Short History Of... - The Brontës
Episode Date: November 24, 2025A Short History of Ancient Rome - the debut book from the Noiser Network is out now! Discover the epic rise and fall of Rome like never before. Pick up your copy now at your local bookstore or ...visit noiser.com/books to learn more. Charlotte, Anne and Emily Brontë were among the most famous authors of the nineteenth century. Though they wrote at a time when women were systematically discouraged from doing so at all, they managed to produce some of the most beloved, powerful and often challenging literature of the Victorian age. How did three sisters from the Yorkshire Moors become celebrated writers? Why did they use pseudonyms and live most of their lives in obscurity? And what were the tragedies that whittled their number down in their prime? This is a Short History Of The Brontës. A Noiser podcast production. Hosted by John Hopkins. With thanks to Nick Holland, author of three books on the family, including “In Search of Anne Brontë” Written by Erin Parker | Produced by Kate Simants | Production Assistant: Chris McDonald | Exec produced by Katrina Hughes | Sound supervisor: Tom Pink | Sound design by Oliver Sanders | Assembly edit by Anisha Deva | Compositions by Oliver Baines, Dorry Macaulay, Tom Pink | Mix & mastering: The Soundhouse Studios | Fact Check: Sean Coleman Get every episode of Short History Of… a week early with Noiser+. You’ll also get ad-free listening, bonus material and early access to shows across the Noiser podcast network. Click the subscription banner at the top of the feed to get started. Or go to noiser.com/subscriptions Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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It's late in the day, sometime in the early 1800s on a wind-swept moor in the north of England.
A bitter gale whips a young woman's cloak as she stumbles over the uneven ground.
The village she left hours ago has disappeared from view, and it's been a long time since she last ate.
A humiliating handful of porridge begged from a farmer's daughter who'd been about to feed it to her pigs.
With the light already fading, tumultuous clouds above her threaten rain at any moment.
Still, there is hope.
If she can only make it to that house in the distance where she is sure she sees a candle
burning in a window, maybe she'll sleep with a roof over her head tonight.
Breathing heavily, she struggles up the hill, her long woolen skirts sodden from the wet heather.
But she is only halfway up and the heavens open.
Freezing rain lashes down, saturating her bonnet in seconds and seeping through her bodice right to the skin.
Even worse, as she pauses to peer through the downpour, she finds she has lost sight of the house.
Weak from hunger and desperately cold, she forces herself onward, stumbling, sobbing, getting
back to her feet, persevering.
Now, a sudden crack of lightning illuminates the moorland.
As she looks up, she sees the house silhouetted for just a second against the purple sky.
It is her only hope of salvation.
She will surely not survive another night out in the open, starving, destitute, chilled to
the bone.
Thunder rumbles across the hills as she increases her pace until finally she is rushing
up the wide stone steps to the house.
With numb hands, she pounds on the door,
shouting into the gale to be let in.
She's almost lost hope, sinking to her knees
when she hears movement inside, the sound of a woman's voice.
A bolt is drawn, a key turns, the door opens.
A log falls out of the fireplace with a thump,
startling the woman who had been captivated by the passage she was reading.
She drops the book into her lap as her husband, Prince Albert, jumps to his feet,
but a footman soon hurries over to help, lifting the smouldering wood back into the fire.
The prince consort notices his teacup is empty and asks his wife if she would like another,
but she's already back to her story, engrossed as she has been since the very first page.
Albert tilts his head to read the spine.
Its gold-printed letters glint in the firelight
announcing the volume's title and author.
Shane Eyre by Cura Bell.
He smiles as he watches his wife's eyes move swiftly across the lines,
the palace around her fading away
as she immerses herself once more in the writer's world.
Tomorrow, as ever, Victoria will go about her duties
as Queen of England. But tonight she is in the Moors with her Northern English heroine as her
companion.
By the mid-1800s, the authors Cura, Acton and Ellis Bell were household names. They were also pseudonyms,
hiding the identities of three remarkable women who feared they would not be published without them.
Charlotte, Anne, and Emily Bronte.
Among the most famous authors of the 19th century,
the Brontes shared close family bonds,
and the deep creativity of their early years
determined much of their lives and work.
And though they wrote at a time
when women were systematically discouraged
from doing so at all,
they managed to produce some of the most beloved,
powerful, and often challenging literature
of the Victorian age.
So how did three sisters from the Yorkshire Moors become celebrated writers?
Why did they use pseudonyms and live most of their lives in obscurity?
And what were the tragedies that whittled their number down in their prime?
I'm John Hopkins.
From the Noiser podcast network, this is a short history of the Brontes.
In December 1812, in a small village near Leeds in northern England, a couple are married in St. Oswald's Church.
Witty and highly educated, 35-year-old Irishman Patrick Bronte currently works as a classics examiner.
His whirlwind romance with school assistant Maria Branwell has seen her relocate from Cornwall
to start a new life with him here just six months after they met.
Within eight years, the couple have six children, five girls and a boy.
And it's now that they move to their new home, the parsonage of the Yorkshire village of Haworth,
where Patrick has accepted a job as a curate.
Set on a hill, the village overlooks the wild and beautiful Yorkshire Dales.
While Patrick works, the toddler, Emily, and baby Anne mostly stay close to their mother,
while the older girls Maria and Elizabeth tend to their younger siblings,
four-year-old Charlotte and their brother Branwell aged three.
For now, the children's days are taken up with clambering around the churchyard,
but it won't be long before they're old enough to start exploring the vast moors beyond.
Even in these early days, creativity is a way of life for the Bronte siblings.
Making up characters and entire worlds in their games,
they are encouraged in their learning by both parents.
with whom they spend the evenings reading and discussing literature.
Life is happy in Howarth, and though not wealthy, the family have enough to employ a cook and a maid.
But then, only a year after moving in, 37-year-old Maria falls ill.
It's found that she has a form of abdominal cancer, and after several months of extreme pain, she passes away.
Patrick is left alone to bring up their six children
the youngest of whom Anne is not yet two
Nick Holland is the author of three books on the family
including in search of Anne Bronte
Anne was only one at the time she was a baby really so she'd never remember her mother
Emily was young three grandma was a bit older
so Charlotte and Brownwell I think especially would have been affected by it
But into their lives came Ant Bramwell, their mother's sister who came up from Cornwall.
And especially for Anne, she became like a surrogate mother, a second mother.
So the aunt became a mother to Anne, and really she fulfilled the mother's role for the whole family.
So that helped negate the loss from that sense.
But really, I think you can see in the novels, we get orphans, people like Jane Eyre, who hasn't got a mother.
Heathcliff hasn't got a mother.
So mothers are often absent in the stories, and aunts are often present in the stories.
Aunt Branwell establishes a schooling routine with the older siblings, but in 1824 she persuades
Patrick to send the girls to school. The two eldest, Maria and Elizabeth, enroll at the Cowan
Bridge School for clergy daughters in Lancashire, a journey of several hours over the moors.
But when eight-year-old Charlotte arrives a few months later, she finds her elder sister's thinner
and weakening.
Maria in particular is plagued with a persistent cough.
The living conditions at the school are grim.
The rooms damp and the food meagre and plain.
By the time Emily arrives in November, Maria is worse.
Soon she is diagnosed with consumption, now known as tuberculosis.
Patrick swiftly brings her back to Haworth, but by then there's little to be done but pray.
A few weeks later, Patrick receives word that Elizabeth, too, has contracted the same disease.
Dismayed by her pitiful condition when she arrives, he demands that the school also return
his remaining two daughters immediately.
Charlotte and Emily arrive home to find their elder sister Maria has already lost the battle,
just a couple of weeks after her 11th birthday.
She is buried next to her mother.
and although the family keep a terrified vigil over Elizabeth,
just a month later, she too succumbs at only 10 years old.
They did become a close-knit group,
especially after the death of the sisters, I think, Maria and Elizabeth.
Suddenly, before remaining siblings were thrown together,
they'd had this tragedy in their life,
and it really impacted them, as you'd expect.
But Charlotte stepped up, she was now the oldest surviving sibling.
Even though she was only eight,
she became almost a mother figure to the rest of the siblings.
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Still grieving after the disastrous consequences of Cowan Bridge School.
Patrick keeps his remaining children home.
As well as encouraging them to read widely,
he teaches them Latin and hires tutors to instruct them in art and music.
And it's now that after Branwell receives a present of 12 toy soldiers,
the siblings' first forays into the world of literature begin.
The Bronte's only son shares the figures out with his sisters,
and together they develop an imaginary world which they name Glass.
town. It becomes more and more complex, the soldiers taking on the characters of Napoleon,
the Duke of Wellington, and even Princess Victoria, who is Charlotte's age. Countless hours
are wild away in their upstairs room, as the children create personalities, backstories,
and detailed narratives in their make-believe games. After a while, Branwell and Charlotte,
who have grown closer after the loss of their sisters, shift their attention to a
another fictional universe, Angria, which becomes the setting for a series of written stories.
They started writing these tiny little books, tiny little novels and magazines.
They're so small you can only read them with a microscope, but some people think they wrote them
that small, so the soldiers could read them toy soldiers. Emily and Anne were probably contributing
in the background, but they never actually wrote anything at that time that we have.
But then later Emily and Anne founded their own imaginary kingdom of Gondon.
and started creating stories and poems about that.
Gondal is a sanctuary for Emily and Anne,
its tales of romance and battle,
secret even from Charlotte and Branwell.
The stories of their island world
revolve around its heroine Augusta,
who shares much of her personality
with Emily's own stubborn nature.
But the refuge of these imagined worlds
is interrupted when Aunt Branwell announced
Aunt Branwell announces that Charlotte is to go again to boarding school, to learn the skills
to become a governess. Roe Head School is in Murfield, 18 miles away from Howarth.
Upon arrival, it's immediately clear to Charlotte that the school is quite different from
Cowan Bridge. The headmistress, while strict, is also fair, and the conditions are much better,
even the food is nourishing. But the upheaval is a shock, and Charlotte struggles to find her
place among the girls who find her odd. After all, though she is comfortable around her siblings,
among strangers, she fears between abrasive and painfully shy. It doesn't help that she is short
with plain features and several missing teeth and a poor sense of fashion. After a time,
though, she settles in and finds a kindred spirit in classmate Ellen Nussie, who becomes a lifelong
friend. And though she begins a long way behind her classmates, she would,
works fiercely to catch up. Within the year, Charlotte is at the top of many of her classes and
takes it upon herself to share her learning with her sisters during the holidays. Back home, Branwell
misses her intensely. Though he's schooled by Patrick and other tutors, ordinarily he only has Anne
for company and is often lonely. But when Charlotte returns, now in her late teens, the siblings pick up
where they left off and the make-believe worlds come to life once more.
The intervening years, however, have changed her brother.
Charlotte watches with disapproval as he sets off in the evening to the pub,
often returning drunk.
Sharing her concern, Patrick and Aunt Branwell make plans to send him away to art school
to develop his promising early talents as a painter.
But school costs money.
Charlotte, keen to help contribute to her brother's education,
accepts an invitation from the headmistress at Roe Head to return as a teacher.
As well as the salary, there is the bonus of taking her sister Emily along as a student.
She became a teacher at Roehead School where she'd been a pupil,
and she wrote a series of letters over a couple of years.
Throughout the letters, she's furious at being a teacher.
She actually despises her pupils.
In one letter she writes to her best friend Ellen.
to her best friend Ellen. Her vision came to my mind about, basically, angry of the imaginary world
that she wrote about. And I could have written a narrative better than anything I'd ever done,
but just then adult came up to me with a lesson, and I thought I was going to vomit.
While Charlotte finds teaching a chore, her sister finds being a student unbearable.
Emily is even shyer than Charlotte and fails to make any friends at all. Her only source of refuge is found
outdoors during long walks throughout the countryside. But pining for home, she grows withdrawn and
ill. Alarmed, Charlotte writes home to their father. Remembering the quick demise of his two
eldest daughters, Patrick wastes no time in bringing Emily back, though he does send Anne to take her
place. Thanks in part to Charlotte's income, Branwell finally leaves for London to seek
admission to the Royal Academy. He has his best clothes on, money in his pocket and his portfolio
safely on his shoulder as he is waved off by both Patrick and his aunt. But once he's there,
he finds the temptation of the innumerable pubs and gambling dens too much to resist.
Inevitably, the money disappears, and he is forced to return home in disgrace without
even submitting his work to the art college he had so wished to join.
Meanwhile, with few other options, Charlotte continues teaching.
The only occupations open really to females of that class were teaching or being a governess.
And it was a real drudgery of a job.
Teaching today might be like that.
But in the 19th century, teachers and governesses worked very, very long hours, very few holidays,
and they had to teach robotically, really.
So there was nothing to expand their minds.
The Brontes loved creating.
They wanted free time to write books,
write poetry. In the precious few hours she has to herself, however, Charlotte does continue to
write. As well as sending angrier stories home to Bramwell, she also works on her poetry.
Though she keeps the work from her family, she does seek feedback from another source.
She wrote to the poet laureate Suvey, which was quite a bold move at the time,
and he wrote back and said, yes, your poetry's quite nice, but, and these were his exact words.
her literature cannot and should not be the occupation for a woman.
For her part, since returning home, Emily has taken on more domestic responsibilities
and finds comfort in the company of her animals.
When she's not out on her extensive hikes across the moors,
she too spends hours secretly writing, locking her poetry away in her desk between sessions.
However, 1838 sees her taking up a position as a teacher at a teacher
at a different school to her sister.
But she lasts only six months,
hating her students more than Charlotte did,
and again finding it painful to be away from home.
She didn't like it either.
She was a very, very private person.
One of her pupils later remembered
that she cared more about the school dog
than she did about her pupils,
which was very fitting for Emily.
She loved animals and she loved dogs,
and she didn't like people as much.
Anne now follows her sisters into teaching.
Her first role as a governess lasts just a year.
But then she works for the Robinson family near York.
Anne was the most successful in a way.
She became a private governess in two situations.
In her second job, she was there for over five years,
which is by far the longest period of time in a job for a Bronte.
But even she, in her first stint,
we hear from the son of one of the people who was one of Anne's pupils.
But at one point she tied that her pupils to table legs
so that she could get on writing poetry without being disturbed
and she was sucked for that reason.
Even so, before she is dismissed,
she manages to secure Branwell a job as a tutor for the children.
Charlotte, though, comes up with a new plan.
If she and her sisters have to teach,
the only way to make it bearable is to do it together.
With a long-term plan to open a school of their own,
she turns her mind to improving her language skills.
It's nearly midnight in mid-February 1842,
and Charlotte, Emily, and Patrick Bronte are on the deck of a steam packet boat.
After a 14-hour journey from London,
the sisters huddled together against the sea breeze
as the crew prepares to dock at the busy,
international port of Ostend on the Belgian coast. The passengers are exhausted after the
day's long journey, but though it's the middle of the night, there's still a long way to go.
As the hull bumps against the dock, a worker nearby throws a thick rope to a stevedore
waiting below. Soon the boat is secured and gripping the handles of their bags. The sisters
make their way down the gangplank and out onto dry land.
Sheffering, Charlotte slips her free arm through her sisters.
Introverted at the best of times, Emily shrinks back from the noisy activity around them, overwhelmed.
Steering her gently to a waiting room while their father makes arrangements for their onward journey,
Charlotte reminds her that they'll soon be out of the hubbub,
at the school where they have enrolled in order to improve their French and German.
Eventually the large horse-drawn carriage, known as a diligence,
arrives. Patrick and the porter load the trunks onto the back as the sisters climb into the cabin.
Giving the tickets to the driver, Patrick climbs in with his daughters, and soon they're on their way to Brussels.
It's a long, uncomfortable journey, but many hours later, they are standing in front of the austere stone-built school, the Pensioners-Hegere.
Heger. The door is opened by a neatly uniformed woman who welcomes them in French,
ushering them inside and sending a nearby student to fetch the headmistress of the school.
The Bronte sisters can hear laughter and footsteps at the other end of the corridor,
as one lesson ends and these students make their way to the next.
Following their host down a wood-paneled corridor, they are settled into a small sitting
room and supplied with tea as they wait.
Then, a beautifully dressed woman enters and introduces herself as Madame Hegerre, the head.
She is followed by her husband, a short, severe-looking man in a dark suit.
And though Emily sees nothing remarkable in Monsieur Hegerer, her sister seems to flush as
she curtses, stumbling over her words.
Brief pleasantries are exchanged before Monsieur Hegear makes his excuses and leaves his wife
to escort the young women to their rooms in another part of the school.
Emily listens politely as they are shown around the place
that will be their home for the coming months,
though she can't help but notice
that her sister seems to have her mind on other things.
Patrick soon returns home,
and once settled into their new home,
Charlotte and Emily work hard at improving their French and German.
Professor Heger, who teaches at the boys' school next door, sets them writing tasks,
which often involve emulating classic French authors. But while Charlotte knuckles down,
Emily resents being forced to write in another's voice, often getting into arguments with
Monsieur Hegerer about the merits of his teaching.
After eight months, they receive news that Aunt Branwell has fallen ill.
They quickly make arrangements to return home, but just two days later, another message informs them it's too late.
Aunt Branwell has died of a bowel obstruction.
They make the journey back in time to bury their beloved aunt, but Emily decides she has had enough of Brussels, taking on the task of housekeeping the parsonage.
Charlotte returns to Belgium, but it's now that she develops an infatuation with Professor Hesels.
Hesier. The feeling is not reciprocal, and certainly not welcomed by his wife who dismisses
the younger woman. After Charlotte returns to Haworth, after two years in Belgium, she writes a series
of letters, begging letters really over a year or more to Heger in Belgium, say, you know,
write back to me, I can't sleep, my whole life's Terry books are not hear from you, I'd undergo
the greatest torments just to go one letter from you. They're really, really sad letters because
He never replied.
It's just really raw, unrequited love.
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By 1844, all of the siblings are home with Patrick. Both Anne and Branwell are back from the
Robinsons after Brannwell is accused of conducting an affair with the Lady of the House.
Charlotte attempts to establish a new school with her sisters, but struggles to attract students.
And though his art school dream has fizzled out,
Branwell now occupies himself with fitful attempts at writing
and frequent visits to the local pub.
Never lacking in self-confidence,
he sends some of his poetry to William Wordsworth,
but receives no reply.
When the publishers he approaches also fail to respond,
he turns increasingly to drink, to dull his disappointment.
Eventually he sinks into taking opioids.
All this time, Charlotte has continued to write, and once she's back home, she works on
The Professor, a novel inspired by her time in Brussels. One day she stumbles upon Emily's open
notebook. By now in her mid-twenties, Emily has been the most secretive with her writing,
and Charlotte finds the temptation irresistible. She sits down to read, and is so impressed
and enthralled, that she fails to notice her sister coming in. Catching her red-handed,
Emily is furious, but what she sees as a breach of privacy soon signals a turning point
in all their lives. When Charlotte explains to Anne what has happened, the younger sister
confesses that she too has been writing, not just poetry but a novel, Agnes Gray, which draws on her
experiences as a governess. The sisters, already familiar with creating their stories as children,
fall into a new rhythm. They write more openly and sit up for hours at night, reading their work
to each other. But while Anne and Charlotte mine their own lives for material, when Emily begins
her own novel, she looks elsewhere for inspiration. I think to a greater or lesser extent,
all the other Brontian novels have some autobiographical elements to them, whereas Wuthering Heights
doesn't. I think Wuthering Heights is pure imagination on Emily's part. And I think that's because
for Emily, she lived very much, almost completely in imagination. Shalot put it quite well, I think.
She said, when she's looking back at Wuthering Heights, she characterized the people so well,
you know, the accents and the way they behaved, but she had very little interaction with people
of Howarth and beyond. She didn't see people. But she knew.
with them somehow she knew how people acted how they talked and that's my such an amazing book but
i think emily could conjure up an amazing novel like that amazing world in her imagination i think
she was a unique genius really despite her modesty Charlotte recognizes their common potential
she convinces her sisters to submit a collection of poetry to a publishing house in london but remembering
Robert Sothe's words to her years ago. She suggests they use pseudonyms. Emily, hating the idea
of losing anonymity, finally agrees under the condition that they tell no one, not even their
father or Branwell. After some thought, they choose names that keep their initials intact.
So Charlotte became Currer and became Acton and Emily became Ellis. And I think they all have
reasons to choose those names, people they knew or people they'd heard of. But they thought, yes,
disguised as men, we can go out into the world. We don't need to be shy anymore. People won't trace
it back to us. They won't think, oh, that's that clergyman's daughters. Why are they writing?
They borrow their assumed surname from the middle name of their father's curate, a young
man by the name of Arthur Bell Nichols. But possibly there is another reason for their choice.
This is just my theory.
I think Bell, in a way, is a tribute to Branwell.
He wasn't in their writings at this time.
You know, he's too far gone down the addiction route, unfortunately.
But B-E-E-O-L are the letters from Branwell, really,
the first letter on the last letters of his name.
So I think he'll be a contracted form of Branwell.
With the names and the submission agreed upon,
the sisters send out their poems.
Though they initially received nothing more than a growing collection of rejection notes,
eventually their volume of poetry is accepted in early 1846,
with the condition that they pay for the paper and ink.
It takes a big bite out of the money they had inherited from Aunt Branwell,
equivalent to a year's worth of their governess wages.
But even so, the sisters agree to foot the bill.
Months later, they are thrilled to finally hold a properly
printed and bound volume of their work in their hands. What is less exciting, however,
is the public's response. In fact, the book sells only two copies. Not to be deterred,
they finish their longer manuscripts, Charlott's The Professor, Emily's Wuthering Heights,
and Agnes Gray by Anne. Several more attempts at publication follow until finally they receive good news.
This time, the acceptance comes from Thomas Newby,
an emerging editor developing a reputation for unearthing exciting new writers,
including his recent discovery of Anthony Trollope.
On the condition, the authors contribute £50 each to publication costs,
he agrees to publish Emily and Anne's novels.
But devastatingly for Charlotte, he doesn't want the professor.
So suddenly, Charlotte, who'd come up with this plan,
didn't have a publisher and her sisters had been published.
So I think that must have been hard for her to take.
But she rose to the challenge of Inorote thought I'll write another book.
This second novel, which she calls Jane Eyre,
is woven throughout with echoes of her life,
including chapters set in a school that much resembles her horrific experience at Cowan Bridge.
And though this book is also repeatedly rejected,
once it finds its way into the hands of publisher George Smith,
things move fast. He reads it from cover to cover in a day, before hastily sending back an
acceptance letter. So keen is he to get it into the hands of readers that Anne and Emily are still
waiting for their books to be published by the time Jane Eyre is finalized and sent to print.
Charlotte negotiates a substantial advance of £100, the equivalent of two years of wages
as a governess.
And though she keeps the publication from her brother,
she can't resist showing it to her father.
When Jane Eyre was published
when she got her six authors' copies,
she went into Patrick's study.
She knocked on his door and said,
I want to talk to you.
I've got a book to show you, Jane Eyre
by Corrie Bell as it said on it.
But she said, I've written this book.
And he was very lukewarm at first.
Patrick said, oh, that's nice.
You know, because if they'd be writing all by my childhood,
all my life. He probably thought it was a childhood-type story she'd knocked up.
And I said, no, I've had it published.
In fact, he said, well, it's a wise thing to do. How much will that cost you?
She said, no, they paid me. And he was just amazed.
Leave the book with me. So he read it very quickly.
And then he called Anne and Emily, not knowing that they'd also written books,
and said, do you know your sister's written this book? And it's an amazing book.
And in fact, he said, it's better than I thought it would be.
The book hits the shops and isn't.
immediate success. Figures as prominent as Queen Victoria enjoy the novel, though it is not without
its critics, with one prominent reviewer calling it immoral and a celebration of anti-Christian values.
She had more of what we might think of as a modern attitude towards religion. So early in the novel,
Jane Eyre, she's at Lowood School and her best friend Helen is dying. She's in bed with her,
and Helen says, I'm going to heaven and you will join me one day, this.
region of universal happiness with one god universal parent looking after us and then jane says where is
that region does it exist and i think that's charlotte's own doubts coming on to the page you know she saw
her mother die she saw her sisters die early and she was thinking you know have they gone to heaven
is there a god so i think there is that doubt in charlotte's works
Wuthering Heights and Agnes Gray emerge soon after, and are also received enthusiastically,
although neither reached the levels of success enjoyed by Charlotte's debut.
With more financial freedom, the sisters are able to abandon teaching in favor of staying home and writing full-time.
But in 1848, a misunderstanding blows the subterfuge wide open.
The editor, George Smith, sends a letter to Haworth explaining that a new book,
the tenant of Wildfell Hall, is being offered around publishers in America.
But though it's under Anne's pseudonym of Acton Bell,
it's his belief that it's actually written by Cura Bell,
that Acton and Cura Bell are in fact the same person.
Charles and Dan were furious about this.
It's about very same day they got on a train.
from Leeds, they were in London in the early hours of Saturday morning
for the next day and they made the way to George Smith's publisher
and in his memoirs she wrote how a clerk came to his room, his office
and said there were two women wanting to see him so he let them into his office
and he said there were two shabbily dressed small women
and he said oh why are you here and Charlotte put his letter in front of him
that was addressed to Curra Bell
George Smith said where did you get this letter and she said oh from the post office
it's addressed to me. She said that we have come in person to show you ocular proof that there are
at least two of us. He said at least two because Emily refused to go. She still wants to remain
private. So it's a massive revelation for George Smith. At last, he'd found out they were women
and he was blown away. But though the secret is out, the publisher, George Smith, promises
to keep it to himself. For Charlotte, the liberation opens the door to a new world.
Smith makes sure to introduce her to literary figures, such as William Thackeray, her personal hero, and novelist Elizabeth Gaskill, who becomes a friend to the family and Charlotte's biographer.
But her new friends perhaps fail to truly bring her out of her shell.
Elizabeth Gaskill reports that Charles, when she was visiting her, another visitor came and Charlotte hid behind the curtains for an hour until the visitor left.
On top of her almost debilitating timidity, Charlotte is also prone to misplacing her affection.
On her increasingly regular visits to London, George Smith takes her to the opera and often invites her to dine with him and his sisters.
She falls in love with him, writing him long letters describing her affection.
He doesn't return her feelings and eventually replies to her with the news that he is engaged to another woman.
Charlotte replies with a single word,
Congratulations, and does not write to him again.
In 1848, Anne successfully publishes the tenant of Wildfell Hall,
a story about a woman who falls in love at a young age,
but who is then forced to leave her abusive, alcoholic husband.
She writes about marital infidelity, about marital abuse,
and about a woman leaving a man, leaving her husband, taking her child, which was hugely popular
with the readership, but hugely controversial at the time.
Even Charlotte is disapproving, arguing that it is a book that need not have been written.
Meanwhile, Branwell, oblivious to his sister's success, has lived at home since the scandal of the
Robinson's. He continues to run up gambling debts, is badly addicted to opium and alcohol,
and is often ill-tempered and sickly. Now, as his health begins to decline rapidly,
it falls to Patrick to nurse him. The sisters also take their turns, their concern growing
as he develops a familiar sounding cough. In September 1848, at just 31 years old,
he loses his life to tuberculosis without ever having realized what his sisters had achieved.
mere weeks later it becomes clear that Emily too is ill.
Their grief still raw, the family do their best to help her, but she is not an easy patient.
Refusing medical treatment, she insists on continuing her domestic tasks until one December day
she finds herself unable to make it up the stairs.
She does not recover.
At 30 years old, she passes away just.
three months after her brother. It is a somber Christmas that year, with the Bronti
clan now whittled down to just three. There is a small bright spot for Charlotte
when she is given an advance for her new novel Shirley, with which she busies herself
writing. But soon there is more bad news. It's a May afternoon in 1849.
In the seaside town of Scarborough, North Yorkshire, the sun is setting over the sea.
The sky, a vivid palette of pink and orange.
Seagulls screech and whirl overhead in the cold air, while below the carriage rattles across a cobbled street.
Inside, three women sit braced as it turns a corner.
29-year-old Anne Bronte is slumped against her sister, coughing uncontrollably.
When she moves the handkerchief away from her mouth, it is spotted with blood.
Charlotte exchanges a glance with her old school friend Ellen Nussie, who was accompanying them.
Things are not looking good.
Her face pale, Charlotte's last living sibling is weak and soaked with sweat, despite the cool of the evening,
and her clothes hang loose on her emaciated frame.
The hope is that this visit to take the fresh sea air,
might give her some relief, and it's one of Anne's favorite places to visit too.
Right now, though, what she needs is rest and quickly.
They pull to a stop in front of a house overlooking the sea.
Charlotte and Ellen are helped out by the coachman, but Anne is almost too frail to climb down.
Eventually she manages it, and her companions loop their arms around her body and help her up the steps.
The housekeeper hurries to open the door, worriedly ushering them inside.
It takes some work and several rests to manage the stairs, but eventually they get Anne into a room with a beautiful view of the ocean.
After settling her into the bed, propping her up with pillows so she can breathe more easily, Charlotte opens the window, letting in the sound of the waves.
She manages to feed her sister a few mouthfuls of soup.
But after that, Anne has strength to do little other than sleep.
The next morning is a Sunday, and at the sound of the church bells, Anne struggles to sit upright.
Reluctantly, Charlotte agrees to help her to church, and carefully dresses her in her best clothes,
before trying to get her to take a little breakfast.
The three women leave the house, but every step is an ordeal for the ailing writer.
Slowly they make their way into church, and Anne chooses a spot in the back row
to avoid disturbing the rest of the congregation with her continuous coughing.
Trying her best to stifle the spasms, she can only croak a few words from the hymn book
held in front of her by Ellen before giving up and closing her eyes.
They make it home, but it is clear that Anne has worsened.
Charlotte sends Ellen to fetch a doctor and bathes her sister's sister's
forehead as she slips into unconsciousness.
But though she continues to pray for her recovery, Charlotte has seen enough of this ravenous,
merciless disease to know that there is little anyone can do for her now.
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Anne Bronte, the youngest of the six siblings, dies at the age of 29.
After burying her in the churchyard of St Mary's Church in Scarborough,
overlooking the sea, Charlotte returns to Howarth.
The house is quiet with just her and Patrick,
who is already in his 70s.
But she continues to write, returning to the novel Shirley.
And it's got two heroines, Shirley and Caroline.
And they're based quite clear, I think, Charlotte even told Elizabeth Gaskell.
They're based upon Emily Burroughs.
Brontius Shirley and Anne Bronteus Caroline, and when she started writing the novel,
both sisters were healthy, but halfway through the novel, they both died, and so the novel
changes a little bit really, and I think it becomes a tribute to her sisters, and it shows
just how much she really looked them.
She writes under her own name now, and a year after Anne's death, publishers are asking
to republish Anne's, the tenant of Wildfell Hall, and Emily's Wuthering Heights.
But while Charlotte agrees to the new edition of Emily's novel, she refuses a reprint of Anne's.
She told her publisher she didn't think it should be republished.
And some people, myself included at one time, have wondered whether Charlotte was showing a bit of jealousy
because the Tent to Wildfell Hall had been an amazing success when it came out.
But I don't think that was the case.
I think Charlotte did what she thought was right because Tennett was a controversial novel
and she didn't want that controversy to be linked to Anne after her death.
Though Charlotte is in her late 30s and a confirmed spinster by the standards of the time,
an unexpected new chapter is about to begin.
For years, Patrick has been supported by his curate, Arthur Bell Nichols,
whose middle name the Bronte Sisters took as their pseudonym.
Having become increasingly close to the family in their recent, difficult years,
he confesses that he has fallen in love with Charlotte.
But when he asks Patrick for his last living child's hand in marriage, both father and daughter are horrified.
Charlotte rejects Arthur outright, declaring that she has no affection for him at all,
while Patrick suspects his colleague's motives, given that his daughter is a famous author.
Distraught, Arthur resigns his position and accepts a missionary role in Australia.
On his final Sunday, Arthur gives a halting, miserable address to his parishioners,
after which Charlotte finds him outside the church on a bench weeping.
Saddened by his distress, she comforts him, telling him how much she's admired his ardent care for the parish.
His hopes rekindled, he changes his plan.
He didn't go to Australia.
He went to another parish at Yorkshire instead, and he continued to write Shal.
he didn't give up, and eventually a year later, he came back to us.
This time, when he asks Charlotte to marry him, she accepts.
They are married in June 1854, and though Patrick appears to disapprove initially,
by the time the newlyweds return from a honeymoon in Wales, he seems to have come around.
On Christmas day that year, Charlotte writes to Ellen that she is blissfully happy.
Still, living at the parsonage, she dusts off her first rejected novel, the professor,
hoping once more to publish it, and her other books remain very popular.
Sometimes she is even visited by fans of her work, something she finds greatly annoying.
And when, in December 1854, she discovers she is expecting a baby, her contentment seems complete.
Her pregnancy, though, is troubled from the outset.
Becoming violently ill, she is soon confined to her bed. Desperate for her recovery, Patrick
sits beside her as she declines. But within a few short months, Charlotte passes away, aged 38.
Though modern scholars believe conditions related to pregnancy may have caused her death,
the official record cites tuberculosis. Patrick, who has now lost every one of his six children to the illness,
is left to be supported by his son-in-law.
With her widower's consent, Charlott's The Professor is finally published posthumously.
Anne's The Tenant of Wildfell Hall lies in obscurity for years, but is re-released in 1992
almost 150 years after its first publication.
Today, the visionary novel is considered a masterpiece.
as is Emily's Wuthering Heights, which has never been out of print,
and Jane Eyre, Charlotte's most popular novel, which has sold millions of copies.
Between them, the sister's works have been translated countless times
and inspired untold numbers of adaptations, films, and television series.
Their beloved work finds new fans by the thousands with every reimagining.
Though the world they describe is almost unrecognizable today,
The Brontes remain some of the best-loved authors of all time.
Their names synonymous with great Victorian literature.
And while their books drew on universal themes of love, death, religion and honour,
at heart it was perhaps their commitment to their own imaginations
that became their greatest legacy.
I think if you read any Bronte novel today, you'll enjoy it.
Yes, they're writing about a time 200 years ago, nearly.
but they're relevant, you know, the people are the people who could meet on the streets today,
and some of the issues they're writing about are very modern,
especially the tendent to Wildfell Hall by Ambranchi, which I think is very modern, but well ahead of its time.
I think there were forward-thinking, very relevant novels, even today,
but they're just brilliant stories, who are amazing geniuses, but they're obviously humans as well.
I think as long as humanity exists, as long as this world keeps turning,
as long as people read books in whatever form they read them,
Paper will still read the Bronte novels.
Next time on Short History, we'll bring you a short history of the ashes.
Well, I think we still love the ashes and we will continue to love the ashes
because it's gone on for so long.
And whilst in some countries they're sort of giving up on test cricket,
England and Australia won't give up on the ashes because there's too much history at stage.
history at stake and is what's defined as, you know, we measure ourselves by how we're doing
against the other lot. So the fact that other people are giving up on test cricket only adds
to the appeal that it's this sort of slightly exotic creature, which we all still love.
That's next time.
If you can't wait a week until the next episode, you can listen to it right away by subscribing
to Noyser Plus.
Head to www.noyser.com forward slash subscriptions for more information.
This November on the Noyser podcast network.
On short history of, we'll step beyond the Leonine Wall and into Vatican City,
the smallest sovereign state in the world.
We'll follow the extraordinary life of Irish writer Oscar Wilde and crack befuddling cases
with the Pinkerton Detective Agency.
On real survival stories, we'll find ourselves marooned on a wild, remote fjord in British Columbia,
witness a terrifying lightning strike atop a Wyoming mountain,
and watch on as a fearsome typhoon devastates a Pacific lagoon.
In Jane Austen's stories, pride and prejudice continues,
with a free-spirited Lizzie attending a dinner party at the grand estate of Lady Catherine,
and not exactly making a favourable impression.
And in Sherlock Holmes short stories, a professor returns from Prague with a mysterious carved box and a strangely changed personality in The Adventure of the Creeping Man.
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