Charlotte Bronte

Charlotte Bronte, the writer of Jane Eyre, was born in the north of England in 1816. She was the third of six children. Her mother’s sister, Elizabeth, after the children because Charlotte’s mother had died when she was five. When their father was at work, Charlotte helped her aunt to look after her younger sisters in the quiet village where they lived. In their free time, Charlotte, her brother Branwell and her sisters Emily and Anne wrote and stories. From 1835 to 1838, Charlotte was a school teacher. Then, in 1839, she worked as a to a number of families. In 1842, Charlotte travelled to Europe to teach English, but she was and returned to England the following year. In 1846, Charlotte wrote a collection of poems with her sisters Emily and Anne. of using their real names, they called themselves Currer, Ellis and Acton Bell. These could be men’s or women’s names, and the sisters chose them to hide the fact that they wear women. At that time in England, people thought that women should not write books and did not take their work . The people who read Charlotte’s novels were not sure whether she was a man or a woman. By the year of 1850, Charlotte’s brother and sisters had all died and Charlotte and her father lived alone together. Because her novel Jane Eyre was so , Charlotte sometimes visited London and made contact with other writers. Soon, everyone realized that Charlotte was a woman and learnt that, like her Jane, she was a very strong, clever woman. Charlotte continued to look after her father and in 1854, married a man who worked with her father. , in 1855, at the age of 38, Charlotte Bronte died.

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