Early Life
Writer Charlotte Brontë was born on April 21, 1816, in
Thornton, Yorkshire, England. Said to be the most dominant and ambitious of the
Brontës, Charlotte was raised in a strict Anglican home by her clergyman father
and a religious aunt after her mother and two eldest siblings died. She and her
sister Emily attended the Clergy Daughter's School at Cowan Bridge, but were
largely educated at home. Though she tried to earn a living as both a governess
and a teacher, Brontë missed her sisters and eventually returned home. Writer
Charlotte Brontë was born on April 21, 1816, in Thornton, Yorkshire, England.
Said to be the most dominant and ambitious of the Brontës, Charlotte was raised
in a strict Anglican home by her clergyman father and a religious aunt after
her mother and two eldest siblings died. She and her sister Emily attended the
Clergy Daughter's School at Cowan Bridge, but were largely educated at home.
Though she tried to earn a living as both a governess and a teacher, Brontë
missed her sisters and eventually returned home.
At home Brontë acted as "the motherly friend and guardian of
her younger sisters". Brontë wrote her first known poem at the age of
13 in 1829, and was to go on to write more than 200 poems in the course of her
life. Many of her poems were "published" in their homemade
magazine Branwell's Blackwood's Magazine, and concerned the fictional
Glass Town Confederacy. She and her surviving siblings — Branwell, Emily
and Anne – created their own fictional worlds, and began chronicling the
lives and struggles of the inhabitants of their imaginary kingdoms. Charlotte
and Branwell wrote Byronic stories about their jointly
imagined country, Angria, and Emily and Anne wrote articles and poems about Gondal. The sagas they created were
episodic and elaborate, and they exist in incomplete manuscripts, some of which
have been published as juvenilia. They provided them with an obsessive interest
during childhood and early adolescence, which prepared them for literary
vocations in adulthood.

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