York Castle Museum Victorian

Anne And Emily Brontë’s ‘Long Journey’

We saw earlier this week how June 29th was a momentous day for Charlotte Brontë, as it was the date on which she was baptised and married, with a 38 year gap in between. Unfortunately many of the exact dates in the Brontë story are unknown, so that we don’t know, for example, the exact date of birth of the eldest Brontë sibling Maria Brontë, nor the joint publication date of ‘Wuthering Heights’ and ‘Agnes Grey’.

One event we do know the exact date of, however, happened on June 30th 1845 – it was a journey to York undertaken by Emily and Anne Brontë, and the two sisters viewed it rather differently, as can be seen in references to it, and absences of references to it, within their individual diary papers of that year.

The huge, imposing York Minster
The majestic York Minster would have been visited by Anne and Emily in 1845

There are six diary papers in existence, the 1834 and 1837 papers are written jointly by Emily and Anne, whilst in 1841 and 1845 they each write one separately, with the intention that they are opened on Emily’s birthday three or four years later. In her 1845 diary paper, dated 30th July (her 27th birthday) she writes that the papers are intended to be opened in 1848, but we have no new diary papers for that year – they could now be lost, or it could be an external factor such as Branwell’s deteriorating health prevented them from ever being penned.

Emily also writes:

‘Anne and I went on our first long journey by ourselves together – leaving home on the 30th of June – Monday sleeping at York – returning to Keighley Tuesday evening, sleeping there and walking home on Wednesday morning – though the weather was broken, we enjoyed ourselves very much except during a few hours at Bradford and during our excursion we were Ronald Macelgin, Henry Angorra, Juliet Angusteena, Roseabelle, Ella and Julian Egramont, Catherine Navarre and Cordelia Fitzaphnold escaping from the palace of instruction to join the Royalists who are hard driven at present by the victorious Republicans. The Gondals still flourish bright as ever. I am at present writing a work on the First Wars – Anne has been writing some articles on this and a book by Henry Sophona. We intend sticking firm by the rascals as long as they delight us which I am glad to say they do at present.’

This is a very upbeat recollection of a happy few days by Emily, spent in the company of the sister she loved more than anything in the world. It is also in contrast to the image many have of Emily as being relentlessly dour, and in support of a cheerful Emily we also have Ellen Nussey’s account of how she liked to play tricks on people and then laugh uproariously.

York Castle Museum Victorian Street
York Castle Museum’s recreation of a Victorian Street (see also the header image)

Nevertheless, questions arise from Emily’s account – what was the problem with Bradford for example, and is Anne really still obsessed with the land of Gondal, invented in their youth and which the characters named in the above diary paper all populated, as Emily so plainly is? Anne’s corresponding diary paper doesn’t mention the expedition at all, and it seems that she is still suffering after escaping an all too real ‘palace of instruction’. Here is Anne Brontë’s account of that summer:

‘This is a dismal cloudy wet evening, we have had so far a very cold wet summer… The Gondals are in general not in first rate playing condition… I for my part cannot well be flatter or older in mind than I am now. Hoping for the best I conclude, Anne Brontë.’

Why is Anne so despondent here? Simply because June, the month of the trip to York with Emily, also saw Anne resign her post as governess to the Robinson family of Thorp Green Hall, after more than five years of excellent service to them. In this same 1845 paper, Anne hints why she left:

‘I was then at Thorp Green and now I am only just escaped from it. I was wishing to leave then and if I had known that I had four years longer to stay how wretched I should have been too. I was writing my fourth volume of Sophala, but during my stay I have had some very unpleasant and undreamt of experience of human nature.’

Undoubtedly, Anne is at least partly here hinting at flirtations, if not necessarily a full blown love affair, between her mistress Lydia Robinson and Branwell, whom she had secured a job there in 1843. Anne was also doubtless ruing that she would not see Scarborough that summer, or as far as she knew ever again, the east coast resort she loved and that she usually travelled to in July with the Robinson family.

This was a time of transition for Anne Brontë, but with the ever faithful and ever loving Emily Brontë by her side to cheer her up, it would eventually become an incredibly creative one. The girls, with older sister Charlotte, were about to embark upon writing some of the greatest books the world has ever seen.

One thought on “Anne And Emily Brontë’s ‘Long Journey’”

  1. Like you I am fascinated by the Brontes…still working on a WH commentary/analysis I began in January 2021, only weeks before my dearest wife died…so reading of Hindley’s anguish and Heathcliff’s 20 years’ yearning…!
    I have paused in the text where he and Cathy clash over Isabella…

    The ultimate tragedy for this period of the Bronte family has no bearing on the writing of the novel for it was completed two years earlier but the sense of tragedy overhanging the Brontes has obscured what followed and clarity is worth re-stating. Branwell’s long decline, with his illness and death from tuberculosis that September 28th 1848, had exposed his family to bacterial droplet infection from his spitting, coughing and sneezing even from his speaking. Somehow Charlotte and their father were unaffected but there can be little doubt that the Bronte children, like most of the world’s population, were genetically susceptible to the tuberculosis bacterium: five of the six died from it. Emily, stubborn to the last, died only months later in December from the same illness and soon after the signs were all too evident in Anne who died in May. Even here the family tragedy is not finished for the last of them, Charlotte, who found such unexpected happiness in her marriage to their father’s curate, Arthur Bell Nicholls, did not survive her marriage and pregnancy for long, for she died nine months later in March 1858 from the complications of morning-sickness, organ collapse from malnutrition: she was the only Bronte child not to die from tuberculosis.
    What remains for these three Brontes, Emily, Anne and Charlotte is more than most of us can ever hope to achieve, the world-wide acclaim of their published poems and novels and with them enduring fame.
    This is said in the noble spirit of “Dulce et Decorum est pro Patria Mori”; it might however be more kindly asked if many years of life, happy fulfilled life with those who loved them, might not have been wished for each of these Brontes, and their siblings, rather than their names in print. It was otherwise.

    Many thanks again for the fascinating insights

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