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Brontë
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Brontë

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Haworth, a village in West Yorkshire, England, and the home of the Brontë sisters. It was at Haworth, during the first half of the 19th century, that Charlotte wrote Jane Eyre, Anne wrote The Tenant of Wildfell Hall and, most famously, Emily wrote Wuthering Heights, the story of the doomed love of Cathy and Heathcliff.
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English novelist Charlotte Brontë, eldest of the three literary Brontë sisters. She abandoned a career in teaching to write poetry, published under the male pseudonym Currer Bell. Charlotte was the only sister to achieve recognition during her lifetime, for her second and most famous novel Jane Eyre(1847).

Three English novelists, daughters of a Yorkshire parson. Charlotte Brontë (1816–1855), notably with Jane Eyre (1847) and Villette (1853), reshaped autobiographical material into vivid narrative. Emily Brontë (1818–1848) in Wuthering Heights (1847) expressed the intensity and nature mysticism which also pervades her poetry (Poems, 1846). The more modest talent of Anne Brontë (1820–1849) produced Agnes Grey (1847) and The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (1848).

The Brontës were brought up by an aunt in their father's rectory (now a museum) at Haworth in Yorkshire. In 1846 the sisters published a volume of poems under the pen-names Currer (Charlotte), Ellis (Emily), and Acton (Anne) Bell. In 1847 (using the same names), they published the novels Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights, and Agnes Grey. During 1848–49 Emily, Anne, and their brother Patrick Branwell (1817–1848) all died of tuberculosis, aided in Branwell's case by alcohol and opium addiction; his portrait of the sisters survives. Charlotte died during pregnancy in 1855. The sisters share a memorial in Westminster Abbey, London.



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Readers will delight in this tale of the Bronte sisters and their brother Branwell because it offers a window into their lives as young people.
A drama of poetic experience," according to the program, in which "three sisters, perhaps like the Bronte sisters, relive their childhood and youth, and their relationships with each other and with the men they have known.
I have always admired British women: Queen Elizabeth I, Queen Victoria, Margaret Thatcher, the Bronte sisters, and Virginia Woolf.
 
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