent in themselves,
+because you fear that some puppy may fancy that you are letting them
+come out to fascinate him; do not condemn yourself to live only by halves,
+because if you showed too much animation some pragmatical thing in breeches
+might take it into his pate to imagine that you designed to dedicate
+your life to his inanity.&nbsp; Still, a composed, decent, equable deportment
+is a capital treasure to a woman, and that you possess.&nbsp; Write
+again soon, for I feel rather fierce, and want stroking down.&rdquo;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;June 13th, 1845.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As to the Mrs. ---, who, you say, is like me, I somehow feel
+no leaning to her at all.&nbsp; I never do to people who are said to
+be like me, because I have always a notion that they are only like me
+in the disagreeable, outside, first-acquaintance part of my character;
+in those points which are obvious to the ordinary run of people, and
+which I know are not pleasing.&nbsp; You say she is &lsquo;clever&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;a
+clever person.&rsquo;&nbsp; How I dislike the term!&nbsp; It means rather
+a shrewd, very ugly, meddling, talking woman . . . I feel reluctant
+to leave papa for a single day.&nbsp; His sight diminishes weekly; and
+can it be wondered at that, as he sees the most precious of his faculties
+leaving him, his spirits sometimes sink?&nbsp; It is so hard to feel
+that his few and scanty pleasures must all soon go.&nbsp; He has now
+the greatest difficulty in either reading or writing; and then he dreads
+the state of dependence to which blindness will inevitably reduce him.&nbsp;
+He fears that he will be nothing in his parish.&nbsp; I try to cheer
+him; sometimes I succeed temporarily, but no consolation can restore
+his sight, or atone for the want of it.&nbsp; Still he is never peevish;
+never impatient; only anxious and dejected.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>For the reason just given, Charlotte declined an invitation to the
+only house to which she was now ever asked to come.&nbsp; In answer
+to her correspondent&rsquo;s reply to this letter, she says:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;You thought I refused you coldly, did you?&nbsp;
+It was a queer sort of coldness, when I would have given my ears to
+say Yes, and was obliged to say No.&nbsp; Matters, however, are now
+a little changed.&nbsp; Anne is come home, and her presence certainly
+makes me feel more at liberty.&nbsp; Then, if all be well, I will come
+and see you.&nbsp; Tell me only when I must come.&nbsp; Mention the
+week and the day.&nbsp; Have the kindness also to answer the following
+queries, if you can.&nbsp; How far is it from Leeds to Sheffield?&nbsp;
+Can you give me a notion of the cost?&nbsp; Of course, when I come,
+you will let me enjoy your own company in peace, and not drag me out
+a visiting.&nbsp; I have no desire at all to see your curate.&nbsp;
+I think he must be like all the other curates I have seen; and they
+seem to me a self-seeking, vain, empty race.&nbsp; At this blessed moment,
+we have no less than three of them in Haworth parish&mdash;and there
+is not one to mend another.&nbsp; The other day, they all three, accompanied
+by Mr. S., dropped, or rather rushed, in unexpectedly to tea.&nbsp;
+It was Monday (baking day), and I was hot and tired; still, if they
+had behaved quietly and decently, I would have served them out their
+tea in peace; but they began glorifying themselves, and abusing Dissenters
+in such a manner, that my temper lost its balance, and I pronounced
+a few sentences sharply and rapidly, which struck them all dumb.&nbsp;
+Papa was greatly horrified also, but I don&rsquo;t regret it.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>On her return from this short visit to her friend, she travelled
+with a gentleman in the railway carriage, whose features and bearing
+betrayed him, in a moment, to be a Frenchman.&nbsp; She ventured to
+ask him if such was not the case; and, on his admitting it, she further
+inquired if he had not passed a considerable time in Germany, and was
+answered that he had; her quick ear detected something of the thick
+guttural pronunciation, which, Frenchmen say, they are able to discover
+even in the grandchildren of their countrymen who have lived any time
+beyond the Rhine.&nbsp; Charlotte had retained her skill in the language
+by the habit of which she thus speaks to M. H&eacute;ger:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Je crains beaucoup d&rsquo;oublier le fran&ccedil;ais&mdash;j&rsquo;apprends
+tous les jours une demie page de fran&ccedil;ais par coeur, et j&rsquo;ai
+grand plaisir &agrave; apprendre cette le&ccedil;on, Veuillez presenter
+&agrave; Madame l&rsquo;assurance de mon estime; je crains que Maria-Louise
+et Claire ne m&rsquo;aient d&eacute;j&agrave; oubli&eacute;es; mais
+je vous reverrai un jour; aussit&ocirc;t que j&rsquo;aurais gagn&eacute;
+assez d&rsquo;argent pour alter &agrave; Bruxelles, j&rsquo;y irai.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>And so her journey back to Haworth, after the rare pleasure of this
+visit to her friend, was pleasantly beguiled by conversation with the
+French gentleman; and she arrived at home refreshed and happy.&nbsp;
+What to find there?</p>
+<p>It was ten o&rsquo;clock when she reached the parsonage.&nbsp; Branwell
+was there, unexpectedly, very ill.&nbsp; He had come home a day or two
+before, apparently for a holiday; in reality, I imagine, because some
+discovery had been made which rendered his absence imperatively desirable.&nbsp;
+The day of Charlotte&rsquo;s return, he had received a letter from Mr.
+---, sternly dismissing him, intimating that his proceedings were discovered,
+characterising them as bad beyond expression, and charging him, on pain
+of exposure, to break off immediately, and for ever, all communication
+with every member of the family.</p>
+<p>Whatever may have been the nature and depth of Branwell&rsquo;s sins,&mdash;whatever
+may have been his temptation, whatever his guilt,&mdash;there is no
+doubt of the suffering which his conduct entailed upon his poor father
+and his innocent sisters.&nbsp; The hopes and plans they had cherished
+long, and laboured hard to fulfil, were cruelly frustrated; henceforward
+their days were embittered and the natural rest of their nights destroyed
+by his paroxysms of remorse.&nbsp; Let us read of the misery caused
+to his poor sisters in Charlotte&rsquo;s own affecting words:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;We have had sad work with Branwell.&nbsp; He thought
+of nothing but stunning or drowning his agony of mind.&nbsp; No one
+in this house could have rest; and, at last, we have been obliged to
+send him from home for a week, with some one to look after him.&nbsp;
+He has written to me this morning, expressing some sense of contrition
+. . . but as long as he remains at home, I scarce dare hope for peace
+in the house.&nbsp; We must all, I fear, prepare for a season of distress
+and disquietude.&nbsp; When I left you, I was strongly impressed with
+the feeling that I was going back to sorrow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;August, 1845.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Things here at home are much as usual; not very bright as
+it regards Branwell, though his health, and consequently his temper,
+have been somewhat better this last day or two, because he is now <i>forced
+to</i> abstain.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;August 18th, 1845.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have delayed writing, because I have no good news to communicate.&nbsp;
+My hopes ebb low indeed about Branwell.&nbsp; I sometimes fear he will
+never be fit for much.&nbsp; The late blow to his prospects and feelings
+has quite made him reckless.&nbsp; It is only absolute want of means
+that acts as any check to him.&nbsp; One ought, indeed, to hope to the
+very last; and I try to do so, but occasionally hope in his case seems
+so fallacious.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nov. 4th, 1845.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hoped to be able to ask you to come to Haworth.&nbsp; It
+almost seemed as if Branwell had a chance of getting employment, and
+I waited to know the result of his efforts in order to say, dear ---,
+come and see us.&nbsp; But the place (a secretaryship to a railway committee)
+is given to another person.&nbsp; Branwell still remains at home; and
+while <i>he</i> is here, <i>you</i> shall not come.&nbsp; I am more
+confirmed in that resolution the more I see of him.&nbsp; I wish I could
+say one word to you in his favour, but I cannot.&nbsp; I will hold my
+tongue.&nbsp; We are all obliged to you for your kind suggestion about
+Leeds; but I think our school schemes are, for the present, at rest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dec. 31st, 1845.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You say well, in speaking of ---, that no sufferings are so
+awful as those brought on by dissipation; alas! I see the truth of this
+observation daily proved. &mdash;and&mdash;must have as weary and burdensome
+a life of it in waiting upon their unhappy brother.&nbsp; It seems grievous,
+indeed, that those who have not sinned should suffer so largely.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In fact, all their latter days blighted with the presence of cruel,
+shameful suffering,&mdash;the premature deaths of two at least of the
+sisters,&mdash;all the great possibilities of their earthly lives snapped
+short,&mdash;may be dated from Midsummer 1845.</p>
+<p>For the last three years of Branwell&rsquo;s life, he took opium
+habitually, by way of stunning conscience; he drank moreover, whenever
+he could get the opportunity.&nbsp; The reader may say that I have mentioned
+his tendency to intemperance long before.&nbsp; It is true; but it did
+not become habitual, as far as I can learn, until after he was dismissed
+from his tutorship.&nbsp; He took opium, because it made him forget
+for a time more effectually than drink; and, besides, it was more portable.&nbsp;
+In procuring it he showed all the cunning of the opium-eater.&nbsp;
+He would steal out while the family were at church&mdash;to which he
+had professed himself too ill to go&mdash;and manage to cajole the village
+druggist out of a lump; or, it might be, the carrier had unsuspiciously
+brought him some in a packet from a distance.&nbsp; For some time before
+his death he had attacks of delirium tremens of the most frightful character;
+he slept in his father&rsquo;s room, and he would sometimes declare
+that either he or his father should be dead before the morning.&nbsp;
+The trembling sisters, sick with fright, would implore their father
+not to expose himself to this danger; but Mr. Bront&euml; is no timid
+man, and perhaps he felt that he could possibly influence his son to
+some self-restraint, more by showing trust in him than by showing fear.&nbsp;
+The sisters often listened for the report of a pistol in the dead of
+the night, till watchful eye and hearkening ear grew heavy and dull
+with the perpetual strain upon their nerves.&nbsp; In the mornings young
+Bront&euml; would saunter out, saying, with a drunkard&rsquo;s incontinence
+of speech, &ldquo;The poor old man and I have had a terrible night of
+it; he does his best&mdash;the poor old man! but it&rsquo;s all over
+with me.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+<p>In the course of this sad autumn of 1845, a new interest came up;
+faint, indeed, and often lost sight of in the vivid pain and constant
+pressure of anxiety respecting their brother.&nbsp; In the biographical
+notice of her sisters, which Charlotte prefixed to the edition of &ldquo;Wuthering
+Heights&rdquo; and &ldquo;Agnes Grey,&rdquo; published in 1850&mdash;a
+piece of writing unique, as far as I know, in its pathos and its power&mdash;she
+says:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;One day in the autumn of 1845, I accidentally
+lighted on a MS. volume of verse, in my sister Emily&rsquo;s handwriting.&nbsp;
+Of course, I was not surprised, knowing that she could and did write
+verse: I looked it over, and something more than surprise seized me&mdash;a
+deep conviction that these were not common effusions, nor at all like
+the poetry women generally write.&nbsp; I thought them condensed and
+terse, vigorous and genuine.&nbsp; To my ear they had also a peculiar
+music, wild, melancholy, and elevating.&nbsp; My sister Emily was not
+a person of demonstrative character, nor one on the recesses of whose
+mind and feelings even those nearest and dearest to her could, with
+impunity, intrude unlicensed: it took hours to reconcile her to the
+discovery I had made, and days to persuade her that such poems merited
+publication . . . Meantime, my younger sister quietly produced some
+of her own compositions, intimating that since Emily&rsquo;s had given
+me pleasure, I might like to look at hers.&nbsp; I could not but be
+a partial judge, yet I thought that these verses too had a sweet sincere
+pathos of their own.&nbsp; We had very early cherished the dream of
+one day being authors.&nbsp; We agreed to arrange a small selection
+of our poems, and, if possible, get them printed.&nbsp; Averse to personal
+publicity, we veiled our own names under those of Currer, Ellis, and
+Acton Bell; the ambiguous choice being dictated by a sort of conscientious
+scruple at assuming Christian names, positively masculine, while we
+did not like to declare ourselves women, because&mdash;without at the
+time suspecting that our mode of writing and thinking was not what is
+called &lsquo;feminine,&rsquo; we had a vague impression that authoresses
+are liable to be looked on with prejudice; we noticed how critics sometimes
+use for their chastisement the weapon of personality, and for their
+reward, a flattery, which is not true praise.&nbsp; The bringing out
+of our little book was hard work.&nbsp; As was to be expected, neither
+we nor our poems were at all wanted; but for this we had been prepared
+at the outset; though inexperienced ourselves, we had read the experience
+of others.&nbsp; The great puzzle lay in the difficulty of getting answers
+of any kind from the publishers to whom we applied.&nbsp; Being greatly
+harassed by this obstacle, I ventured to apply to the Messrs. Chambers,
+of Edinburgh, for a word of advice; <i>they</i> may have forgotten the
+circumstance, but <i>I</i> have not, for from them I received a brief
+and business-like, but civil and sensible reply, on which we acted,
+and at last made way.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I inquired from Mr. Robert Chambers, and found, as Miss Bront&euml;
+conjectured, that he had entirely forgotten the application which had
+been made to him and his brother for advice; nor had they any copy or
+memorandum of the correspondence.</p>
+<p>There is an intelligent man living in Haworth, who has given me some
+interesting particulars relating to the sisters about this period.&nbsp;
+He says:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have known Miss Bront&euml;, as Miss Bront&euml;, a long
+time; indeed, ever since they came to Haworth in 1819.&nbsp; But I had
+not much acquaintance with the family till about 1843, when I began
+to do a little in the stationery line.&nbsp; Nothing of that kind could
+be had nearer than Keighley before I began.&nbsp; They used to buy a
+great deal of writing paper, and I used to wonder whatever they did
+with so much.&nbsp; I sometimes thought they contributed to the Magazines.&nbsp;
+When I was out of stock, I was always afraid of their coming; they seemed
+so distressed about it, if I had none.&nbsp; I have walked to Halifax
+(a distance of ten miles) many a time, for half a ream of paper, for
+fear of being without it when they came.&nbsp; I could not buy more
+at a time for want of capital.&nbsp; I was always short of that.&nbsp;
+I did so like them to come when I had anything for them; they were so
+much different to anybody else; so gentle and kind, and so very quiet.&nbsp;
+They never talked much.&nbsp; Charlotte sometimes would sit and inquire
+about our circumstances so kindly and feelingly! . . . Though I am a
+poor working man (which I have never felt to be any degradation), I
+could talk with her with the greatest freedom.&nbsp; I always felt quite
+at home with her.&nbsp; Though I never had any school education, I never
+felt the want of it in her company.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The publishers to whom she finally made a successful application
+for the production of &ldquo;Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell&rsquo;s poems,&rdquo;
+were Messrs. Aylott and Jones, Paternoster Row.&nbsp; Mr. Aylott has
+kindly placed the letters which she wrote to them on the subject at
+my disposal.&nbsp; The first is dated January 28th, 1846, and in it
+she inquires if they will publish one volume octavo of poems; if not
+at their own risk, on the author&rsquo;s account.&nbsp; It is signed
+&ldquo;C. Bront&euml;.&rdquo;&nbsp; They must have replied pretty speedily,
+for on January 31st she writes again:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;GENTLEMEN,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Since you agree to undertake the publication of the work respecting
+which I applied to you, I should wish now to know, as soon as possible,
+the cost of paper and printing.&nbsp; I will then send the necessary
+remittance, together with the manuscript.&nbsp; I should like it to
+be printed in one octavo volume, of the same quality of paper and size
+of type as Moxon&rsquo;s last edition of Wordsworth.&nbsp; The poems
+will occupy, I should think, from 200 to 250 pages.&nbsp; They are not
+the production of a clergyman, nor are they exclusively of a religious
+character; but I presume these circumstances will be immaterial.&nbsp;
+It will, perhaps, be necessary that you should see the manuscript, in
+order to calculate accurately the expense of publication; in that case
+I will send it immediately.&nbsp; I should like, however, previously,
+to have some idea of the probable cost; and if, from what I have said,
+you can make a rough calculation on the subject, I should be greatly
+obliged to you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In her next letter, February 6th, she says:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will perceive that the poems are the work of three persons,
+relatives&mdash;their separate pieces are distinguished by their respective
+signatures.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She writes again on February 15th; and on the 16th she says:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The MS. will certainly form a thinner volume than I had anticipated.&nbsp;
+I cannot name another model which I should like it precisely to resemble,
+yet, I think, a duodecimo form, and a somewhat reduced, though still
+<i>clear</i> type, would be preferable.&nbsp; I only stipulate for <i>clear</i>
+type, not too small, and good paper.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On February 21st she selects the &ldquo;long primer type&rdquo; for
+the poems, and will remit 31<i>l</i>. 10<i>s</i>. in a few days.</p>
+<p>Minute as the details conveyed in these notes are, they are not trivial,
+because they afford such strong indications of character.&nbsp; If the
+volume was to be published at their own risk, it was necessary that
+the sister conducting the negotiation should make herself acquainted
+with the different kinds of type, and the various sizes of books.&nbsp;
+Accordingly she bought a small volume, from which to learn all she could
+on the subject of preparation for the press.&nbsp; No half-knowledge&mdash;no
+trusting to other people for decisions which she could make for herself;
+and yet a generous and full confidence, not misplaced, in the thorough
+probity of Messrs. Aylott and Jones.&nbsp; The caution in ascertaining
+the risk before embarking in the enterprise, and the prompt payment
+of the money required, even before it could be said to have assumed
+the shape of a debt, were both parts of a self-reliant and independent
+character.&nbsp; Self-contained also was she.&nbsp; During the whole
+time that the volume of poems was in the course of preparation and publication,
+no word was written telling anyone, out of the household circle, what
+was in progress.</p>
+<p>I have had some of the letters placed in my hands, which she addressed
+to her old schoolmistress, Miss W-.&nbsp; They begin a little before
+this time.&nbsp; Acting on the conviction, which I have all along entertained,
+that where Charlotte Bront&euml;&rsquo;s own words could be used, no
+others ought to take their place, I shall make extracts from this series,
+according to their dates.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Jan. 30th, 1846.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;MY DEAR MISS W---,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have not yet paid my visit to ---; it is, indeed, more than
+a year since I was there, but I frequently hear from E., and she did
+not fail to tell me that you were gone into Worcestershire; she was
+unable, however, to give me your exact address.&nbsp; Had I known it,
+I should have written to you long since.&nbsp; I thought you would wonder
+how we were getting on, when you heard of the railway panic; and you
+may be sure that I am very glad to be able to answer your kind inquiries
+by the assurance that our small capital is as yet undiminished.&nbsp;
+The York and Midland is, as you say, a very good line, yet, I confess
+to you, I should wish, for my own part, to be wise in time.&nbsp; I
+cannot think that even the very best lines will continue for many years
+at their present premiums; and I have been most anxious for us to sell
+our shares ere it be too late, and to secure the proceeds in some safer,
+if, for the present, less profitable investment.&nbsp; I cannot, however,
+persuade my sisters to regard the affair precisely from my point of
+view; and I feel as if I would rather run the risk of loss than hurt
+Emily&rsquo;s feelings by acting in direct opposition to her opinion.&nbsp;
+She managed in a most handsome and able manner for me, when I was in
+Brussels, and prevented by distance from looking after my own interests;
+therefore, I will let her manage still, and take the consequences.&nbsp;
+Disinterested and energetic she certainly is; and if she be not quite
+so tractable or open to conviction as I could wish, I must remember
+perfection is not the lot of humanity; and as long as we can regard
+those we love, and to whom we are closely allied, with profound and
+never-shaken esteem, it is a small thing that they should vex us occasionally
+by what appear to us unreasonable and headstrong notions.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;You, my dear Miss W---, know, full as well as
+I do, the value of sisters&rsquo; affection to each other; there is
+nothing like it in this world, I believe, when they are nearly equal
+in age, and similar in education, tastes, and sentiments.&nbsp; You
+ask about Branwell; he never thinks of seeking employment, and I begin
+to fear that he has rendered himself incapable of filling any respectable
+station in life; besides, if money were at his disposal, he would use
+it only to his own injury; the faculty of self-government is, I fear,
+almost destroyed in him.&nbsp; You ask me if I do not think that men
+are strange beings?&nbsp; I do, indeed.&nbsp; I have often thought so;
+and I think, too, that the mode of bringing them up is strange: they
+are not sufficiently guarded from temptation.&nbsp; Girls are protected
+as if they were something very frail or silly indeed, while boys are
+turned loose on the world, as if they, of all beings in existence, were
+the wisest and least liable to be led astray.&nbsp; I am glad you like
+Broomsgrove, though, I dare say, there are few places you would <i>not</i>
+like, with Mrs. M. for a companion.&nbsp; I always feel a peculiar satisfaction
+when I hear of your enjoying yourself, because it proves that there
+really is such a thing as retributive justice even in this world.&nbsp;
+You worked hard; you denied yourself all pleasure, almost all relaxation,
+in your youth, and in the prime of life; now you are free, and that
+while you have still, I hope, many years of vigour and health in which
+you can enjoy freedom.&nbsp; Besides, I have another and very egotistical
+motive for being pleased; it seems that even &lsquo;a lone woman&rsquo;
+can be happy, as well as cherished wives and proud mothers.&nbsp; I
+am glad of that.&nbsp; I speculate much on the existence of unmarried
+and never-to-be-married women now-a-days; and I have already got to
+the point of considering that there is no more respectable character
+on this earth than an unmarried woman, who makes her own way through
+life quietly, perseveringly, without support of husband or brother;
+and who, having attained the age of forty-five or upwards, retains in
+her possession a well-regulated mind, a disposition to enjoy simple
+pleasures, and fortitude to support inevitably pains, sympathy with
+the sufferings of others, and willingness to relieve want as far as
+her means extend.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>During the time that the negotiation with Messrs. Aylott and Co.
+was going on, Charlotte went to visit her old school-friend, with whom
+she was in such habits of confidential intimacy; but neither then nor
+afterwards, did she ever speak to her of the publication of the poems;
+nevertheless, this young lady suspected that the sisters wrote for Magazines;
+and in this idea she was confirmed when, on one of her visits to Haworth,
+she saw Anne with a number of &ldquo;Chambers&rsquo;s Journal,&rdquo;
+and a gentle smile of pleasure stealing over her placid face as she
+read.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is the matter?&rdquo; asked the friend.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why
+do you smile?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Only because I see they have inserted one of my poems,&rdquo;
+was the quiet reply; and not a word more was said on the subject.</p>
+<p>To this friend Charlotte addressed the following letters:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;March 3rd, 1846.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I reached home a little after two o&rsquo;clock, all safe
+and right yesterday; I found papa very well; his sight much the same.&nbsp;
+Emily and Anne were going to Keighley to meet me; unfortunately, I had
+returned by the old road, while they were gone by the new, and we missed
+each other.&nbsp; They did not get home till half-past four, and were
+caught in the heavy shower of rain which fell in the afternoon.&nbsp;
+I am sorry to say Anne has taken a little cold in consequence, but I
+hope she will soon be well.&nbsp; Papa was much cheered by my report
+of Mr. C.&rsquo;s opinion, and of old Mrs. E.&rsquo;s experience; but
+I could perceive he caught gladly at the idea of deferring the operation
+a few months longer.&nbsp; I went into the room where Branwell was,
+to speak to him, about an hour after I got home: it was very forced
+work to address him.&nbsp; I might have spared myself the trouble, as
+he took no notice, and made no reply; he was stupified.&nbsp; My fears
+were not in vain.&nbsp; I hear that he got a sovereign while I have
+been away, under pretence of paying a pressing debt; he went immediately
+and changed it at a public-house, and has employed it as was to be expected.&nbsp;
+--- concluded her account by saying he was a &lsquo;hopeless being;&rsquo;
+it is too true.&nbsp; In his present state it is scarcely possible to
+stay in the room where he is.&nbsp; What the future has in store I do
+not know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;March 31st, 1846.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Our poor old servant Tabby had a sort of fit, a fortnight
+since, but is nearly recovered now.&nbsp; Martha&rdquo; (the girl they
+had to assist poor old Tabby, and who remains still the faithful servant
+at the parsonage,) &ldquo;is ill with a swelling in her knee, and obliged
+to go home.&nbsp; I fear it will be long before she is in working condition
+again.&nbsp; I received the number of the &lsquo;Record&rsquo; you sent
+. . . I read D&rsquo;Aubign&eacute;&rsquo;s letter.&nbsp; It is clever,
+and in what he says about Catholicism very good.&nbsp; The Evangelical
+Alliance part is not very practicable, yet certainly it is more in accordance
+with the spirit of the Gospel to preach unity among Christians than
+to inculcate mutual intolerance and hatred.&nbsp; I am very glad I went
+to&mdash;when I did, for the changed weather has somewhat changed my
+health and strength since.&nbsp; How do you get on?&nbsp; I long for
+mild south and west winds.&nbsp; I am thankful papa continues pretty
+well, though often made very miserable by Branwell&rsquo;s wretched
+conduct.&nbsp; <i>There</i>&mdash;there is no change but for the worse.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Meanwhile the printing of the volume of poems was quietly proceeding.&nbsp;
+After some consultation and deliberation, the sisters had determined
+to correct the proofs themselves, Up to March 28th the publishers had
+addressed their correspondent as C. Bront&euml;, Esq.; but at this time
+some &ldquo;little mistake occurred,&rdquo; and she desired Messrs.
+Aylott and Co. in future to direct to her real address, &ldquo;<i>Miss</i>
+Bront&euml;,&rdquo; &amp;c.&nbsp; She had, however, evidently left it
+to be implied that she was not acting on her own behalf, but as agent
+for the real authors, since in a note dated April 6th, she makes a proposal
+on behalf of &ldquo;C., E., and A. Bell,&rdquo; which is to the following
+effect, that they are preparing for the press a work of fiction, consisting
+of three distinct and unconnected tales, which may be published either
+together, as a work of three volumes, of the ordinary novel size, or
+separately, as single volumes, as may be deemed most advisable.&nbsp;
+She states, in addition, that it is not their intention to publish these
+tales on their own account; but that the authors direct her to ask Messrs.
+Aylott and Co. whether they would be disposed to undertake the work,
+after having, of course, by due inspection of the MS., ascertained that
+its contents are such as to warrant an expectation of success.&nbsp;
+To this letter of inquiry the publishers replied speedily, and the tenor
+of their answer may be gathered from Charlotte&rsquo;s, dated April
+11th.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;I beg to thank you, in the name of C., E., and
+A. Bell, for your obliging offer of advice.&nbsp; I will avail myself
+of it, to request information on two or three points.&nbsp; It is evident
+that unknown authors have great difficulties to contend with, before
+they can succeed in bringing their works before the public.&nbsp; Can
+you give me any hint as to the way in which these difficulties are best
+met?&nbsp; For instance, in the present case, where a work of fiction
+is in question, in what form would a publisher be most likely to accept
+the MS.?&nbsp; Whether offered as a work of three vols., or as tales
+which might be published in numbers, or as contributions to a periodical?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What publishers would be most likely to receive favourably
+a proposal of this nature?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Would it suffice to <i>write</i> to a publisher on the subject,
+or would it be necessary to have recourse to a personal interview?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your opinion and advice on these three points, or on any other
+which your experience may suggest as important, would be esteemed by
+us as a favour.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>It is evident from the whole tenor of this correspondence, that the
+truthfulness and probity of the firm of publishers with whom she had
+to deal in this her first literary venture, were strongly impressed
+upon her mind, and was followed by the inevitable consequence of reliance
+on their suggestions.&nbsp; And the progress of the poems was not unreasonably
+lengthy or long drawn out.&nbsp; On April 20th she writes to desire
+that three copies may be sent to her, and that Messrs. Aylott will advise
+her as to the reviewers to whom copies ought to be sent.</p>
+<p>I give the next letter as illustrating the ideas of these girls as
+to what periodical reviews or notices led public opinion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The poems to be neatly done up in cloth.&nbsp; Have the goodness
+to send copies and advertisements, <i>as early as possible</i>, to each
+of the undermentioned periodicals.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Colburn&rsquo;s New Monthly Magazine.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Bentley&rsquo;s Magazine.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Hood&rsquo;s Magazine.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Jerrold&rsquo;s Shilling Magazine.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Blackwood&rsquo;s Magazine.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;The Edinburgh Review.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Tait&rsquo;s Edinburgh Magazine.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;The Dublin University Magazine.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Also to the &lsquo;Daily News&rsquo; and to the &lsquo;Britannia&rsquo;
+papers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If there are any other periodicals to which you have been
+in the habit of sending copies of works, let them be supplied also with
+copies.&nbsp; I think those I have mentioned will suffice for advertising.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In compliance with this latter request, Messrs. Aylott suggest that
+copies and advertisements of the work should be sent to the &ldquo;Athen&aelig;um,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Literary Gazette,&rdquo; &ldquo;Critic,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Times;&rdquo;
+but in her reply Miss Bront&euml; says, that she thinks the periodicals
+she first mentioned will be sufficient for advertising in at present,
+as the authors do not wish to lay out a larger sum than two pounds in
+advertising, esteeming the success of a work dependent more on the notice
+it receives from periodicals than on the quantity of advertisements.&nbsp;
+In case of any notice of the poems appearing, whether favourable or
+otherwise, Messrs. Aylott and Co. are requested to send her the name
+and number of those periodicals in which such notices appear; as otherwise,
+since she has not the opportunity of seeing periodicals regularly, she
+may miss reading the critique.&nbsp; &ldquo;Should the poems be remarked
+upon favourably, it is my intention to appropriate a further sum for
+advertisements.&nbsp; If, on the other hand, they should pass unnoticed
+or be condemned, I consider it would be quite useless to advertise,
+as there is nothing, either in the title of the work, or the names of
+the authors, to attract attention from a single individual.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I suppose the little volume of poems was published some time about
+the end of May, 1846.&nbsp; It stole into life; some weeks passed over,
+without the mighty murmuring public discovering that three more voices
+were uttering their speech.&nbsp; And, meanwhile, the course of existence
+moved drearily along from day to day with the anxious sisters, who must
+have forgotten their sense of authorship in the vital care gnawing at
+their hearts.&nbsp; On June 17th, Charlotte writes:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Branwell declares that he neither can nor will do anything
+for himself; good situations have been offered him, for which, by a
+fortnight&rsquo;s work, he might have qualified himself, but he will
+do nothing except drink and make us all wretched.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In the &ldquo;Athen&aelig;um&rdquo; of July 4th, under the head of
+poetry for the million, came a short review of the poems of C., E.,
+and A. Bell.&nbsp; The reviewer assigns to Ellis the highest rank of
+the three &ldquo;brothers,&rdquo; as he supposes them to be; he calls
+Ellis &ldquo;a fine, quaint spirit;&rdquo; and speaks of &ldquo;an evident
+power of wing that may reach heights not here attempted.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Again, with some degree of penetration, the reviewer says, that the
+poems of Ellis &ldquo;convey an impression of originality beyond what
+his contributions to these volumes embody.&rdquo;&nbsp; Currer is placed
+midway between Ellis and Acton.&nbsp; But there is little in the review
+to strain out, at this distance of time, as worth preserving.&nbsp;
+Still, we can fancy with what interest it was read at Haworth Parsonage,
+and how the sisters would endeavour to find out reasons for opinions,
+or hints for the future guidance of their talents.</p>
+<p>I call particular attention to the following letter of Charlotte&rsquo;s,
+dated July 10th, 1846.&nbsp; To whom it was written, matters not; but
+the wholesome sense of duty in it&mdash;the sense of the supremacy of
+that duty which God, in placing us in families, has laid out for us,
+seems to deserve especial regard in these days.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;I see you are in a dilemma, and one of a peculiar
+and difficult nature.&nbsp; Two paths lie before you; you conscientiously
+wish to choose the right one, even though it be the most steep, strait,
+and rugged; but you do not know which is the right one; you cannot decide
+whether duty and religion command you to go out into the cold and friendless
+world, and there to earn your living by governess drudgery, or whether
+they enjoin your continued stay with your aged mother, neglecting, <i>for
+the present</i>, every prospect of independency for yourself, and putting
+up with daily inconvenience, sometimes even with privations.&nbsp; I
+can well imagine, that it is next to impossible for you to decide for
+yourself in this matter, so I will decide it for you.&nbsp; At least,
+I will tell you what is my earnest conviction on the subject; I will
+show you candidly how the question strikes me.&nbsp; The right path
+is that which necessitates the greatest sacrifice of self-interest&mdash;which
+implies the greatest good to others; and this path, steadily followed,
+will lead, I believe, in time, to prosperity and to happiness, though
+it may seem, at the outset, to tend quite in a contrary direction.&nbsp;
+Your mother is both old and infirm; old and infirm people have but few
+sources of happiness&mdash;fewer almost than the comparatively young
+and healthy can conceive; to deprive them of one of these is cruel.&nbsp;
+If your mother is more composed when you are with her, stay with her.&nbsp;
+If she would be unhappy in case you left her, stay with her.&nbsp; It
+will not apparently, as far as short-sighted humanity can see, be for
+your advantage to remain at ---, nor will you be praised and admired
+for remaining at home to comfort your mother; yet, probably, your own
+conscience will approve, and if it does, stay with her.&nbsp; I recommend
+you to do what I am trying to do myself.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The remainder of this letter is only interesting to the reader as
+it conveys a peremptory disclaimer of the report that the writer was
+engaged to be married to her father&rsquo;s curate&mdash;the very same
+gentleman to whom, eight years afterwards, she was united; and who,
+probably, even now, although she was unconscious of the fact, had begun
+his service to her, in the same tender and faithful spirit as that in
+which Jacob served for Rachel.&nbsp; Others may have noticed this, though
+she did not.</p>
+<p>A few more notes remain of her correspondence &ldquo;on behalf of
+the Messrs. Bell&rdquo; with Mr. Aylott.&nbsp; On July 15th she says,
+&ldquo;I suppose, as you have not written, no other notices have yet
+appeared, nor has the demand for the work increased.&nbsp; Will you
+favour me with a line stating whether <i>any</i>, or how many copies
+have yet been sold?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But few, I fear; for, three days later, she wrote the following:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Messrs. Bell desire me to thank you for your suggestion
+respecting the advertisements.&nbsp; They agree with you that, since
+the season is unfavourable, advertising had better be deferred.&nbsp;
+They are obliged to you for the information respecting the number of
+copies sold.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On July 23rd she writes to the Messrs. Aylott:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Messrs. Bell would be obliged to you to post the enclosed
+note in London.&nbsp; It is an answer to the letter you forwarded, which
+contained an application for their autographs from a person who professed
+to have read and admired their poems.&nbsp; I think I before intimated,
+that the Messrs. Bell are desirous for the present of remaining unknown,
+for which reason they prefer having the note posted in London to sending
+it direct, in order to avoid giving any clue to residence, or identity
+by post-mark, &amp;c.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Once more, in September, she writes, &ldquo;As the work has received
+no further notice from any periodical, I presume the demand for it has
+not greatly increased.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In the biographical notice of her sisters, she thus speaks of the
+failure of the modest hopes vested in this publication.&nbsp; &ldquo;The
+book was printed; it is scarcely known, and all of it that merits to
+be known are the poems of Ellis Bell.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The fixed conviction I held, and hold, of the worth of these
+poems, has not, indeed, received the confirmation of much favourable
+criticism; but I must retain it notwithstanding.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
+<p><a name="footnote1"></a><a href="#citation1">{1}</a>&nbsp; A reviewer
+pointed out the discrepancy between the age (twenty-seven years) assigned,
+on the mural tablet, to Anne Bront&euml; at the time of her death in
+1849, and the alleged fact that she was born at Thornton, from which
+place Mr. Bront&euml; removed on February 25th, 1820.&nbsp; I was aware
+of the discrepancy, but I did not think it of sufficient consequence
+to be rectified by an examination of the register of births.&nbsp; Mr.
+Bront&euml;&rsquo;s own words, on which I grounded my statement as to
+the time of Anne Bront&euml;&rsquo;s birth, are as follows:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In Thornton, Charlotte, Patrick Branwell, Emily Jane, and
+Anne were born.&rdquo;&nbsp; And such of the inhabitants of Haworth
+as have spoken on the subject say that all the children of Mr. and Mrs.
+Bront&euml; were born before they removed to Haworth.&nbsp; There is
+probably some mistake in the inscription on the tablet.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote2"></a><a href="#citation2">{2}</a>&nbsp; In the
+month of April 1858, a neat mural tablet was erected within the Communion
+railing of the Church at Haworth, to the memory of the deceased members
+of the Bront&euml; family.&nbsp; The tablet is of white Carrara marble
+on a ground of dove-coloured marble, with a cornice surmounted by an
+ornamental pediment of chaste design.&nbsp; Between the brackets which
+support the tablet, is inscribed the sacred monogram I.H.S., in old
+English letters.</p>
+<p>In Memory of</p>
+<p>Maria, wife of the Rev. P. Bront&euml;, A.B., Minister of Haworth,</p>
+<p>She died Sept. 15th, 1821, in the 39th year of her age.</p>
+<p>Also, of Maria, their daughter, who died May 6th, 1825, in the 12th
+year of her age.</p>
+<p>Also, of Elizabeth, their daughter, who died June 15th, 1825, in
+the 11th year of her age.</p>
+<p>Also, of Patrick Branwell, their son, who died Sept. 24th, 1848,
+aged 31 years.</p>
+<p>Also, of Emily Jane, their daughter, who died Dec. 19th, 1848, aged
+30 years.</p>
+<p>Also, of Anne, their daughter, who died May 28th, 1849, aged 29 years.&nbsp;
+She was buried at the Old Church, Scarborough.</p>
+<p>Also, of Charlotte, their daughter, wife of the Rev. A. B. Nicholls,
+B.A.&nbsp; She died March 31st, 1855, in the 39th year of her age.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The sting of death is sin, and the strength of sin is the
+law, but thanks be to God which giveth us the victory through our Lord
+Jesus Christ.&rdquo;&mdash;1 Cor. xv. 56, 57.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote3"></a><a href="#citation3">{3}</a>&nbsp; With regard
+to my own opinion of the present school, I can only give it as formed
+after what was merely a cursory and superficial inspection, as I do
+not believe that I was in the house above half an hour; but it was and
+is this,&mdash;that the house at Casterton seemed thoroughly healthy
+and well kept, and is situated in a lovely spot; that the pupils looked
+bright, happy, and well, and that the lady superintendent was a most
+prepossessing looking person, who, on my making some inquiry as to the
+accomplishments taught to the pupils, said that the scheme of education
+was materially changed since the school had been opened.&nbsp; I would
+have inserted this testimony in the first edition, had I believed that
+any weight could be attached to an opinion formed on such slight and
+superficial grounds.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote4"></a><a href="#citation4">{4}</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;Jane
+Eyre,&rdquo; vol. I., page 20.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote5"></a><a href="#citation5">{5}</a>&nbsp; Scott
+describes the sport, &ldquo;Shooting at the Popinjay,&rdquo; &ldquo;as
+an ancient game formerly practised with archery, but at this period
+(1679) with firearms.&nbsp; This was the figure of a bird decked with
+parti-coloured feathers, so as to resemble a popinjay or parrot.&nbsp;
+It was suspended to a pole, and served for a mark at which the competitors
+discharged their fusees and carbines in rotation, at the distance of
+seventy paces.&nbsp; He whose ball brought down the mark held the proud
+title of Captain of the Popinjay for the remainder of the day, and was
+usually escorted in triumph to the most respectable change-house in
+the neighbourhood, where the evening was closed with conviviality, conducted
+under his auspices, and if he was able to maintain it, at his expense.&rdquo;&mdash;Old
+Mortality.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote6"></a><a href="#citation6">{6}</a>&nbsp; In this
+Gutenberg eBook M. H&eacute;ger&rsquo;s comments are given in {} at
+approximately the place where they occur&mdash;DP.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE OF CHARLOTTE BRONTE -</p>
+<pre>
+VOLUME 1***
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