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Selected Letters of Charlotte Bronte



Charlotte Bronte wrote letters to her friends, family, and publishers. These letters give insight into her life and her writing. Some of her early letters are written with vigor and vivacity, while others reveal her intense longing for a response from her "master," Constantin Heger. Her letters to her father after he gave his consent to her marriage are moving. She also writes about her experience... more details
Key Features:
  • Letters from Charlotte Bronte to her friends, family, and publishers
  • Letters written with vigor and vivacity, revealing her intense longing for a response from her "master," Constantin Heger
  • Letters written after her father gave his consent to her marriage are moving


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Features
Format Hardcover
ISBN 9780199205875
Publisher Oxford University Press, Usa
Manufacturer Oxford University Press, Usa
Description
Charlotte Bronte wrote letters to her friends, family, and publishers. These letters give insight into her life and her writing. Some of her early letters are written with vigor and vivacity, while others reveal her intense longing for a response from her "master," Constantin Heger. Her letters to her father after he gave his consent to her marriage are moving. She also writes about her experiences visiting art galleries, operas, and the Great Exhibition of 1851. Her letters written in December 1852 convey the "turbulence of feeling" in her relationship with Arthur Nicholls. She dies in March 1855, just a few months after her marriage.

These letters give an insight into the life of a writer whose novels continue to be bestsellers. They reveal much about Charlotte Bront:e's personal life, her family relationships, and the society in which she lived. Many of her early letters are written with vigour, vivacity, and an engaging aptitude for self-mockery. In contrast, her letters to her "master", the Belgian schoolteacher Constantin Heger, reveal her intense, obsessive longing for some response from him. Other letters are deeply moving, when Charlotte endures the agony of her brother's and sisters' untimely deaths. We learn also of the progress of her writing, including the astonishing success of Jane Eyre, and of her contacts with her publishers, including the young George Smith; and we recognize in her letters the life-experiences which are transmuted into the art of her novels. Contemporary society is brilliantly described in her letters from London, when she writes of her encounters with famous writers and with critics of her novels. We hear too of her visits to art galleries, operas, and the Great Exhibition of 1851 at the Crystal Palace. Dramatic letters written in December 1852 convey the "turbulence of feeling" in the Haworth curate Arthur Nicholls's proposal of marriage to her and in Mr Bront:e's violent reaction to it; and we subsequently hear of her secret correspondence with her suitor, her father's eventual consent, and her tragically brief happy marriage, cut short by her death in March 1855.
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