This is a blog about the Bronte Sisters, Charlotte, Emily and Anne. And their father Patrick, their mother Maria and their brother Branwell. About their pets, their friends, the parsonage (their house), Haworth the town in which they lived, the moors they loved so much, the Victorian era in which they lived.
zaterdag 30 juli 2011
donderdag 28 juli 2011
woensdag 27 juli 2011
Emily Bronte
I love the weblog Abigails Ateliers. On this weblog you can find great information about the Bronte sisters. For instance information about Emily on: Abigails Ateliers will-the-real-emily-bronte-please-stand-up
We can be sure that Emily had dark brown hair as it can be seen in the mourning jewelry at the parsonage,she is described by eye witnesses as having beautiful dark brown hair, she seems to have held it up in her adult years with a tall comb similar to those still used in spain, though smaller. In her teenage years she wore it in a tight frizz that was very unbecoming.
She is also described as having ” very beautiful eyes of a hazel colour, (kind kindling eyes is the expression used by contemporaries) aquiline nose and large expressive prominent mouth, (Mrs Robinson’s biography)
we know Emily was tall both for the age and by comparison with the rest of her family, her coffin was 5 ,7 inches ,,she would have been a head higher than Charlotte who was 4, 9 and possibly taller than even Branwell. Read more on the weblog from Lyn Marie Cunliffe, the owner of the blog .
On this weblog are really beautiful pictures of the costumes Lyn Marie Cunliffe, is making. I have permission to show pictures. I really am happy with it, because it gives such a good idea about the Brontes in their surroundings, like the parsonage and the moors.
Lyn Marie Cunliffe is writing about this dress:
I made the dress above and it took a couple of weeks to make and that’s constant all day hand sewing, most of the time was taken sewing and smocking the sleeves. It also took me much longer to make the 1830s gigot sleeved dress than a plain 1840s dress. So if Emily had not cared about clothes, I doubt she would have gone to the effort of making the elaborate sleeves. She was almost certainly less tidy in her dress than the other sisters and this is no doubt partly inclination but also partly the needs of housework inside and comfort on the moors.
dinsdag 26 juli 2011
maandag 25 juli 2011
Faith and Emily Bronte II
On one of the social media I found a question about Emily Bronte. The question: ""What kind of a believe did Emily had? Was she a pagan? I am going to search for an answer.
What is paganism? www.nl.paganfederation.org
Paganism is a religion of nature, in other words Pagans revere Nature. Pagans see the divine as immanent in the whole of life and the universe; in every tree, plant, animal and object, man and woman and in the dark side of life as much as in the light. Pagans live their lives attuned to the cycles of Nature, the seasons, life and death. http://www.crystalinks.com/paganism.html
Brontë claims she stood in the glow of heaven and the 'glare' of hell and forged her own path between 'scraph's song and demon's groan'. Only 'thy soul alone' can know the truth, and her appeal to 'My thoughtful Comforter' is not an appeal to God, but to her enigmatic male muse which governs her spiritual belief. He is epitomised by the life-giving 'soft air' and 'thawwind melting quietly' and lovingly around her. She is grateful that her 'visitants' allow her 'savage heart' to grow 'meek' and allow her to conform to the role she is forced to play within an ordered Christian and patriarchal system. Her poetry focuses on the betrayals of mind and body, as she seeks to find answers to questions that her society does not permit her to ask. Brontë's religious symbolism and unique spirituality show a form of pantheistic atheism, although she continued to attend a church 'whilst sitting as motionless as a statue' and it seems that this careful passivity is juxtaposed with uncontained anger and frustrated passions (Chitham, p. 156).
Brontë's male muse is intrinsically linked to the moors and attached to the eastern wind blowing across them. The wind is tied to the spiritual essence of a god. Her sensual relationship with her muse appears to have been 'threatening as well as inspiring' and enveloped her poetry with deep longing and a desire for fulfilment (Victorian Women Poets, p. 89). Brontë's spiritual belief and secular spiritualism is symbolised by her love of nature and typified by 'shadows of the dead' which she sees around her.
Gilbert and Gubar see Emily Brontë's poetry and beliefs as threatening the rigidly hierarchical state of heaven and hell, and Brontë believed that the dead remained on the earth and moved around her (Gilbert & Gubar, p. 255). She also saw dead friends and family watching her at night, and this dream-like sleepy other reality has some similarities with Christina Rossetti's 'soul-sleep' (Victorian Women Poets, p. 176).
Read on: .http://www.victorianweb.org/authors/bronte/ebronte
Read on: .http://www.victorianweb.org/authors/bronte/ebronte
This is the first time I read:
- dead friends and family watching her at night..................... where comes this idea from??????
- Emily Brontë clung to her distinctly male identity. Brontë's alter ego was a masculine one.I never thought of Emily and a masculine alter ego.......................
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"... and Hareton is thrown in by the way in sheer opulence of imagination. It is not insisted on. Redemption is not the keynote of ""Wuthering Heights"". The moral problem never entered into Emily Bronte's head. You may call her what you will--Pagan, pantheist, transcendentalist mystic and worshipper of earth, she slips from all your formulas. She reveals a point of view above good and evil. Hers is an attitude of tolerance that is only not tenderness because her acceptance ..."
The Three Brontes • May Sinclair http://books.google.nl/books The Three Brontes by May Sinclairs
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A pagan above all she was: the centuries of revelation behind her seem not to have won a glance of question or of recognition; Christianity, taking its place with "the thousand creeds that move men's hearts", must have been found with them "unutterably vain", nor does she even momentarily seem to turn from the sin and suffering of humanity to the picture of a suffering but sinless God. Indeed the religion of meditation and sacrament and self-surrender could never have won a possible assent from one who shunned so resolutely the common pledges and submissions of daily life. Only in [362] her infinite forbearance with, and compassion for the victims of weakness and vanity and passion, does she touch that eternally uplifted figure which hangs between earth and heaven to link inseparably the human with the divine. We cannot but remember that it was not Charlotte, but the pagan Emily, who to the last protected and forgave the sorry wreck who, once the pride, had come to be the terror of their home. It was she who achieved his epitaph wherein we read, almost amazed, the plea for weakness penned by one who so accounted strength:
zondag 24 juli 2011
Faith and Emily Bronte I
Emily Bronte was not a typical Victorian woman. She was very reclusive and didn’t have much interest in the outside world. She had pastimes that weren’t proper for women during those times and her views on religion were not what you would expect from a clergyman’s daughter. And, she was in possession of a wonderful imagination that wouldn’t quit.
Emily enjoyed walking on the moors and loved animals of all kinds. She drew pleasure from watching the seasons change. A neighbour of the Bronte’s claimed that after Emily returned one night from a walk, her face was lit “with the divine light of happiness”.
The personal tone in 'My Comforter' describes the thoughts she has 'concealed' within her soul in the 'light that lies hid from men' and its 'gentle ray' cannot be controlled by a patriarchal system or by a male God (Victorian Woman Poets, p. 209). She sees Christians as 'wretches', 'howling' empty praise in a 'Brotherhood of misery' and their 'madness daily maddening' her. Brontë claims she stood in the glow of heaven and the 'glare' of hell and forged her own path between 'scraph's song and demon's groan'. Only 'thy soul alone' can know the truth, and her appeal to 'My thoughtful Comforter' is not an appeal to God, but to her enigmatic male muse which governs her spiritual belief. He is epitomised by the life-giving 'soft air' and 'thawwind melting quietly' and lovingly around her. She is grateful that her 'visitants' allow her 'savage heart' to grow 'meek' and allow her to conform to the role she is forced to play within an ordered Christian and patriarchal system. poetry focuses on the betrayals of mind and body, as she seeks to find answers to questions that her society does not permit her to ask. Brontë's religious symbolism and unique spirituality show a form of pantheistic atheism, although she continued to attend a church 'whilst sitting as motionless as a statue' and it seems that this careful passivity is juxtaposed with uncontained anger and frustrated passions (Chitham, p. 156). Read on: http://www.victorianweb.bronte
http://www.erudit.org/
http://www.erudit.org/
Emily Brontë as a Mystic
O God within my breast
Almighty ever-present Deity
Life, that in me hast rest
As I Undying Life, have power in Thee!...
With wide-embracing love
Thy spirit animates eternal years
Pervades and broods above,
Changes, sustains, dissolves, creates and rears
Though Earth and moon were gone
And suns and universes ceased to be
And thou wert left alone
Every Existence would exist in thee
studymore The Poems of Emily Bronte