CHAPTER I.
During this summer of 1846, while her
literary hopes were waning, an anxiety of another kind was
increasing. Her father’s eyesight had become seriously impaired by
the progress of the cataract which was forming. He was nearly
blind. He could grope his way about, and recognise the features of
those he knew well, when they were placed against a strong light;
but he could no longer see to read; and thus his eager appetite for
knowledge and information of all kinds was severely balked. He
continued to preach. I have heard that he was led up into the
pulpit, and that his sermons were never so effective as when he
stood there, a grey sightless old man, his blind eyes looking out
straight before him, while the words that came from his lips had
all the vigour and force of his best days. Another fact has been
mentioned to me, curious as showing the accurateness of his
sensation of time. His sermons had always lasted exactly half an
hour. With the clock right before him, and with his ready flow of
words, this had been no difficult matter as long as he could see.
But it was the same when he was blind; as the minute-hand came to
the point, marking the expiration of the thirty minutes, he
concluded his sermon.
Under his great sorrow he was always patient. As in
times of far greater affliction, he enforced a quiet endurance of
his woe upon himself. But so many interests were quenched by this
blindness that he was driven inwards, and must have dwelt much on
what was painful and distressing in regard to his only son. No
wonder that his spirits gave way, and were depressed. For some time
before this autumn, his daughters had been collecting all the
information they could respecting the probable success of
operations for cataract performed on a person of their father’s
age. About the end of July, Emily and Charlotte had made a journey
to Manchester for the purpose of searching out an operator; and
there they heard of the fame of the late Mr. Wilson as an oculist.
They went to him at once, but he could not tell, from description,
whether the eyes were ready for being operated upon or not. It
therefore became necessary for Mr. Brontë to visit him; and towards
the end of August, Charlotte brought her father to him. He
determined at once to undertake the operation, and recommended them
to comfortable lodgings, kept by an old servant of his. These were
in one of numerous similar streets of small monotonous-looking
houses, in a suburb of the town. From thence the following letter
is dated, on August 21st, 1846:—
“I just scribble a line to you to let you know
where I am, in order that you may write to me here, for it seems to
me that a letter from you would relieve me from the feeling of
strangeness I have in this big town. Papa and I came here on
Wednesday; we saw Mr. Wilson, the oculist, the same day; he
pronounced papa’s eyes quite ready for an operation, and has fixed
next Monday for the performance of it. Think of us on that day! We
got into our lodgings yesterday. I think we shall be comfortable:
at least our rooms are very good, but there is no mistress of the
house (she is very ill, and gone out into the country), and I am
somewhat puzzled in managing about provisions: we board ourselves.
I find myself excessively ignorant. I can’t tell what to order in
the way of meat. For ourselves I could contrive, papa’s diet is so
very simple; but there will be a nurse coming in a day or two, and
I am afraid of not having things good enough for her. Papa requires
nothing you know but plain beef and mutton, tea and bread and
butter; but a nurse will probably expect to live much better; give
me some hints if you can. Mr. Wilson says we shall have to stay
here for a month at least. I wonder how Emily and Anne will get on
at home with Branwell. They, too, will have their troubles. What
would I not give to have you here! One is forced, step by step, to
get experience in the world; but the learning is so disagreeable.
One cheerful feature in the business is, that Mr. Wilson thinks
most favourably of the case.”
“August 26th, 1846.
“The operation is over; it took place yesterday.
Mr. Wilson performed it; two other surgeons assisted. Mr. Wilson
says, he considers it quite successful; but papa cannot yet see
anything. The affair lasted precisely a quarter of an hour; it was
not the simple operation of couching Mr. C. described, but the more
complicated one of extracting the cataract. Mr. Wilson entirely
disapproves of couching. Papa displayed extraordinary patience and
firmness; the surgeons seemed surprised. I was in the room all the
time, as it was his wish that I should be there; of course, I
neither spoke nor moved till the thing was done, and then I felt
that the less I said, either to papa or the surgeons, the better.
Papa is now confined to his bed in a dark room, and is not to be
stirred for four days; he is to speak and be spoken to as little as
possible. I am greatly obliged to you for your letter, and your
kind advice, which gave me extreme satisfaction, because I found I
had arranged most things in accordance with it, and, as your theory
coincides with my practice, I feel assured the latter is right. I
hope Mr. Wilson will soon allow me to dispense with the nurse; she
is well enough, no doubt, but somewhat too obsequious; and not, I
should think, to be much trusted; yet I was obliged to trust her in
some things....
“Greatly was I amused by your account of -’s
flirtations;ac and
yet something saddened also. I think Nature intended him for
something better than to fritter away his time in making a set of
poor, unoccupied spinsters unhappy. The girls, unfortunately, are
forced to care for him, and such as him, because, while their minds
are mostly unemployed, their sensations are all unworn, and,
consequently, fresh and green; and he, on the contrary, has had his
fill of pleasure, and can with impunity make a mere pastime of
other people’s torments. This is an unfair state of things: the
match is not equal. I only wish I had the power to infuse into the
souls of the persecuted a little of the quiet strength of pride-of
the supporting consciousness of superiority (for they are superior
to him because purer)—of the fortifying resolve of firmness to bear
the present, and wait the end. Could all the virgin population of
receive and retain these sentiments, he would continually have to
veil his crest before them. Perhaps, luckily, their feelings are
not so acute as one would think, and the gentleman’s shafts
consequently don’t wound so deeply as he might desire. I hope it is
so.”
A few days later, she writes thus: “Papa is still
lying in bed, in a dark room, with his eyes bandaged. No
inflammation ensued, but still it appears the greatest care,
perfect quiet, and utter privation of light are necessary to ensure
a good result from the operation. He is very patient, but, of
course, depressed and weary. He was allowed to try his sight for
the first time yesterday. He could see dimly. Mr. Wilson seemed
perfectly satisfied, and said all was right. I have had bad nights
from the toothache since I came to Manchester.”
All this time, notwithstanding the domestic
anxieties which were harassing them—notwithstanding the ill-success
of their poems—the three sisters were trying that other literary
venture, to which Charlotte made allusion in one of her letters to
the Messrs. Aylott. Each of them had written a prose tale, hoping
that the three might be published together. “Wuthering Heights” and
“Agnes Grey” are before the world. The third-Charlotte’s
contribution—is yet in manuscript, but will be published shortly
after the appearance of this memoir.ad The
plot in itself is of no great interest; but it is a poor kind of
interest that depends upon startling incidents rather than upon
dramatic development of character; and Charlotte Brontë never
excelled one or two sketches of portraits which she has given in
“The Professor,” nor, in grace of womanhood, ever surpassed one of
the female characters there described. By the time she wrote this
tale, her taste and judgment had revolted against the exaggerated
idealisms of her early girlhood, and she went to the extreme of
reality, closely depicting characters as they had shown themselves
to her in actual life: if there they were strong even to
coarseness,—as was the case with some that she had met with in
flesh and blood existence,—she “wrote them down as ass;” if the
scenery of such life as she saw was for the most part wild and
grotesque, instead of pleasant or picturesque, she described it
line for line. The grace of the one or two scenes and characters,
which are drawn rather from her own imagination than from absolute
fact, stand out in exquisite relief from the deep shadows and
wayward lines of others, which call to mind some of the portraits
of Rembrandt.
The three tales had tried their fate in vain
together, at length they were sent forth separately, and for many
months with still-continued ill success. I have mentioned this
here, because, among the dispiriting circumstances connected with
her anxious visit to Manchester, Charlotte told me that her tale
came back upon her hands, curtly rejected by some publisher, on the
very day when her father was to submit to his operation. But she
had the heart of Robert Bruce within her, and failure upon failure
daunted her no more than him. Not only did “The Professor” return
again to try his chance among the London publishers, but she began,
in this time of care and depressing inquietude, —in those grey,
weary, uniform streets, where all faces, save that of her kind
doctor, were strange and untouched with sunlight to her,—there and
then, did the brave genius begin “Jane Eyre.” Read what she herself
says:—“Currer Bell’s book found acceptance nowhere, nor any
acknowledgment of merit, so that something like the chill of
despair began to invade his heart.” And, remember, it was not the
heart of a person who, disappointed in one hope, can turn with
redoubled affection to the many certain blessings that remain.
Think of her home, and the black shadow of remorse lying over one
in it, till his very brain was mazed, and his gifts and his life
were lost;—think of her father’s sight hanging on a thread;—of her
sisters’ delicate health, and dependence on her care;—and then
admire, as it deserves to be admired, the steady courage which
could work away at “Jane Eyre,” all the time “that the one-volume
tale was plodding its weary round in London.”
I believe I have already mentioned, that some of
her surviving friends consider that an incident which she heard,
when at school at Miss Wooler’s, was the germ of the story of Jane
Eyre. But of this nothing can be known, except by conjecture. Those
to whom she spoke upon the subject of her writings are dead and
silent; and the reader may probably have noticed, that in the
correspondence from which I have quoted, there has been no allusion
whatever to the publication of her poems, nor is there the least
hint of the intention of the sisters to publish any tales. I
remember, however, many little particulars which Miss Brontë gave
me, in answer to my inquiries respecting her mode of composition,
&c. She said, that it was not every day that she could write.
Sometimes weeks or even months elapsed before she felt that she had
anything to add to that portion of her story which was already
written. Then, some morning, she would waken up, and the progress
of her tale lay clear and bright before her, in distinct vision.
When this was the case, all her care was to discharge her household
and filial duties, so as to obtain leisure to sit down and write
out the incidents and consequent thoughts, which were, in fact,
more present to her mind at such times than her actual life itself.
Yet notwithstanding this “possession” (as it were), those who
survive, of her daily and household companions, are clear in their
testimony, that never was the claim of any duty, never was the call
of another for help, neglected for an instant. It had become
necessary to give Tabby—now nearly eighty years of age-the
assistance of a girl. Tabby relinquished any of her work with
jealous reluctance, and could not bear to be reminded, though ever
so delicately, that the acuteness of her senses was dulled by age.
The other servant might not interfere with what she chose to
consider her exclusive work. Among other things, she reserved to
herself the right of peeling the potatoes for dinner; but as she
was growing blind, she often left in those black specks, which we
in the North call the “eyes” of the potato. Miss Brontë was too
dainty a housekeeper to put up with this; yet she could not bear to
hurt the faithful old servant, by bidding the younger maiden go
over the potatoes again, and so reminding Tabby that her work was
less effectual than formerly. Accordingly she would steal into the
kitchen, and quietly carry off the bowl of vegetables, without
Tabby’s being aware, and breaking off in the full flow of interest
and inspiration in her writing, carefully cut out the specks in the
potatoes, and noiselessly carry them back to their place. This
little proceeding may show how orderly and fully she accomplished
her duties, even at those times when the “possession” was upon
her.
Any one who has studied her writings,—whether in
print or in her letters; any one who has enjoyed the rare privilege
of listening to her talk, must have noticed her singular felicity
in the choice of words. She herself, in writing her books, was
solicitous on this point. One set of words was the truthful mirror
of her thoughts; no others, however apparently identical in
meaning, would do. She had that strong practical regard for the
simple holy truth of expression, which Mr. Trench1 has
enforced, as a duty too often neglected. She would wait patiently
searching for the right term, until it presented itself to her. It
might be provincial, it might be derived from the Latin; so that it
accurately represented her idea, she did not mind whence it came;
but this care makes her style present the finish of a piece of
mosaic. Each component part, however small, has been dropped into
the right place. She never wrote down a sentence until she clearly
understood what she wanted to say, had deliberately chosen the
words, and arranged them in their right order. Hence it comes that,
in the scraps of paper covered with her pencil writing which I have
seen, there will occasionally be a sentence scored out, but seldom,
if ever, a word or an expression. She wrote on these bits of paper
in a minute hand, holding each against a piece of board, such as is
used in binding books, for a desk. This plan was necessary for one
so short-sighted as she was; and, besides, it enabled her to use
pencil and paper, as she sat near the fire in the twilight hours,
or if (as was too often the case) she was wakeful for hours in the
night. Her finished manuscripts were copied from these pencil
scraps, in clear, legible, delicate traced writing, almost as easy
to read as print.
The sisters retained the old habit, which was begun
in their aunt’s life-time, of putting away their work at nine
o’clock, and beginning their study, pacing up and down the sitting
room. At this time, they talked over the stories they were engaged
upon, and described their plots. Once or twice a week, each read to
the others what she had written, and heard what they had to say
about it. Charlotte told me, that the remarks made had seldom any
effect in inducing her to alter her work, so possessed was she with
the feeling that she had described reality; but the readings were
of great and stirring interest to all, taking them out of the
gnawing pressure of daily-recurring cares, and setting them in a
free place. It was on one of these occasions, that Charlotte
determined to make her heroine plain, small, and unattractive, in
defiance of the accepted canon.
The writer of the beautiful obituary article on
“the death of Currer Bell,”2 most
likely learnt from herself what is there stated, and which I will
take the liberty of quoting, about Jane Eyre.
“She once told her sisters that they were
wrong-even morally wrong—in making their heroines beautiful as a
matter of course. They replied that it was impossible to make a
heroine interesting on any other terms. Her answer was, ‘I will
prove to you that you are wrong; I will show you a heroine as plain
and as small as myself, who shall be as interesting as any of
yours.’ Hence ‘Jane Eyre,’ said she in telling the anecdote: ‘but
she is not myself, any further than that.’ As the work went on, the
interest deepened to the writer. When she came to ‘Thornfield’ she
could not stop. Being short-sighted to excess, she wrote in little
square paper-books, held close to her eyes, and (the first copy) in
pencil. On she went, writing incessantly for three weeks; by which
time she had carried her heroine away from Thornfield, and was
herself in a fever which compelled her to pause.”
This is all, I believe, which can now be told
respecting the conception and composition of this wonderful book,
which was, however, only at its commencement when Miss Brontë
returned with her father to Haworth, after their anxious expedition
to Manchester.
They arrived at home about the end of September.
Mr. Brontë was daily gaining strength, but he was still forbidden
to exercise his sight much. Things had gone on more comfortably
while she was away than Charlotte had dared to hope, and she
expresses herself thankful for the good ensured and the evil spared
during her absence.
Soon after this some proposal, of which I have not
been able to gain a clear account, was again mooted for Miss
Brontë’s opening a school at some place distant from Haworth. It
elicited the following fragment of a characteristic reply:—
“Leave home!—I shall neither be able to find place
nor employment, perhaps, too, I shall be quite past the prime of
life, my faculties will be rusted, and my few acquirements in a
great measure forgotten. These ideas sting me keenly sometimes;
but, whenever I consult my conscience, it affirms that I am doing
right in staying at home, and bitter are its upbraidings when I
yield to an eager desire for release. I could hardly expect success
if I were to err against such warnings. I should like to hear from
you again soon. Bring to the point, and make him give you a clear,
not a vague, account of what pupils he really could promise; people
often think they can do great things in that way till they have
tried; but getting pupils is unlike getting any other sort of
goods.”
Whatever might be the nature and extent of this
negotiation, the end of it was that Charlotte adhered to the
decision of her conscience, which bade her remain at home, as long
as her presence could cheer or comfort those who were in distress,
or had the slightest influence over him who was the cause of it.
The next extract gives us a glimpse into the cares of that home. It
is from a letter dated December 15th.
“I hope you are not frozen up; the cold here is
dreadful. I do not remember such a series of North-Pole days.
England might really have taken a slide up into the Arctic Zone;
the sky looks like ice; the earth is frozen; the wind is as keen as
a two edged blade. We have all had severe colds and coughs in
consequence of the weather. Poor Anne has suffered greatly from
asthma, but is now, we are glad to say, rather better. She had two
nights last week when her cough and difficulty of breathing were
painful indeed to hear and witness, and must have been most
distressing to suffer; she bore it, as she bears all affliction,
without one complaint, only sighing now and then when nearly worn
out. She has an extraordinary heroism of endurance. I admire, but I
certainly could not imitate her.” ... “You say I am to ‘tell you
plenty.’ What would you have me say? Nothing happens at Haworth;
nothing, at least, of a pleasant kind. One little incident occurred
about a week ago, to sting us to life; but if it gives no more
pleasure for you to hear, than it did for us to witness, you will
scarcely thank me for adverting to it. It was merely the arrival of
a Sheriff ’s officer on a visit to B., inviting him either to pay
his debts or take a trip to York. Of course his debts had to be
paid. It is not agreeable to lose money, time after time, in this
way; but where is the use of dwelling on such subjects? It will
make him no better.”
“December 28th.
“I feel as if it was almost a farce to sit down and
write to you now, with nothing to say worth listening to; and,
indeed, if it were not for two reasons, I should put off the
business at least a fortnight hence. The first reason is, I want
another letter from you, for your letters are interesting, they
have something in them; some results of experience and observation;
one receives them with pleasure, and reads them with relish; and
these letters I cannot expect to get, unless I reply to them. I
wish the correspondence could be managed so as to be all on one
side. The second reason is derived from a remark in your last, that
you felt lonely, something as I was at Brussels, and that
consequently you had a peculiar desire to hear from old
acquaintance. I can understand and sympathize with this. I remember
the shortest note was a treat to me, when I was at the above-named
place; therefore I write. I have also a third reason: it is a
haunting terror lest you should imagine I forget you—that my regard
cools with absence. It is not in my nature to forget your nature;
though, I dare say, I should spit fire and explode sometimes, if we
lived together continually; and you, too, would get angry, and then
we should get reconciled and jog on as before. Do you ever get
dissatisfied with your own temper when you are long fixed to one
place, in one scene, subject to one monotonous species of annoyance
? I do: I am now in that unenviable frame of mind; my humour, I
think, is too soon overthrown, too sore, too demonstrative and
vehement. I almost long for some of the uniform serenity you
describe in Mrs.—’s disposition; or, at least, I would fain have
her power of self-control and concealment; but I would not take her
artificial habits and ideas along with her composure. After all, I
should prefer being as I am.... You do right not to be annoyed at
any maxims of conventionality you meet with. Regard all new ways in
the light of fresh experience for you: if you see any honey gather
it.” ... “I don’t, after all, consider that we ought to despise
every thing we see in the world, merely because it is not what we
are accustomed to. I suspect, on the contrary, that there are not
unfrequently substantial reasons underneath for customs that appear
to us absurd; and if I were ever again to find myself amongst
strangers, I should be solicitous to examine before I condemned.
Indiscriminating irony and fault-finding are just sumphishness, and
that is all. Anne is now much better, but papa has been for near a
fortnight far from well with the influenza; he has at times a most
distressing cough, and his spirits are much depressed.”
So ended the year 1846.