Life of Charlotte Brontë | Page 3

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The Life of Charlotte Bronte by Elizabeth Claghorn Gaskell Volume 2
[At this date we are still working on Volume 1]
by ELIZABETH CLAGHORN GASKELL

CONTENTS OF VOLUME TWO
CHAPTER I.
Mr. Bronte afflicted with blindness, and relieved by a successful
operation for cataract--Charlotte Bronte's first work of fiction, "The
Professor"--She commences "Jane Eyre"--Circumstances attending its
composition--Her ideas of a heroine--Her attachment to
home--Haworth in December--A letter of confession and counsel.
CHAPTER II.
State of Charlotte Bronte's health at the commencement of 1847--
Family trials--"Wuthering Heights" and "Agnes Grey" accepted by a
publisher--"The Professor" rejected--Completion of "Jane Eyre", its
reception and publication--The reviews of "Jane Eyre", and the author's
comments on them--Her father's reception of the book--Public interest
excited by "Jane Eyre"--Dedication of the second edition to Mr.
Thackeray--Correspondence of Currer Bell with Mr. Lewes on "Jane
Eyre"--Publication of "Wuthering Heights" and "Agnes Grey"--Miss
Bronte's account of the authoress of "Wuthering Heights"--Domestic
anxieties of the Bronte sisters--Currer Bell's correspondence with Mr.
Lewes--Unhealthy state of Haworth--Charlotte Bronte on the
revolutions of 1848--Her repudiation of authorship--Anne Bronte's
second tale, "The Tenant of Wildfell Hall"--Misunderstanding as to the
individuality of the three Bells, and its results--Currer and Acton Bell
visit London--Charlotte Bronte's account of her visit--The Chapter

Coffee House--The Clergy Daughters' School at Casterton--Death of
Branwell Bronte--Illness and death of Emily Bronte.
CHAPTER III
The Quarterly Review on "Jane Eyre"--Severe illness of Anne
Bronte--Her last verses--She is removed to Scarborough--Her last hours,
and death and burial there--Charlotte's return to Haworth, and her
loneliness.
CHAPTER IV.
Commencement and completion of "Shirley"--Originals of the
characters, and circumstances under which it was written--Loss on
railway shares--Letters to Mr. Lewes and other friends on "Shirley,"
and the reviews of it--Miss Bronte visits London, meets Mr. Thackeray,
and makes the acquaintance of Miss Martineau--Her impressions of
literary men.
CHAPTER V.
"Currer Bell" identified as Miss Bronte at Haworth and the
vicinity--Her letter to Mr. Lewes on his review of "Shirley"--Solitude
and heavy mental sadness and anxiety--She visits Sir J. and Lady Kay
Shuttleworth--Her comments on critics, and remarks on Thackeray's
"Pendennis" and Scott's "Suggestions on Female Education"--Opinions
of "Shirley" by Yorkshire readers.
CHAPTER VI.
An unhealthy spring at Haworth--Miss Bronte's proposed visit to
London--Her remarks on "The Leader"--Associations of her walks on
the moors--Letter to an unknown admirer of her works--Incidents of
her visit to London--Her impressions of a visit to Scotland--Her portrait,
by Richmond--Anxiety about her father.
CHAPTER VII.

Visit to Sir J. and Lady Kay Shuttleworth--The biographer's
impressions of Miss Bronte--Miss Bronte's account of her visit to the
Lakes of Westmoreland--Her disinclination for acquaintance and
visiting--Remarks on "Woman's Mission," Tennyson's "In Memoriam,"
etc.--Impressions of her visit to Scotland--Remarks on a review in the
"Palladium."
CHAPTER VIII.
Intended republication of "Wuthering Heights" and "Agnes Grey"--
Reaction after her visit
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