Anne Bronte
(born Jan. 17, 1820, Thornton, Yorkshire, Eng.?died May 28, 1849,
Scarborough
, Yorkshire) was an English poet and novelist, sister of
Charlotte
and
Emily Bronte
and author of
Agnes Grey
(1847) and
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
(1848).
The youngest of six children of Patrick and Marie Bronte, Anne was taught in the family’s
Haworth
home and at Roe Head School. With her sister Emily, she invented the imaginary kingdom of Gondal, about which they wrote verse and
prose
(the latter now lost) from the early 1830s until 1845. She took a position as governess briefly in 1839 and then again for four years, 1841?45, with the Robinsons, the family of a clergyman, at Thorpe Green, near
York
. There her irresponsible brother,
Branwell
, joined her in 1843, intending to serve as a tutor. Anne returned home in 1845 and was followed shortly by her brother, who had been dismissed, charged with making love to his employer’s wife.
Britannica Quiz
The Bronte Sisters
In 1846 Anne contributed 21 poems to
Poems by Currer, Ellis and Acton Bell
,
a joint work with her sisters Charlotte and Emily. Her first
novel
,
Agnes Grey
,
was published together with Emily’s
Wuthering Heights
in three volumes (of which
Agnes Grey
was the third) in December 1847. The reception to these volumes, associated in the public mind with the immense popularity of Charlotte’s
Jane Eyre
(October 1847), led to quick publication of Anne’s second novel (again as Acton Bell),
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
,
published in three volumes in June 1848; it sold well. She fell ill with
tuberculosis
toward the end of the year and died the following May.
Her novel
Agnes Grey,
probably begun at Thorpe Green, records with limpidity and some humour the life of a governess.
George Moore
called it “simple and beautiful as a muslin dress.”
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
presents an unsoftened picture of the
debauchery
and
degradation
of the heroine’s first husband and sets against it the Arminian belief, opposed to Calvinist predestination, that no soul shall be ultimately lost. Her outspokenness raised some scandal, and Charlotte deplored the subject as morbid and out of keeping with her sister’s nature, but the vigorous writing indicates that Anne found in it not only a
moral
obligation but also an opportunity of artistic development.