The Brontë Sisters and Their Work

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The Brontë Sisters and Their Work

As the three famous Brontë sisters grew up, they wrote stories even as

young girls. They developed their characters and plotlines over the years,

and these three works would later become either their best or only works;

Charlotte with Jane Eyre, Emily with Wuthering Heights, and Anne with

Agnes Grey. Focusing on the key works of Charlotte and Anne, readers get a

glimpse into the writers' opinions of being a governess and perhaps life

in general.

Of the three sisters, Emily produced the least amount but was also the

first to pass away. All three did see some of their poetry published

before taking to their final resting place, but Emily published only one

novel. Anne only published two, but the second novel The Tenant of

Wildfell Hall was a much larger work than her first. Charlotte saw three

of her novels published, Shirley, Villette, and Jane Eyre, and the fourth,

The Professor, was released after her death. Charlotte was obviously the

more productive one, but she lived to be 39, while Anne died at 29 and

Emily at 30.

Charlotte and Anne spent a great deal of their adult lives as governesses,

while Emily tried the profession once for six months. Looking exclusively

at Agnes Grey and Jane Eyre then, one can see that the writers used much

of their own lives and experiences in their works. The protagonists of

both books become governesses at a young age (Charlotte and Anne took

their first positions both at 19), and if Jane a...

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...ot have any feelings for him. Her

and Rochester's personalities fit together, and Weston is nothing like

Rochester. Miss Murray would still marry Lord Ashby, so Jane would

probably look for another position.

In conclusion, Charlotte may have toned down her experience for the sake

of the complexity of the novel, considering she never in real life fell in

love with her master and then went on to marry him only to find out he was

married to the wild beast in the attic. Anne's portrayal would be the more

realistic of the two, considering Agnes' story is not beyond the realms of

reality. Through these two works, however, one can get a sense of the

Brontës' experience as governesses and their opinions of the profession.

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