Charlotte Brontë: A Brief Biography
Charlotte
Brontë was born in 1816, the third daughter of the Rev. Patrick Brontë and his
wife Maria. Her brother Patrick Branwell was born in 1817, and her sisters
Emily and Anne in 1818 and 1820. In 1820, too, the Brontë family moved to
Haworth, Mrs. Brontë dying the following year.
In 1824 the four
eldest Brontë daughters were enrolled as pupils at the Clergy Daughter's School
at Cowan Bridge. The following year Maria and Elizabeth, the two eldest
daughters, became ill, left the school and died: Charlotte and Emily,
understandably, were brought home.
In 1826 Mr.
Brontë brought home a box of wooden soldiers for Branwell to play with.
Charlotte, Emily, Branwell, and Ann, playing with the soldiers, conceived of
and began to write in great detail about an imaginary world which they called
Angria.
In 1831 Charlotte
became a pupil at the school at Roe Head, but she left school the following
year to teach her sisters at home. She returned returns to Roe Head School in
1835 as a governess: for a time her sister Emily attended the same school as a
pupil, but became homesick and returned to Haworth. Ann took her place from
1836 to 1837.
In 1838,
Charlotte left Roe Head School. In 1839 she accepted a position as governess in
the Sidgewick family, but left after three months and returned to Haworth. In
1841 she became governess in the White family, but left, once again, after nine
months.
Upon her return
to Haworth the three sisters, led by Charlotte, decided to open their own
school after the necessary preparations had been completed. In 1842 Charlotte
and Emily went to Brussels to complete their studies. After a trip home to
Haworth, Charlotte returned alone to Brussels, where she remained until 1844.
Upon her return
home the sisters embarked upon their project for founding a school, which
proved to be an abject failure: their advertisements did not elicit a single
response from the public. The following year Charlotte discovered Emily's
poems, and decided to publish a selection of the poems of all three sisters:
1846 brought the publication of their Poems, written under the pseudonyms of Currer,
Ellis and Acton Bell. Charlotte also completed The
Professor, which was rejected for publication. The following
year, however, Charlotte's Jane Eyre, Emily's Wuthering Heights,
and Ann's Agnes Grey were all
published, still under the Bell pseudonyms.
In 1848 Charlotte
and Ann visited their publishers in London, and revealed the true identities of
the "Bells." In the same year Branwell Brontë, by now an alcoholic
and a drug addict, died, and Emily died shortly thereafter. Ann died the
following year.
In 1849
Charlotte, visiting London, began to move in literary circles, making the
acquaintance, for example, of Thackeray. In 1850 Charlotte edited her sister's
various works, and met Mrs. Gaskell. In 1851she visited the Great Exhibition in
London, and attended a series of lectures given by Thackeray.
The Rev. A. B.
Nicholls, curate of Haworth since 1845, proposed marriage to Charlotte in 1852.
The Rev. Mr. Brontë objected violently, and Charlotte, who, though she may have
pitied him, was in any case not in love with him, refused him. Nicholls left
Haworth in the following year, the same in which Charlotte's Villette was published. By 1854, however, Mr.
Brontë's opposition to the proposed marriage had weakened, and Charlotte and
Nicholls became engaged. Nicholls returned as curate at Haworth, and they were
married, though it seems clear that Charlotte, though she admired him, still
did not love him.
In 1854
Charlotte, expecting a child, caught pneumonia. It was an illness which could
have been cured, but she seems to have seized upon it (consciously or
unconsciously) as an opportunity of ending her life, and after a lengthy and
painful illness, she died, probably of dehydration.
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