Why Anne Brontë didn’t go to Brussels and why it matters was the title of Samantha Ellis’s eagerly awaited talk to our group, which finally took place on 20 April. Afterwards, Samantha tweeted about the irony of giving a talk about Anne not coming to Brussels while being unable herself to come to Brussels. She said she was sad not to be on a Eurostar eating ‘proper chocolate’ as she headed home.
Samantha was originally billed to speak to us in April last year, Anne’s bicentenary year, when she was busy promoting her book Take Courage. Then Covid struck, the lockdown began and her visit to Brussels was put on hold. A year on, Covid is still with us and Samantha’s talk had to be held virtually. But her speaking style works well on Zoom. Her talk was just like her book – personal, entertaining, erudite, packed with anecdotes and facts.
She told us how her interest in Anne started in the Parsonage library, holding a letter Anne wrote shortly before she died. The letter makes it clear she hadn’t spent her life ‘preparing for an early death’ as her sister Charlotte said. She wanted to live and ‘do some good in the world before I leave it. I have many schemes in my head …’
Interesting points were raised in the
question-and-answer session afterwards. If Anne had gone to Brussels instead of
Emily, would she have tempered Charlotte’s attachment to Monsieur Heger which,
like Branwell’s infatuation for Mrs. Robinson, turned into an obsession? Should/can
biographers be objective? Samantha said her book about Anne doesn’t set out to
be cool and unemotional. How far was Anne Brontë a ‘feminist’ and how
appropriate is it to apply the term to a woman of her time? Was Villette
influenced by Anne’s account of her teaching experiences? Samantha talked about
the way the Brontës’ novels speak to each other and re-write one another’s heroes
and heroines; Arthur Huntingdon in The Tenant of Wildfell Hall is a very
different picture of a rake from Charlotte’s portrait of Mr. Rochester.
It would have been wonderful to have met Samantha in the flesh, had a drink with her in Grand’Place and made sure she had plenty of chocolate for her return journey. In the end, she didn’t come to Brussels – but it didn’t matter too much; we had a great time with her on Zoom.
Helen MacEwan
No comments:
Post a Comment