Charlotte Brontë was born in 1816 in Yorkshire. Her father was an Anglican clergyman who was very strict with his 6 children. After his wife and two of his children died, an aunt helped him raise his three daughters Charlotte, Anne, Emily and his son Branwell. Charlotte and Emily were sent to Clergy Daughters' school in Lancashire. It was not a pleasant place for the girls and may have inspired Charlotte when she imagined the Lowood Institution in her novel Jane Eyre. The girls went back home after a year and started writing romantic stories and reading them to each other. In 1831, Charlotte was sent to another school where she made some long-lasting friends. She went back home for a short period before returning to her school as a teacher. Charlotte refused two marriage proposals and so had to start working again to support herself and help her family. She became a governess and then planned on opening a school with one of her sisters. Their aunt agreed to finance this project. The two sisters went to Belgium to improve their French and learn some German with a man named Héger. Charlotte became quite fond of him but he was married and did not encourage her. She went back home but her school project failed.
The three sisters then realised they had all been writing and in 1846 published a volume of poetry under a pseudonym. After that, they tried to have their novels published : Anne's Agnes Grey, Emily's Wuthering Heights were accepted for publication but Charlotte's The Professor was refused. She quickly finished another novel Jane Eyre : An Autobiography. It came out in 1847 and was an immediate success. Of course, all three sisters published under pseudonyms because in Charlotte's own words : "we did not like to declare ourselves women because – without at that time suspecting that our mode of writing and thinking was not what is called 'feminine' – we had a vague impression that authoresses are liable to be looked on with prejudice".
However, the years that followed were extremely difficult : Charlotte's brother Branwell died in September 1848, Emily in December and Anne in May 1849.
Charlotte continued writing and became acquainted with other writers : notably William Makepeace Thackeray and Elizabeth Gaskell, who wrote the very first biography of Charlotte Brontë. A critic in The Guardian describes this book as " a loving defence of the value and power of women’s writing; […] revolutionary […] a testament to the constraints placed on female writers and the ways they have found to move beyond them."
Charlotte dedicated the second edition of Jane Eyre to Thackeray : " Finally, I have alluded to Mr. Thackeray, because to him—if he will accept the tribute of a total stranger—I have dedicated this second edition of Jane Eyre." In a letter to a friend, Thackeray wrote : " I don't know why I tell you this but that I have been exceedingly moved & pleased by Jane Eyre."
Charlotte married her father's curate in 1854 and died in 1855.
VOCABULARY
clergyman : ecclésiastique
to raise : élever
long-lasting : de longue durée
governess : gouvernante
to improve : améliorer
to be fond of : éprouver de l'affection pour
to fail : échouer
Wuthering Heights : Les Hauts de Hurlevent
liable : susceptible
to be looked on with prejudice : être victime de préjugés
to become acquainted with : faire la connaissance de
notably : notamment
constraints : contraintes
to move beyond : dépasser
to allude : faire allusion
tribute : hommage
a stranger : un(e) inconnu(e)
exceedingly : extrèmement
moved : ému
curate : vicaire