Looking at secular books: the Brontes

Sarah Allen  |  Features  |  Secular Shelf Life
Date posted:  1 May 2007
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The Brontes are never far away from our screens. Alongside Dickens, George Eliot and Austen, the works of these extraordinary three sisters are English Classics with a capital C. Directors tend to concentrate on the petticoats and passion, unrequited love and madwomen in attics, but on rereading a few of these stories, I’ve been struck by how central Christianity is to each of them.

It is not surprising really. William Grimshaw, the hugely passionate and effective curate of Haworth only died in 1763 (do read Faith Cook’s brilliant biography), and Patrick Bronte, father of Emily, Anne and Charlotte, took up the job in 1820. Patrick has been called an evangelical and their aunt, who looked after the family when their mother died, was known for her ‘Wesleyan tendencies’. This influence, combined with the romanticism of the period, the wild beauty of the moors and repeated bereavement in the family go a long way to explaining the tensions found within the Brontes’ works.

Lawful wife

In Jane Eyre, we see two examples of evangelical clergymen: Mr. Brocklehurst is a repellent hypocrite, and St. John Rivers, an earnest man who represses himself and oppresses others. But, contrary to what some critics would have us believe, Charlotte Bronte is far from rejecting an evangelical belief outright. Throughout the novel, Charlotte Bronte wrestles with what it means to be a Christian, what it means to forgive and to serve, and to deal with injustice. The ending, in which Rochester professes faith and the last words of Revelation are quoted, is read by some as an ironic rejection of the pious life, or as a sop to conventional readers, but I think it can be taken to sum up Jane’s satisfaction in her final role, as lawful wife of Rochester. Whether there is more law than grace here, more the ‘mighty spirit’ she senses than the reality of Christ, remains open to question. Do reread this book and think it out for yourself!

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