zaterdag 24 augustus 2013

Today is my Birthday


And here, two of my presents!!!!!!
 
At Home with the Brontes: The History of Haworth Parsonage & Its Occupants.   Ann Dinsdale     
 
Haworth Parsonage is the world-famous home of the Brontes. Crowds of tourists are drawn to Haworth every year to discover what inspired Anne, Charlotte and Emily. Ann Dinsdale explores their lives there, the impact of the sisters' home on their writing, and their lasting legacy. However, the Parsonage has also been home to several other families. This book begins with the early history of the house and those who lived there before the arrival of the Brontes. After Patrick Bronte's death in 1861 the Parsonage became home to four of his successors before being purchased by the Bronte Society in 1928. Thereafter, it became home to four museum custodians and their families. All of these later occupants witnessed the development of tourism in Haworth, which had begun in Mr Bronte's own lifetime, and experienced the trials and tribulations of living in a literary shrine. Using a variety of sources, mostly unpublished, Ann Dinsdale also tells their stories.
 
In the Footsteps of the Brontes Mark Davis , Ann Dinsdale    
 
The lives and works of the celebrated Bronte family are so ingrained in our cultural psyche that we think we know them inside out - but walking in the footsteps of the literary greats and their characters offers a new perspective on their work. Our journey begins in Cambridge with the arrival of the young Patrick Bronte and follows his family's fortunes as they grow up in their home village of Haworth. We see the wild moorland locations that would inspire the haunting Wuthering Heights and the dour schools they attended that would later feature in Jane Eyre. We visit the homes of family and friends that provided the settings for many of their novels and travel with them across the industrial West Riding to York and the coast. This spectacular collection of photographs old and new explores the people and places that the brilliant Brontes knew and loved.

dinsdag 20 augustus 2013

Toy Lion and cup and saucer from a children's tea-set

 
From the Treasure Trove: Toy Lion. This carved wooden toy was once played with by the Bronte children and was donated to the Museum in 1928, when the Bronte Society acquired the Parsonage.
It's currently on display in our 'Heaven is a Home' exhibition in the Bonnell Room.

facebook/Bronte-Parsonage-Museum


Cup and saucer from a children's tea-set belonging to Charlotte Brontë. bronte./heaven-is-a-home/

maandag 19 augustus 2013

Chair and sofa

 
From the Treasure Trove: Branwell's chair. This is the chair Branwell favoured when socialising in the Black Bull. The pub claims to have THE chair, but we're pretty sure ours is the real one!
 

Emily supposedly died on this sofa because she refused to let anyone look after her and wouldn't go to bed.

zondag 18 augustus 2013

Brontë Scholars

Lifting the Veil on the Brontë Juvenilia: A Study of the Gondal Saga and Wuthering Heights
Tara, Emily
Advisor: Garcha, Amanpal; Hannibal, Hamlin
Issue Date: 2013-05
The Ohio State University. Department of English Undergraduate Research Theses; 2013

In 1848, before her death, Emily Brontë completed a novel that has transcended time and has become a staple of classic Victorian literature; that novel is Wuthering Heights. While many have read or have heard of this novel, the origination of the tale has been left to speculation and uncertainty. I hope to uncover some of the truth behind the novel's origination by comparing its plot, themes and characters to Emily's juvenilia poetry. The Gondal poetry, as it has come to be called, gives a greater insight into the framework for the novel, and through careful explication of specific passages, can be seen as a precursor to the popular gothic novel. While Wuthering Heights is a fictional story, I will give details that will explain that through studying the novel in relation to the juvenilia, it is more than possible that her writing contains elements of her personal life, environment and viewpoints.
Brontë Scholars (III)