Victorians! discussion

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The Life of Charlotte Brontë
Biographies and Non-fiction
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Life of C Brontë - Section 1
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Followed this way, the text does have the feel of a novel. I get a sense of the traveler's heaviness and need to be at this spot.

That's a really good point, Linda, and I agree it does sound just like a pilgrimage. Gaskell would have been one of the first of the millions who were to follow her in making the trip to Haworth to see the Brontë home and, of course, the graves.
I also felt the opening chapter was almost cinematographic; one of those opening scenes which begins with a general view of the surrounding area and then pans around and zooms in, taking in more detail until we arrive at the church and the memorial tablets. The abrupt ending with the final addition to the "mournful list" does convey grief to me, the sense that an unfillable void has been left behind.


I agree! The language used to describe places, events, and people is no different than in a novel, and while reading, I have to remind myself that this is not a fictional story.
What I thought most striking in these first chapters is the depiction of Cowan Bridge School. It seems much worse, to me, than Lowood in Jane Eyre. How dreadful, it must have been a horrible time for Charlotte.
Description of Haworth, society, family, early years and Juvenilia.
Many critics have said that this biography reads like a novel; was this your impression in these opening chapters?
What were your reactions to the first chapter and its rather melancholy ending?
Gaskell uses chapter two to describe the people and the place where Charlotte grew up; how does this deepen your appreciation of her character and her novels?
How is her early life reflected in her novels?