CHAPTER III.
The Rev. Patrick Brontë is a native of the
County Down in Ireland. 1 His
father, Hugh Brontë, was left an orphan at an early age. He came
from the south to the north of the island, and settled in the
parish of Ahaderg, near Loughbrickland. There was some family
tradition that, humble as Hugh Brontë’s circumstances were, he was
the descendant of an ancient family. But about this neither he nor
his descendants have cared to inquire. He made an early marriage,
and reared and educated ten children on the proceeds of the few
acres of land which he farmed. This large family were remarkable
for great physical strength, and much personal beauty. Even in his
old age, Mr. Brontë is a striking looking man, above the common
height, with a nobly shaped head, and erect carriage. In his youth
he must have been unusually handsome.
He was born on Patrickmas day (March 17), 1777, and
early gave tokens of extraordinary quickness and intelligence. He
had also his full share of ambition; and of his strong sense and
forethought there is a proof in the fact, that, knowing that his
father could afford him no pecuniary aid, and that he must depend
upon his own exertions, he opened a public school at the early age
of sixteen; and this mode of living he continued to follow for five
or six years. He then became a tutor in the family of the Rev. Mr.
Tighe, rector of Drumgooland parish. Thence he proceeded to St.
John’s College, Cambridge, where he was entered in July, 1802,
being at the time five-and-twenty years of age. After nearly four
years’ residence, he obtained his B. A. degree, and was ordained to
a curacy in Essex, whence he removed into Yorkshire. The course of
life of which this is the outline, shows a powerful and remarkable
character, originating and pursuing a purpose in a resolute and
independent manner. Here is a youth—a boy of sixteen—separating
himself from his family, and determining to maintain himself; and
that, not in the hereditary manner by agricultural pursuits, but by
the labour of his brain.
I suppose, from what I have heard, that Mr. Tighe
became strongly interested in his children’s tutor, and may have
aided him, not only in the direction of his studies, but in the
suggestion of an English university education, and in advice as to
the mode in which he should obtain entrance there. Mr. Brontë has
now no trace of his Irish origin remaining in his speech; he never
could have shown his Celtic descent in the straight Greek lines and
long oval of his face; but at five-and-twenty, fresh from the only
life he had ever known, to present himself at the gates of St.
John’s proved no little determination of will, and scorn of
ridicule.
While at Cambridge, he became one of a corps of
volunteers, who were then being called out all over the country to
resist the apprehended invasion by the French. I have heard him
allude, in late years, to Lord Palmerston as one who had often been
associated with him then in the mimic military duties which they
had to perform.2
We take him up now settled as a curate at
Hartshead, in Yorkshire—far removed from his birth-place and all
his Irish connections; with whom, indeed, he cared little to keep
up any intercourse, and whom he never, I believe, re-visited after
becoming a student at Cambridge.
Hartshead is a very small village, lying to the
east of Huddersfield and Halifax; and, from its high situation—on a
mound, as it were, surrounded by a circular basin—commanding a
magnificent view. Mr. Brontë resided here for five years; and,
while the incumbent of Hartshead, he wooed and married Maria
Branwell.
She was the third daughter of Mr. Thomas Branwell,
merchant, of Penzance. Her mother’s maiden name was Carne: and,
both on father’s and mother’s side, the Branwell family were
sufficiently well descended to enable them to mix in the best
society that Penzance then afforded. Mr. and Mrs. Branwell would be
living—their family of four daughters and one son, still
children—during the existence of that primitive state of society
which is well described by Dr. Davy in the life of his
brother.
“In the same town, when the population was about
2,000 persons, there was only one carpet, the floors of rooms were
sprinkled with sea-sand, and there was not a single silver
fork.
“At that time, when our colonial possessions were
very limited, our army and navy on a small scale, and there was
comparatively little demand for intellect, the younger sons of
gentlemen were often of necessity brought up to some trade or
mechanical art, to which no discredit, or loss of caste, as it
were, was attached. The eldest son, if not allowed to remain an
idle country squire, was sent to Oxford or Cambridge, preparatory
to his engaging in one of the three liberal professions of
divinity, law, or physic; the second son was perhaps apprenticed to
a surgeon or apothecary, or a solicitor; the third to a pewterer or
watchmaker; the fourth to a packer or mercer, and so on, were there
more to be provided for.
“After their apprenticeships were finished, the
young men almost invariably went to London to perfect themselves in
their respective trade or art: and on their return into the
country, when settled in business, they were not excluded from what
would now be considered genteel society. Visiting then was
conducted differently from what it is at present. Dinner-parties
were almost unknown, excepting at the annual feast-time. Christmas,
too, was then a season of peculiar indulgence and conviviality, and
a round of entertainments was given, consisting of tea and supper.
Excepting at these two periods, visiting was almost entirely
confined to tea-parties, which assembled at three o’clock, broke up
at nine, and the amusement of the evening was commonly some round
game at cards, as Pope Joan, or Commerce. The lower class was then
extremely ignorant, and all classes were very superstitious; even
the belief in witches maintained its ground, and there was an
almost unbounded credulity respecting the supernatural and
monstrous. There was scarcely a parish in the Mount’s Bay that was
without a haunted house, or a spot to which some story of
supernatural horror was not attached. Even when I was a boy, I
remember a house in the best street of Penzance which was
uninhabited because it was believed to be haunted, and which young
people walked by at night at a quickened pace, and with a beating
heart. Amongst the middle and higher classes there was little taste
for literature, and still less for science, and their pursuits were
rarely of a dignified or intellectual kind. Hunting, shooting,
wrestling, cock-fighting, generally ending in drunkenness, were
what they most delighted in. Smuggling was carried on to a great
extent; and drunkenness, and a low state of morals, were naturally
associated with it. Whilst smuggling was the means of acquiring
wealth to bold and reckless adventurers, drunkenness and
dissipation occasioned the ruin of many respectable
families.”
I have given this extract because I conceive it
bears some reference to the life of Miss Brontë, whose strong mind
and vivid imagination must have received their first impressions
either from the servants (in that simple household, almost friendly
companions during the greater part of the day) retailing the
traditions or the news of Haworth village; or from Mr. Brontë,
whose intercourse with his children appears to have been
considerably restrained, and whose life, both in Ireland and at
Cambridge, had been spent under peculiar circumstances; or from her
aunt, Miss Branwell, who came to the parsonage, when Charlotte was
only six or seven years old, to take charge of her dead sister’s
family. This aunt was older than Mrs. Brontë, and had lived longer
among the Penzance society, which Dr. Davy describes. But in the
Branwell family itself, the violence and irregularity of nature did
not exist. They were Methodists, and, as far as I can gather, a
gentle and sincere piety gave refinement and purity of character.
Mr. Branwell, the father, according to his descendants’ account,
was a man of musical talent. He and his wife lived to see all their
children grown-up, and died within a year of each other—he in 1808,
she in 1809, when their daughter Maria was twenty-five or
twenty-six years of age. I have been permitted to look over a
series of nine letters, which were addressed by her to Mr. Brontë,
during the brief term of their engagement in 1812. They are full of
tender grace of expression, and feminine modesty; pervaded by the
deep piety to which I have alluded as a family characteristic. I
shall make one or two extracts from them, to show what sort of a
person was the mother of Charlotte Brontë: but first, I must state
the circumstances under which this Cornish lady met the scholar
from Ahaderg, near Loughbrickland. In the early summer of 1812,
when she would be twenty-nine, she came to visit her uncle, the
Reverend John Fennel, who was at that time a clergyman of the
Church of England, living near Leeds, but who had previously been a
Methodist minister. Mr. Brontë was the incumbent of Hartshead; and
had the reputation in the neighbourhood of being a very handsome
fellow, full of Irish enthusiasm, and with something of an
Irishman’s capability of falling easily in love. Miss Branwell was
extremely small in person; not pretty, but very elegant, and always
dressed with a quiet simplicity of taste, which accorded well with
her general character, and of which some of the details call to
mind the style of dress preferred by her daughter for her favourite
heroines. Mr. Brontë was soon captivated by the little, gentle
creature, and this time declared that it was for life. In her first
letter to him, dated August 26th, she seems almost surprised to
find herself engaged, and alludes to the short time which she has
known him. In the rest there are touches reminding one of
Juliet’s—
“But trust me, gentlemen, I’ll prove more true
Than those that have more cunning to be strange.”
There are plans for happy pic-nic parties to
Kirkstall Abbey, in the glowing September days, when “Uncle, Aunt,
and Cousin Jane,”—the last engaged to a Mr. Morgan, another
clergyman—were of the party; all since dead, except Mr. Brontë.
There was no opposition on the part of any of her friends to her
engagement. Mr. and Mrs. Fennel sanctioned it, and her brother and
sisters in far-away Penzance appear fully to have approved of it.
In a letter dated September l8th, she says:—
“For some years I have been perfectly my own
mistress, subject to no control whatever; so far from it, that my
sisters, who are many years older than myself, and even my dear
mother, used to consult me on every occasion of importance, and
scarcely ever doubted the propriety of my opinions and actions:
perhaps you will be ready to accuse me of vanity in mentioning
this, but you must consider that I do not boast of it. I have many
times felt it a disadvantage, and although, I thank God, it has
never led me into error, yet, in circumstances of uncertainty and
doubt, I have deeply felt the want of a guide and instructor.” In
the same letter she tells Mr. Brontë, that she has informed her
sisters of her engagement, and that she should not see them again
so soon as she had intended. Mr. Fennel, her uncle, also writes to
them by the same post in praise of Mr. Brontë.
The journey from Penzance to Leeds in those days
was both very long and very expensive; the lovers had not much
money to spend in unnecessary travelling, and, as Miss Branwell had
neither father nor mother living, it appeared both a discreet and
seemly arrangement that the marriage should take place from her
uncle’s house. There was no reason either why the engagement should
be prolonged. They were past their first youth; they had means
sufficient for their unambitious wants; the living of Hartshead is
rated in the Clergy List at 2021. per annum, and she was in the
receipt of a small annuity (501. I have been told) by the will of
her father. So, at the end of September, the lovers began to talk
about taking a house, for I suppose that Mr. Brontë up to that time
had been in lodgings; and all went smoothly and successfully with a
view to their marriage in the ensuing winter, until November, when
a misfortune happened, which she thus patiently and prettily
describes:—
“I suppose you never expected to be much the richer
for me, but I am sorry to inform you that I am still poorer than I
thought myself. I mentioned having sent for my books, clothes,
&c. On Saturday evening, about the time when you were writing
the description of your imaginary shipwreck, I was reading and
feeling the effects of a real one, having then received a letter
from my sister, giving me an account of the vessel in which she had
sent my box being stranded on the coast of Devonshire, in
consequence of which the box was dashed to pieces with the violence
of the sea, and all my little property, with the exception of a
very few articles, being swallowed up in the mighty deep. If this
should not prove the prelude to something worse I shall think
little of it, as it is the first disastrous circumstance which has
occurred since I left my home.”
The last of these letters is dated December the
5th. Miss Branwell and her cousin intended to set about making the
wedding-cake in the following week, so the marriage could not be
far off. She had been learning by heart a “pretty little hymn” of
Mr. Brontë’s composing;3 and
reading Lord Lyttelton’s “Advice to a Lady,”4 on which
she makes some pertinent and just remarks, showing that she thought
as well as read. And so Maria Branwell fades out of sight; we have
no more direct intercourse with her; we hear of her as Mrs. Brontë,
but it is as an invalid, not far from death; still patient,
cheerful and pious. The writing of these letters is elegant and
neat; while there are allusions to household occupations—such as
making the wedding-cake-there are also allusions to the books she
has read, or is reading, showing a well-cultivated mind. Without
having any thing of her daughter’s rare talents, Mrs. Brontë must
have been, I imagine, that unusual character, a well-balanced and
consistent woman. The style of the letters is easy and good; as is
also that of a paper from the same hand, entitled “The Advantages
of Poverty in Religious Concerns,” which was written rather later,
with a view to publication in some periodical.
She was married, from her uncle’s house, in
Yorkshire on the 29th of December, 1812; the same day was also the
wedding-day of her younger sister, Charlotte Branwell, in distant
Penzance. I do not think that Mrs. Brontë ever revisited Cornwall,
but she has left a very pleasant impression on the minds of those
relations who yet survive; they speak of her as “their favourite
aunt, and one to whom they, as well as all the family, looked up,
as a person of talent and great amiability of disposition;” and,
again, as “meek and retiring, while possessing more than ordinary
talents, which she inherited from her father, and her piety was
genuine and unobtrusive.”
Mr. Brontë remained for five years at Hartshead, in
the parish of Dewsbury. There he was married, and his two children,
Maria and Elizabeth, were born. At the expiration of that period,
he had the living ofThornton, in Bradford parish. Some of those
great West Riding parishes are almost like bishoprics for their
amount of population and number of churches. Thornton church is a
little episcopal chapel of ease, rich in Nonconformist monuments,
as of Accepted Leister and his friend Dr. Hall. The neighbourhood
is desolate and wild; great tracks of bleak land, enclosed by stone
dykes, sweeping up Clayton heights. The church itself looks ancient
and solitary, and as if left behind by the great stone mills of a
flourishing Independent firm, and the solid square chapel built by
the members of that denomination. Altogether not so pleasant a
place as Hartshead, with its ample outlook over cloud-shadowed,
sun-flecked plain, and hill rising beyond hill to form the distant
horizon.
Here, at Thornton, Charlotte Brontë was born, on
the 21st of April, 1816. Fast on her heels followed Patrick
Branwell, Emily Jane, and Anne. After the birth of this last
daughter, Mrs. Brontë’s health began to decline. It is hard work to
provide for the little tender wants of many young children where
the means are but limited. The necessaries of food and clothing are
much more easily supplied than the almost equal necessaries of
attendance, care, soothing, amusement, and sympathy Maria Brontë,
the eldest of six, could only have been a few months more than six
years old, when Mr. Brontë removed to Haworth, on February 25th,
1820. Those who knew her then, describe her as grave, thoughtful,
and quiet, to a degree far beyond her years. Her childhood was no
childhood; the cases are rare in which the possessors of great
gifts have known the blessings of that careless happy time; their
unusual powers stir within them, and instead of the natural life of
perception,—the objective, as the Germans call it—they begin the
deeper life of reflection—the subjective.
Little Maria Brontë was delicate and small in
appearance, which seemed to give greater effect to her wonderful
precocity of intellect. She must have been her mother’s companion
and helpmate in many a household and nursery experience, for Mr.
Brontë was, of course, much engaged in his study; and besides, he
was not naturally fond of children, and felt their frequent
appearance on the scene as a drag both on his wife’s strength, and
as an interruption to the comfort of the household.
Haworth Parsonage is—as I mentioned in the first
chapter—an oblong stone house, facing down the hill on which the
village stands, and with the front door right opposite to the
western door of the church, distant about a hundred yards. Of this
space twenty yards or so in depth are occupied by the grassy
garden, which is scarcely wider than the house. The grave-yard goes
round house and garden, on all sides but one. The house consists of
four rooms on each floor, and is two stories high. When the Brontës
took possession, they made the larger parlour, to the left of the
entrance, the family sitting-room, while that on the right was
appropriated to Mr. Brontë as a study. Behind this was the kitchen;
behind the former, a sort of flagged storeroom. Up-stairs were four
bed-chambers of similar size, with the addition of a small
apartment over the passage, or “lobby” as we call it in the north.
This was to the front, the staircase going up right opposite to the
entrance. There is the pleasant old fashion of window seats all
through the house; and one can see that the parsonage was built in
the days when wood was plentiful, as the massive stair-bannisters,
and the wainscots, and the heavy window frames testify.
This little extra up-stairs room was appropriated
to the children. Small as it was, it was not called a nursery;
indeed, it had not the comfort of a fireplace in it; the
servants—two rough affectionate warm-hearted, wasteful sisters, who
cannot now speak of the family without tears—called the room the
“children’s study.” The age of the eldest student was perhaps by
this time seven.
The people in Haworth were none of them very poor.
Many of them were employed in the neighbouring worsted mills; a few
were mill-owners and manufacturers in a small way; there were also
some shopkeepers for the humbler and every-day wants; but for
medical advice, for stationery, books, law, dress, or dainties, the
inhabitants had to go to Keighley. There were several
Sunday-schools; the Baptists had taken the lead in instituting
them, the Wesleyans had followed, the Church of England had brought
up the rear. Good Mr. Grimshaw, Wesley’s friend, had built an
humble Methodist chapel, but it stood close to the road leading on
to the moor; the Baptists then raised a place of worship, with the
distinction of being a few yards back from the highway ; and the
Methodists have since thought it well to erect another and a larger
chapel, still more retired from the road. Mr. Brontë was ever on
kind and friendly terms with each denomination as a body; but from
individuals in the village the family stood aloof, unless some
direct service was required, from the first. “They kept themselves
very close,” is the account given by those who remember Mr. and
Mrs. Brontë’s coming amongst them. I believe many of the
Yorkshiremen would object to the system of parochial visiting;
their surly independence would revolt from the idea of any one
having a right, from his office, to inquire, to counsel, or to
admonish them. The old hill-spirit lingers in them, which coined
the rhyme, inscribed on the under part of one of the seats in the
Sedilia of Whalley Abbey, not many miles from Haworth,
“Who mells wi’ what another does Had best go home
and shoe his goose.”
I asked an inhabitant of a district close to
Haworth, what sort of a clergyman they had at the church which he
attended.
“A rare good one,” said he; “he minds his own
business, and ne’er troubles himself with ours.”
Mr. Brontë was faithful in visiting the sick, and
all those who sent for him, and diligent in attendance at the
schools; and so was his daughter Charlotte too; but, cherishing and
valuing privacy themselves, they were perhaps over-delicate in not
intruding upon the privacy of others.
From their first going to Haworth, their walks were
directed rather out towards the heathery moors, sloping upwards
behind the parsonage, than towards the long descending village
street. A good old woman, who came to nurse Mrs. Brontë in the
illness—an internal cancer—which grew and gathered upon her, not
many months after her arrival at Haworth, tells me that at that
time the six little creatures used to walk out, hand in hand,
towards the glorious wild moors, which in after days they loved so
passionately; the elder ones taking thoughtful care for the
toddling wee things.
They were grave and silent beyond their years;
subdued, probably, by the presence of serious illness in the house;
for, at the time which my informant speaks of, Mrs. Brontë was
confined to the bedroom from which she never came forth alive. “You
would not have known there was a child in the house, they were such
still, noiseless, good little creatures. Maria would shut herself
up” (Maria, but seven!) “in the children’s study with a newspaper,
and be able to tell one every thing when she came out; debates in
parliament, and I don’t know what all. She was as good as a mother
to her sisters and brother. But there never were such good
children. I used to think them spiritless, they were so different
to any children I had ever seen. In part, I set it down to a fancy
Mr. Brontë had of not letting them have flesh-meat to eat. It was
from no wish for saving, for there was plenty and even waste in the
house, with young servants and no mistress to see after them; but
he thought that children should be brought up simply and hardily:
so they had nothing but potatoes for their dinner;5 but
they never seemed to wish for anything else; they were good little
creatures. Emily was the prettiest.”
Mrs. Brontë was the same patient, cheerful person
as we have seen her formerly; very ill, suffering great pain, but
seldom if ever complaining; at her better times begging her nurse
to raise her in bed to let her see her clean the grate, “because
she did it as it was done in Cornwall;” devotedly fond of her
husband, who warmly repaid her affection, and suffered no one else
to take the night-nursing; but, according to my informant, the
mother was not very anxious to see much of her children, probably
because the sight of them, knowing how soon they were to be left
motherless, would have agitated her too much. So the little things
clung quietly together, for their father was busy in his study and
in his parish, or with their mother, and they took their meals
alone; sat reading, or whispering low, in the “children’s study,”
or wandered out on the hill-side, hand in hand.
The ideas of Rousseau and Mr. Day6 on
education had filtered down through many classes, and spread
themselves widely out. I imagine, Mr. Brontë must have formed some
of his opinions on the management of children from these two
theorists. His practice was not half so wild or extraordinary as
that to which an aunt of mine was subjected by a disciple of Mr.
Day’s. She had been taken by this gentleman and his wife, to live
with them as their adopted child, perhaps about five-and-twenty
years before the time of which I am writing. They were wealthy
people and kind-hearted, but her food and clothing were of the very
simplest and rudest description, on Spartan principles. A healthy
merry child she did not much care for dress or eating; but the
treatment which she felt as a real cruelty was this. They had a
carriage, in which she and the favourite dog were taken an airing
on alternate days; the creature whose turn it was to be left at
home being tossed in a blanket—an operation which my aunt
especially dreaded. Her affright at the tossing was probably the
reason why it was persevered in. Dressed-up ghosts had become
common, and she did not care for them, so the blanket exercise was
to be the next mode of hardening her nerves. It is well known that
Mr. Day broke off his intention of marrying Sabrina, the girl whom
he had educated for this purpose, because, within a few weeks of
the time fixed for the wedding, she was guilty of the frivolity,
while on a visit from home, of wearing thin sleeves. Yet Mr. Day
and my aunt’s relations were benevolent people, only strongly
imbued with the crotchet that by a system of training might be
educed the hardihood and simplicity of the ideal savage, forgetting
the terrible isolation of feelings and habits which their pupils
would experience, in the future life which they must pass among the
corruptions and refinements of civilization.
Mr. Brontë wished to make his children hardy, and
indifferent to the pleasures of eating and dress. In the latter he
succeeded, as far as regarded his daughters; but he went at his
object with unsparing earnestness of purpose. Mrs. Brontë’s nurse
told me that one day when the children had been out on the moors,
and rain had come on, she thought their feet would be wet, and
accordingly she rummaged out some coloured boots which had been
given to them by a friend—the Mr. Morgan who married “Cousin Jane,”
she believes. These little pairs she ranged round the kitchen fire
to warm; but, when the children came back, the boots were nowhere
to be found; only a very strong odour of burnt leather was
perceived. Mr. Brontë had come in and seen them; they were too gay
and luxurious for his children, and would foster a love of dress;
so he had put them into the fire. He spared nothing that offended
his antique simplicity. Long before this, some one had given Mrs.
Brontë a silk gown; either the make, the colour, or the material,
was not according to his notions of consistent propriety, and Mrs.
Brontë in consequence never wore it. But, for all that, she kept it
treasured up in her drawers, which were generally locked. One day,
however, while in the kitchen, she remembered that she had left the
key in her drawer, and, hearing Mr. Brontë up-stairs, she augured
some ill to her dress, and, running up in haste, she found it cut
into shreds.
His strong, passionate, Irish nature was, in
general, compressed down with resolute stoicism; but it was there
notwithstanding all his philosophic calm and dignity of demeanour.
He did not speak when he was annoyed or displeased, but worked off
his volcanic wrath by firing pistols out of the back-door in rapid
succession. Mrs. Brontë, lying in bed up-stairs, would hear the
quick explosions, and know that something had gone wrong; but her
sweet nature thought invariably of the bright side, and she would
say, “Ought I not to be thankful that he never gave me an angry
word?” Now and then his anger took a different form, but still
speechless. Once he got the hearth-rug, and stuffing it up the
grate, deliberately set it on fire, and remained in the room in
spite of the stench, until it had smouldered and shrivelled away
into uselessness. Another time he took some chairs, and sawed away
at the backs till they were reduced to the condition of
stools.7
He was an active walker, stretching away over the
moors for many miles, noting in his mind all natural signs of wind
and weather, and keenly observing all the wild creatures that came
and went in the loneliest sweeps of the hills. He has seen eagles
stooping low in search of food for their young; no eagle is ever
seen on those mountain slopes now. He fearlessly took whatever side
in local or national politics appeared to him right. In the days of
the Luddites,8 he had
been for the peremptory interference of the law, at a time when no
magistrate could be found to act, and all the property of the West
Riding was in terrible danger. He became unpopular there among the
mill-workers, and he esteemed his life unsafe if he took his long
and lonely walks unarmed; so he began the habit, which has
continued to this day, of invariably carrying a loaded pistol about
with him. It lay on his dressing-table with his watch; with his
watch it was put on in the morning; with his watch it was taken off
at night. Many years later, during his residence at Haworth, there
was a strike; the hands in the neighbourhood felt themselves
aggrieved by the masters, and refused to work; Mr. Brontë thought
they had been unjustly and unfairly treated, and he assisted them
by all the means in his power to “keep the wolf from their doors,”
and avoid the incubus of debt. Several of the more influential
inhabitants of Haworth were mill-owners; they remonstrated pretty
sharply with him, but he believed that his conduct was right, and
persevered in it. His opinions might be often both wild and
erroneous, his principles of action eccentric and strange, his
views of life partial, and almost misanthropical; but not one
opinion that he held could be stirred or modified by any worldly
motive; he acted up to his principles of action; and, if any touch
of misanthropy mingled with his view of mankind in general, his
conduct to the individuals who came in personal contact with him
did not agree with such view. It is true that he had strong and
vehement prejudices, and was obstinate in maintaining them, and
that he was not dramatic enough in his perceptions to see how
miserable others might be in a life that to him was all-sufficient.
But I do not pretend to be able to harmonize points of character,
and account for them, and bring them all into one consistent and
intelligible whole. The family with whom I have now to do shot
their roots down deeper than I can penetrate. I cannot measure
them, much less is it for me to judge them. I have named these
instances of eccentricity in the father because I hold the
knowledge of them to be necessary for a right understanding of the
life of his daughter.
Mrs. Brontë died in September, 1821, and the lives
of those quiet children must have become quieter and lonelier
still. Charlotte tried hard, in after years, to recall the
remembrance of her mother, and could bring back two or three
pictures of her. One was when, sometime in the evening light, she
had been playing with her little boy, Patrick Branwell, in the
parlour of Haworth Parsonage. But the recollections of four or five
years old are of a very fragmentary character.
Owing to some illness of the digestive organs, Mr.
Brontë was obliged to be very careful about his diet; and, in order
to avoid temptation, and possibly to have the quiet necessary for
digestion, he had begun, before his wife’s death, to take his
dinner alone,—a habit which he always retained. He did not require
companionship, therefore he did not seek it, either in his walks,
or in his daily life. The quiet regularity of his domestic hours
was only broken in upon by churchwardens, and visitors on parochial
business; and sometimes by a neighbouring clergyman, who came down
the hills, across the moors, to mount up again to Haworth
Parsonage, and spend an evening there. But, owing to Mrs. Brontë’s
death so soon after her husband had removed into the district, and
also to the distances, and the bleak country to be traversed, the
wives of these clerical friends did not accompany their husbands;
and the daughters grew up out of childhood into girlhood, bereft,
in a singular manner, of all such society as would have been
natural to their age, sex, and station. There was one family
residing near Haworth who had been remarkably attentive and kind to
Mrs. Brontë in her illness, and who had paid the children the
attention of asking them occasionally to tea; and as the story
connected with this family, and which, I suspect, dissolved their
intercourse with their neighbours, made a deep impression on
Charlotte’s mind in her early girlhood, I may as well relate it
here. It will serve as a specimen of the wild stories afloat in an
isolated village, for as to its truth in minor particulars, I will
not vouch; no more did she, the principal event having occurred
when she was too young to understand its full import, and the tale
having been heard with the addition, probably, of the whispered
exaggerations of the uneducated. The family were Dissenters,
professing some rather rigid form of religion. The father was a
woollen manufacturer and moderately wealthy; at any rate, their
style of living appeared “grand” to the simple children who bounded
their ideas by the frugal habits of the parsonage. These people had
a green-house, the only one in the neighbourhood; a cumbrous
building; with more wood and wall than glass, situated in a garden
which was divided from the house by the high road to Haworth. They
had a large family; and one of the elder daughters was married to a
wealthy manufacturer “beyond Keighley;” she was near her
confinement, when she begged that a favourite young sister might go
and pay her a visit, and remain with her till her baby was born.
The request was complied with; the young girl—fifteen or sixteen
years of age—went. She came home, after some weeks spent in her
brother-in-law’s house, ill and dispirited. Inquiries were made of
her by her parents, and it was discovered that she had been seduced
by her sister’s wealthy husband; and that the consequences of this
wickedness would soon become apparent. Her angry and indignant
father shut her up in her room, until he could decide how to act;
her elder sisters flouted at and scorned her. Only her mother, and
she was reported to be a stern woman, had some pity on her. The
tale went, that passers along the high-road at night time saw the
mother and young daughter walking in the garden, weeping, long
after the household were gone to bed. Nay, more; it was whispered
that they walked and wept there still, when Miss Brontë told me the
tale—though both had long mouldered in their graves. The wild
whisperers of this story added, that the cruel father, maddened
perhaps by the disgrace which had fallen upon a “religious” family,
offered a sum of money to any one who would marry his poor fallen
daughter; that a husband was found, who bore her away from Haworth,
and broke her heart, so that she died while even yet a child.
Such deep passionate resentment would have seemed
not unnatural in a man who took a stern pride in his character for
religious morality; but the degrading part, after all, was this.
The remaining members of the family, elder sisters even, went on
paying visits at their wealthy brother-in-law’s house, as if his
sin was not a hundred-fold more scarlet than the poor young girl’s,
whose evil-doing had been so hardly resented, and so coarsely
hidden. The strong feeling of the country-side still holds the
descendants of this family as accursed. They fail in business, or
they fail in health.
At this house, I believe, the little Brontës paid
their only visits; and these visits ceased before long.
But the children did not want society. To small
infantine gaieties they were unaccustomed. They were all in all to
each other. I do not suppose that there ever was a family more
tenderly bound to each other. Maria read the newspapers, and
reported intelligence to her younger sisters which it is wonderful
they could take an interest in. But I suspect that they had no
“children’s books,” and their eager minds “browzed undisturbed
among the wholesome pasturage of English literature,” as Charles
Lamb expresses it. The servants of the household appear to have
been much impressed with the little Brontës’ extraordinary
cleverness. In a letter which I had from him on this subject, their
father writes:—“The servants often said they had never seen such a
clever little child” (as Charlotte), “and that they were obliged to
be on their guard as to what they said and did before her. Yet she
and the servants always lived on good terms with each other.”
These servants are yet alive; elderly women
residing in Bradford. They retain a faithful and fond recollection
of Charlotte and speak of her unvarying kindness from the “time
when she was ever such a little child!” when she would not rest
till she had got the old disused cradle sent from the parsonage to
the house where the parents of one of them lived, to serve for a
little infant sister. They tell of one long series of kind and
thoughtful actions from this early period to the last weeks of
Charlotte Brontë’s life; and, though she had left her place many
years ago, one of these former servants went over from Bradford to
Haworth on purpose to see Mr. Brontë, and offer him her true
sympathy when his last child died. There might not be many to
regard the Brontës with affection, but those who once loved them,
loved them long and well.
I return to the father’s letter. He says:—
“When mere children, as soon as they could read and
write, Charlotte and her brothers and sisters used to invent and
act little plays of their own, in which the Duke of Wellington, my
daughter Charlotte’s hero, was sure to come off conqueror; when a
dispute would not unfrequently arise amongst them regarding the
comparative merits of him, Buonaparte, Hannibal, and Cæasar. When
the argument got warm, and rose to its height, as their mother was
then dead, I had sometimes to come in as arbitrator, and settle the
dispute according to the best of my judgment. Generally, in the
management of these concerns, I frequently thought that I
discovered signs of rising talent, which I had seldom or never
before seen in any of their age..... A circumstance now occurs to
my mind which I may as well mention. When my children were very
young, when, as far as I can remember, the oldest was about ten
years of age, and the youngest about four, thinking they knew more
than I had yet discovered, in order to make them speak with less
timidity, I deemed that if they were put under a sort of cover I
might gain my end; and happening to have a mask in the house, I
told them all to stand and speak boldly from under cover of the
mask.
“I began with the youngest (Anne, afterwards Acton
Bell), and asked what a child like her most wanted; she answered,
‘Age and experience.’ I asked the next (Emily, afterwards Ellis
Bell), what I had best do with her brother Branwell, who was
sometimes a naughty boy; she answered, ‘Reason with him, and when
he won’t listen to reason, whip him.’ I asked Branwell what was the
best way of knowing the difference between the intellects of men
and women; he answered, ‘By considering the difference between them
as to their bodies.’ I then asked Charlotte what was the best book
in the world; she answered, ‘The Bible.’ And what was the next
best; she answered, ‘The Book of Nature.’ I then asked the next
what was the best mode of education for a woman; she answered,
‘That which would make her rule her house well.’ Lastly I asked the
oldest what was the best mode of spending time; she answered, ‘By
laying it out in preparation for a happy eternity.’ I may not have
given precisely their words, but I have nearly done so, as they
made a deep and lasting impression on my memory. The substance,
however, was exactly what I have stated.”
The strange and quaint simplicity of the mode taken
by the father to ascertain the hidden characters of his children,
and the tone and character of these questions and answers, show the
curious education which was made by the circumstances surrounding
the Brontës. They knew no other children. They knew no other modes
of thought than what were suggested to them by the fragments of
clerical conversation which they overheard in the parlour, or the
subjects of village and local interest which they heard discussed
in the kitchen. Each had their own strong characteristic
flavour.
They took a vivid interest in the public
characters, and the local and foreign politics discussed in the
newspapers. Long before Maria Brontë died, at the age of eleven,
her father used to say he could converse with her on any of the
leading topics of the day with as much freedom and pleasure as with
any grown-up person.