The Three Brontës by May Sinclair
page 28 of 276 (10%)
page 28 of 276 (10%)
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child, free, and at Haworth, Anne wrote _Agnes Grey_ and _The Tenant of
Wildfell Hall_. And Emily wrote _Wuthering Heights_. They had found their destiny--at Haworth. * * * * * Every conceivable theory has been offered to account for the novels that came so swiftly and incredibly from these three sisters. It has been said that they wrote them merely to pay their debts when they found that poems did not pay. It would be truer to say that they wrote them because it was their destiny to write them, and because their hour had come, and that they published them with the dimmest hope of a return. Before they knew where they were, Charlotte found herself involved in what she thought was a businesslike and masculine correspondence with publishing firms. The _Poems_ by Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell, appeared first, and nothing happened. _The Professor_ travelled among publishers, and nothing happened. Then, towards the end of the fourth year there came _Jane Eyre_, and Charlotte was famous. But not Emily. _Wuthering Heights_ appeared also, and nothing happened. It was bound in the same volume with Anne's humble tale. Its lightning should have scorched and consumed _Agnes Grey_, but nothing happened. Ellis and Acton Bell remained equals in obscurity, recognized only by their association with the tremendous Currer. When it came to publishing |
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