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Chapter1: Introduction

Background of Study

Charlotte Bronte a novelist belongs to early Victorian Age, the age which is undoubtedly
considered as the most glorious epoch in the history and English literature. It was an age of
material affluence, democratic heifers, social unrest, educational expansion humanitarianism
idealism and imperialism most importantly it was the age of great literary output, especially
the age of great prose and novel.

The English novels flowered and reached its acme during Victorian Age. The novels of this
age presented pictures of contemporary life and society and were humorous and sentimental.
Novelists like Charles Dickens, W. M. Thackeray, George Eliot, George Meredith, Thomas
Hardy, Mrs. Elisabeth Gaskell, Anthony Trollope and the Bronte Sisters, etc. contributed in
different ways to enrich the English novels. It Diners shone as the novelist of social reform
championing the cause of poor and oppressed, George Eliot attempted to depict the inner
conflict of the soul which governed human action. W.M.Thackeray was the first to use the
novel for satiric purposed to express conscious eroticism of life; Thomas Hardy raised the
regional novel to the level of universal there by giving it a philosophical appeal. It Anthony
Trollope and Mrs. Gaskell were typical victorious adapting to the contemporary institutional
values; the Bronte sisters proved to be truly new visionary foraging their romantic view of
life which concerned itself with paring of the human soul. George Eliot and Meredith also
represent the intrinsic struggle of human but when it comes to pausing the deeper anguish of
soul they were incomparable to Charlotte Bronte and her two other sisters named Emily
Bronte and Anne Bronte. The introduction of passionate love wandered souls is the gift of
Charlotte and Emily Bronte to the world of novels.

The sequestered life of charlotte Bronte and her sisters passed entirely as the personage in
the moorland of Haworth in Yorkshire, London is one of the strongest and most moving
accounts in literary biography. It is filled with struggles and disappointment they faced in
their personal life but were certainly outshined by the genius and talent they possessed in
storytelling. The spontaneous pouring of their anguished heart not only gave them strength,
name and fame but also enriched the world of romantic fiction. Therefore it would not be out
of place to know the life and personal world of Charlotte Bronte which went into the creation
of an organic relationship with her world in fictions. All the fear her novels bear is a
testimonial to the kind of life she had lived.

An analysis of the organic relationship between Charlotte Bronte and her fictional
world

Charlotte was born in Thornton, Yorkshire, the third of six children Maria and her husband
Patrick Bronte, an Irish Anglican clergyman. In1820, her family moved a few miles to the
village of Haworth, where her father had been appointed Perpetual curate of St Michael and
All Angels Church. Her mother died of concern 15 September 1821, leaving five daughters,
Maria, Elizabeth, Charlotte, Emily, Anne and a son Branwell to be taken care of by her sister,
Elizabeth Branwell.

In August 1824, Patrick Bronte sent Charlotte, Emily, Maria and Elizabeth to the Clergy
Daughters' School at Cowan Bridge in Lancashire. Charlotte maintained the school's poor
conditions permanently affected her health and physical development and hastened the death
of Maria (born1814) and Elizabeth (born 1815), who died of tuberculosis in June 1825. After
the deaths of her older sisters her father removed Charlotte and Emily from the school.
Charlotte used the school as the basis for Lowood School in Jane Eyre.

At home, Haworth Parsonage Charlotte acted as the motherly friend and guardian of her
younger sisters''. She and her surviving siblings Branwell, Emily, and Anne- created their
own literary fictional worlds and began chronicling the lives and struggles of the inhabitants
of their imaginary kingdoms. Charlotte and Branwell wrote Byronic stories about their
imagined country,'' Angria'', and Emily and Anne wrote articles and poems about ''Gondal''.
The sagas they created were elaborate and convoluted (and exist in partial manuscripts) and
provided them with an obsessive interest during childhood and early adolescence which
prepared them for literary vocations in adulthood.

Between 1831 and 1832 Charlotte continued her education at Roe Head in Mirfield, where
she met her lifelong friends and correspondents, Ellen Nussey and Mary Taylor. In 1833 she
wrote a novella, The Green Dwarf, using the name Wellesley. Charlotte returned to Roe Head
as a teacher from 1835 to 1838. In 1839 she took up the first of many positions as governess
to families in Yorkshire, a career she pursued until 1841. Politically a Tory, she preached
tolerance rather than revolution. She held high moral principles and, despite her shyness, was
prepared to argue for her beliefs.

In 1842 Charlotte and Emily Travelled to Brussels to enroll at the boarding school run by
Constantin Heger(1809-96) and his wife Claire Zone Parent Heger (1804-87). In return for
board and tuition, Charlotte taught English and Emily taught music. Their time at the school
was cut short when Elizabeth Branwell, their aunt who joined the family to look after the
children after the death of their mother, died from internal obstruction in October 1842.
Charlotte returned alone to Brussels in January 1843 to take up a teaching post at the school.
Her second stay was not happy; she was lonely, homesick and deeply attached to Constantin
Heger. She returned to Haworth in January 1844 and used the time spent in Brussels as the
inspiration for some experiences in The Professor and Villette.

In May 1846 Charlotte, Emily and Anne self-financed the publication of a joint collection of
poetry under their assumed names Currer, Ellis and Acton Bell. The pseudonyms veiled the
sisters' gender whilst preserving their initials, thus Charlotte was ''Currer Bell'. ''Bell'' was the
middle name of Haworth's curate, Arthur Bell Nicholls whom charlotte married of the
decision to use nom de plume, Charlotte wrote.

Averse to personal publicity, we veiled our own names under those of Currer, Ellis and
Acton Bell; the ambiguous choice being dictated by a sort of conscientious scruple at
assuming Christian names positively masculine, while we did not like to declare ourselves
women, because --- without at that time suspecting that our mode of writing and thinking was
not what is called 'feminine'- we had a vague impression that authoresses are liable to be
looked on with prejudice; we had notice how critics sometimes use for their chastisement the
weapon of personality, and for their reward, a flattery, which is not true praise.

Although only two copies of the collection of poetry were sold, the sisters continued writing
for publication and began their first novels, continuing to use their nom de plume when
sending manuscripts to potential publishers.
Charlotte's first manuscript, The Professor did not secure a publisher, although she was
heartened by an encouraging response from Smith, Elder, & Co. of Cornhill, who expressed
an interest in any longer works which ''Currer Bell'' might wish to send. Charlotte responded
by finishing and sending a second manuscript in August 1847, and six weeks later Jane Eyre:
An Autobiography, was published. It tells the story of a plain governess (Jane) who, after
early life difficulties, falls in love with her employer, Mr. Rochester. They marry, but only
after Rochester's insane first wife (of whom Jane initially had no knowledge) dies in a
dramatic house fire.

Charlotte believed art was most convincing when based on personal experience; in Jane Eyre
she transformed the experience into a novel with universal appeal. Commercially it was an
instant success, and initially received favorable reviews. Critic G.H. Lewes wrote that it was ''
an utterance from the depths of a struggling, suffering, much-enduring spirit'', declaring it to
be ''suspiria de profundis!'' (sighs from the depths). The books' style was innovative,
combining naturalism with gothic melodrama and broke new ground in being written from an
intensely first person female perspective. Speculation about the identity of Currer Bell and
whether the author was male or female heightened with the publication of Emily's Wuthering
Heights by ''Ellis Bell'' and Anne's Agnes Greyby ''Acton Bell'. Accompanying the
speculation was a change in the critical reaction to Charlotte's work and accusations were
made that the writing was ''coarse'', a judgment more readily made once it was suspected that
''Currer Bell'' was a woman. However sales of Jane Eyre continued to be strong, and may
have increased as a result of the novel developing a reputation as an 'improper' book.

Following the success of Jane Eyre, in 1848 Charlotte began work on the manuscript of the
second novel, Shirley. The manuscript was partially completed when the Bronte household
suffered a tragic series of events, the deaths of three family members within eight months. In
September 1848, Branwell, died of chronic bronchitis and marasmus exacerbated by heavy
drinking, although Charlotte believed his death was due to tuberculosis. Branwell was a
suspected ''opium eater'', a laudanum addict. Emily become seriously ill shortly after
Branwell's funeral, and died of pulmonary tuberculosis in December 1848. Anne died of the
same disease in May1849. Charlotte was unable to write at this time.

After Anne's death Charlotte resumed writings a way of dealing with her grief, and Shirley
which deals with themes of industrial unrest and the role of women in society was published
in October 1849. Unlike Jane Eyre, which is written form the main character's first-person
perspective, Shirley is written in the third person and lacks the emotional immediacy of her
first novel, and reviewers found it less shocking.

In view of her novels' success, particularly Jane Eyre, Charlotte was persuaded by her
publisher to visit London occasionally, where she revealed her true identity and began to
move in more exalted social circles, becoming friends with Harriet Martineau and Elizabeth
Gaskell, and acquainted with William Makepeace Thackeray and G.H. Lewes. She never left
Haworth for more than a few weeks at a time as she did not want to leave her ageing father.
Thackeray's daughter, writer Anne Isabella Thackeray Ritchie recalled a visit to her father by
Charlotte:

“...two gentlemen come in, leading a tiny, delicate, serious, little lady, with fair straight hair,
and steady eyes. She may be a little over thirty; she is dressed in a little barege dress with a
pattern of faint green moss. She enters in mittens, in silence, in seriousness; our hearts are
beating with wild excitement.” The moment is so breathless that dinner comes as a relief to
the solemnity of the occasion, and we all smile as my father stoops to offer his arm; for,
genius though she may be Miss Bronte can barely reach his elbow. My own personal
impressions are that she is somewhat grave and stern specially to forward little girls who
wish to chatter... Every one waited for the brilliant conversation which never began at all.
Miss Bronte retired to the sofa in the study, and murmured a low word now and then to our
king governess... the conversation grew dimmer and more dim, the ladies sat round still
expectant, my father was too much perturbed by the gloom and the silence to be able to cope
with it at all... after Miss Bronte had left, I was surprise to see my father opening the front
door with his hat on. He put his fingers to his lips, walked out into the darkness, and shut the
door quietly behind him... long afterwards. Mrs. Procter asked me if I knew what had
happened... It was one of the dullest evenings [Mrs. Procter] had ever spent in her life... the
ladies who had all come expecting so much delightful conversation, and the gloom and the
constraint, and how finally, overwhelmed by the situation, my father had quietly left the
room, left the house, and gone off to his club.

Charlotte's friendship with Elizabeth Gaskell, whilst not necessarily close, was significant in
that Gaskell wrote Charlotte's biography after her death in 1855. Charlotte's third novel, the
last published in her lifetime, was Villette in 1853. Its main themes include isolation, how
such a condition can be borne, and the internal conflict brought about by societal repression
of individual desire. its main character, Lucy Snowe, travels abroad to teach in a boarding
school in the fictional town of Villette, where she encounters a culture and religion difference
from her own, and where she falls in love with a man ('Paul Emanuel') whom she cannot
marry. Her experiences result in a breakdown, but eventually she achieves independence and
fulfillment running her own school. Villette marked Charlotte's return to writing from a first-
person perspective (that of Lucy Snowe), the technique she had used in Jane Eyre. Another
similarity to Jane Eyre was the use of aspects from her own life as inspiration for fictional
events, in particular reworking the time she spent at the pensionnat in Brussels into Lucy
teaching at the boarding school, and falling in love with Constantine Heger into Lucy falling
in love with 'Paul Emanuel '. Villette was acknowledged by critics of the day as a potent and
sophisticated piece of writing, although it was criticized for 'coarseness' and not being
suitably 'feminine' in its portrayal of Lucy's desires.

Before the publication of Villette, Charlotte received a proposal of marriage from Arthur
Bell Nicholls, her father's curate who had long been in love with her. She initially turned
down his proposal, and her father objected to the union at least partly because of Nicholls'
poor financial status. Elizabeth Gaskell, who believed marriage provided 'clear and defined
duties' that were beneficial for a woman, encouraged Charlotte to consider the positive
aspects of such a union, and tried to use her contacts to engineer an improvement in
Nicholls's financial situation. Charlotte meanwhile, was increasingly attracted to the intense
attachment displayed by Nicholls, and by January1854 she had accepted his proposal. They
gained the approval of her father by April, and married in June. They took their honeymoon
in Ireland.

Charlotte became pregnant soon after the marriage but her health declined rapidly and
according to Gaskell, she was attacked by ''sensations of perpetual nausea and ever-recurring
faintness. ''Charlotte died with her unborn child on 31 March 1855, aged 38. Her death
certificate gives the cause of death as phthisis, but many biographers suggests he may have
died from dehydration and malnourishment, caused by excessive vomiting from severe
morning sickness or hyperemesis gravidarum. There is evidence to suggest that Charlotte
died from typhus which she may have caught form Tabitha Aykroyd, the Bronte household's
oldest servant, who died shortly before her. Charlotte was entered in the family vault in the
Church of St Michael and All Angels at Haworth. Charlotte's first-written novel, The
Professor, was published posthumously in 1857. The fragment of a new novel she had been
working on in her last years has been twice completed by recent authors, the more famous
version being Emma Brown; A Novel from the Unfinished Manuscript by Charlotte Bronte
by Clare Boylan in 2003. Most of the writings about an imaginary country Angria have also
been published since the author's death.

Elizabeth Gaskell's biography The Life of Charlotte Bronte was published in 1857. It was an
important step for a leading female novelist to write a biography of another, and Gaskell's
approach was unusual in that, rather than analyzing her subject's achievements, she
concentrated on private details of Charlotte's life emphasizing aspects which countered the
accusations of 'coarseness' which had been leveled at her writing. Though frank in places,
Gaskell was selective about which details she revealed; she suppressed details of Charlotte's
love for Heger, a married man, as being too much of an affront to contemporary morals and
source of distress to Charlotte's father, husband and friends. Gaskell provided doubtful and
inaccurate information about Patrick Bronte, claiming that he did not allow his children to eat
meat. This is refuted by one of Emily Bronte's diary papers, in which she describes preparing
meat and potatoes for dinner at the parsonage, as Juliet Barker points out in her biography,
The Bronte’s: A Life in Letters. It has been argued that the approach of Mrs. Gaskell
transferred the focus of attention away from the 'difficult' novels, not just Charlotte's, but all
the sisters, and began a process of sanctification of their private lives.

On 29 July 1913 The Times printed four letters Charlotte had written to Constantine Heger
after leaving Brussels in1844. Written in French except for one postscript in English, the
letters broke Charlotte's image as an angelic martyr to Christian and female duties that had
been constructed by many biographers, beginning with Gaskell. The letters, part of a larger
and somewhat one-sided correspondence in which Heger frequently appears not to have
replied, reveal that she had been in love with a married man, although they are complex and
have been interpreted in many ways. Some consider it as an example of literary self-
dramatization and other take it as an expression of gratitude from a former pupil.

Problem statement

Charlotte Bronte who was the eldest sibling at her house was a charming and interesting
novelist. The main fact is all three sisters called a thunderstorm in literature in the Victorian
period of the world. Compared to other siblings Charlotte Bronte has more achievements that
are distinctive. Her life is extremely interesting, melodramatic, and fascinating according to
her novels (Sanders2020). She always had a belief that art is the most fascinating way of
expressing your feelings and it can be more helpful if the feeling includes personal
experience. Her novel, Jane Eyre which brought her a lifetime fame from all over the world
not only from critics but also commercially was generally her life experience. This novel is
based on the bitter experiences of Charlotte Bronte who had come to her life from childhood
to become an adult one after another. Her novels that also brought her fame were The
Professor, Villette and Shirley also included in the list of the novels inspired by her lifetime
incidents. According to Sanders (2020) Even though she mixed all her life experiences in her
writings it was her writing skill, technique, and quality style invented by her brain which
makes an intelligent connection between her personal life feeling and the fictional world
created by her. Every novel written by Charlotte connects a person, incident, or place from
the phrase of the child to the adult. This connection between fictional characters and her
personal experiences brings to another level in the literature of the Victorian period era. Jane
Eyre published in 1847 became a grand success for Charlotte Bronte; it brought her fame
from all over the world, along with many critics also started to blame or admire it from
different views. Pike (2020) stated that In the autumn of 1845 Charlotte showed interest in
poems by Emily, which finding led to the publication of a joint section of poems by Currer,
Ellis, and Action and Action Bell (1846), or charlotte and her two sisters; the pseudonyms
thought that they would preserve secrecy and ignore the special behaviors provided to women
by the reviewers of literature. Although only two copies of the book were sold and all of them
got a lucky chance again state against the Bronte sisters. Famous critic G.H. Lewes
commented after Jane Eyre became commercially successful "an utterance from the depths of
a struggling, suffering much-enduring spirit.'' This novel is introduced with an extreme first-
person female perspective mixed with gothic melodrama and naturalism grounded in a new
level in the literary world. In the entire literary discoveries of charlotte Bronte she always has
shown herself as a romantic novelist drowned by the fire of her imagination, clearly marking
her different from the normal category of novelists and also society (Friar 2019). She
considers an outcast because her thoughts have made her higher than the people roaming
around her. Although, Bronte's name is also listed in good books of many more romantic
poets and novelists. She was greatly influenced by William Wordsworth's poetry and also
was very familiar with S.T. Coleridge's writing. She was also in favor of Shelly. In many
poems by Bronte, several examples are there which proved a parallel similarity between
Shelly and Bronte. Bronte's writings are a fascinating way of protesting the enforcement of
silencing female voices and also many norms of the society which were looking down upon
women (Chiu 2021). Although Bronte protests with her writings about the situation that
women were facing and the positioning of female characters in several writings by male
romantic poets. She also introduced a new type of heroine to the literary world who was
greatly elevating the position of women.

As mentioned earlier this study shall mainly focus on how her novel are connecting charlotte
Bronte's personal life with the fictional world mentioned in them. According to Chiu (2021),
most nineteenth-century women writers have set their level in the conventional way of
composing their work in a feminine manner but Bronte successfully imitated male writers.
Bronte's Romantic sights attracted most of the critics all over the world, however, a reviewer
also stated about Jane Eyre that if this book was written by a woman it would be odious' but it
will be praised if it will be written by a man. In Bronte's writings, she had elevated herself to
such a level where no one can define her personally as a woman. She always presented her
novels worked by Currer Bell, whom she always referred to as 'him' when suggesting her
public name as the writer.

At the time female writers were praised only when they are bound to write and project the
central character as a household worker or always celebrating home, always attentive to the
happiness of others, in many cases poetry was also acceptable if the writer was not trying to
hurt rival male writers. Bronte's lifetime experience as a parallel writer also offers two words
worth. They had a very similar way of expressing their love for walking which can be visible
from their writing contents. The goal for this type of literary romantic walk doesn't reach a
particular physical destination but certainly to a mental one by making free all mental
contemplations to jump into memory and recreate the internal senses and finally return to a
normal self. The main need to go for this walking is not to explore physical natural beauty
outside in front of the eyes but to go beyond those physical scenes and feel the inner fictitious
world (Ogden and Cook 2019). Like Wordsworth he always proffered the mind's eye rather
than the physical eye so that the internal beauty can be seen deeply. Charlotte's
contemporaries always prefer to walk and similarly their own feet bring them to their
idealized destination. The protagonists are led to their inner self by this type of mental goal
searching with the help of the mental eye. The function of walking mentioned by Bronte in
her literary works means Moers assertion which is narrated in terms of metaphor by the
whole literary world.

The Proposal line of Research (Objectives)

Charlotte Bronte belonged to a happy and complete family in her childhood. It consists of
her parents, her three sisters, one brother, and herself. Unfortunately, at first, her mother died,
and then her two sisters died. Her brother also died. Still, she continued to fight her life
struggle (White and Ferguson 2019). Despite all these difficulties, she never gave up on her
life. Eventually, the Bronte sisters brought a storm in English literature after they decided to
become Novelists in their career. As the female writers were extremely looked down upon at
that time by the male writers and novelists, they decided to express their writing skills with a
male pseudonym for each of them. Charlotte's character was called Currer Bell. Even after
taking a male pseudo name, some critics pointed out that Jane Eyre was written by two
different writers both male and female, otherwise only a woman portrays Currer Bell's
character alone. The main features of the novels written by Charlotte Bronte were every
novel and maximum characters in those are connected with the childhood of Charlotte
(Barotovna2021). As her childhood was full of bitter experiences her fictional characters had
the same situations throughout their life.

The objective of this study is to establish how the novel's fictional characters are so realistic
and connected to charlotte's life. The word imagination is situated within this novel.
Generally, this word refers to those contents that are been produced from the mind itself and
cannot be seen in front of the eyes if needed. As the product is created by the mind it is
completely visual, hence it cannot be touched or seen so it's good to call it not real
(Heitzman2019). Standing on the strength of characters and situations, the word gives
suggestions about the words like artistic meditation, hope, fear, fantasy, image-making,
nervous depression, etc. As a result, these words have a disgrace with the words like cause,
reality, fact, duty, conscience, and society. Some novels welcome imagination more carefully
than others. As a result few victory upholders always are serving facts with practicality well
with equality. To co-operate with society and its demands other upholders should make a
barrier of their imaginations and then implementation in literature if that results unpleasant to
the society. Charlotte Bronte's writings are a perfect combination of a proper balance of
imagination and fact in a large quantity.

The second objective of this study is to find out the women's perspective. Being a woman
her strong character making in her novels (Bayley2018). Her fictional characters always
protested against female domination by the male writers as much as possible. In that time
female writers were admired by critics or male writers only if they showed their characters as
they love only homemaking, they are very careful and attentive about other's happiness, etc.,
type reasons where there are certain restrictions drawn around the female writer. However,
Bronte's bold style of writing never cared about those. She inspired a new generation of
female writers to come out and write beyond those unofficial boundaries and restriction
borders that were made by the society.
Significance of the Study

This study on the available masterpieces created by Charlotte Bronte reveals the feminine
aspect of the literature (Karim S). Charlotte Bronte admitted her collaborative feeling of
imagination before her first novel was published. The letters written by Bronte also proves
her fear of both pity and condemnation. She always had to struggle as she often got confused
between the imaginative world which gave her a lot of pleasure and the real world where she
had to do many duties to save it from getting disrespected by her. Bronte's early attachment
was always with the world that she made in her childhood days. She called this world an
internal world of imagination and recreation. Society did not approach Bronte in the manner
that the imagined world did to her. As a result of all of major Bronte's novels, she remade the
helmsman ship between the imaginary world and the factual real world. Each standard-bearer
had faced the struggle with a different view and manner to achieve more success than others.

Whether we want to understand the literary, social, and historical context of Bronte's
writings we want an understanding of cultural and social backgrounds and also have to
implement it (Gezairi 2018) stated that the start of the Victorian era was from 1837 to 1901,
which changed England in a massive form and impacted both social and economic
conditions. In 1840, England was considered the biggest merchant society and largest
colonial center all over the world. While the upper and middle classes of Victorian England
were getting more and more prosper, then the working class also started to question the
working conditions as demeaning and exploitative (Franklin 2018). There were also many
queries about the destiny of young unmarried surplus women of these working people with
supplies provided by the local authority.

In the time of Victorian England, a governess's profession was specially slotted for middle-
class people and Charlotte was one of them. While many women or daughters of respected
people from the upper classes worked in upper-class employment but the middle or lower
class hadn't any choice to prefer their job according to their qualifications (Rutherford2022).
A few writers like Mathew Arnold remarked that time England society was getting more and
more distracted by culture and art from the main subject of these socio economic
disturbances. While poetry and romanticism identified the renaissance period, Victorian
England was also famous for its novel. At that time several things were growing like fiction
but the most important thing was the growth of the middle classes rapidly. This study mainly
goes through the connection between the imaginative world and the real world of Charlotte
Bronte and also their lovely execution in her novels.

Despite the fact, that most novels are written to a degree that is deemed "imaginative
autobiography", Charlotte's every novel comes under a slightly different genre of fiction
(Klitgard 2020). The professor expresses a story of a self-made man and a self-made man that
quells imaginative expression to become successful in society. Jane Eyre tended toward
Gothic romance and satisfyingly mixes imagination and reason. It was her first book The
Professor could not find an interested publisher during her lifetime, her second book Jane
Eyre brought her worldwide name and fame both critically and commercially. It also came to
be discussed as the most successful novel of the era. Some critics went to the extent of
commenting that it is an impossible task to write such a novel by a woman. The famous
novelist George Eliot though admired the novel she could not restrain herself in saying that
Charlotte Bronte's Characters spoke like ''the heroes and heroines of police reports." To some
other critic Jan Eyre appeared to be purely 'unrealistic'(Simonton2020), some others labeled it
as ''an anti-Christian composition''. Few critics also praised the novel's bold language and the
unity of plot.

The commentary with the touch of politics in Shirley needs a reason to influence because
Shirley is a novel that is all about characters that are fighting for their place in society. It
became the first regional novel filled with Local characters, the cloth workers of Yorkshire
church and chapel. It was fallowing the frame work of Maria Edge worth and Sir Walter
Scott.

Another Novel by Charlotte is Villette. It again elevates a woman to a self-dependent woman.


Again the proponent made this novel's business famous, not the writing skills of Charlotte
Bronte. Mainly imagination and determination are the main secrets to the success of the
works of Bronte. Admiration for Bronte's writings was at its peak from the first published
novel of Bronte (Tupa 2021). In every case Bronte's heroine characters don't find lovers who
are devoted and humble, after traveling with Bronte metaphorically, Elliot wrote about
Bronte ''I am only just returned to a sense of the real world about me, for I have been reading
Villette, a still more wonderful book than Jane Eyre''. Bronte's works usually transport their
readers to a new world that is created imaginatively by her novels had a great influence on
budding writers like Alcott and Jasper Forde. Her fusion of romance and satire decoratively
and her innovative imaginations were the best examples of 'picture of love from a woman's
standpoint along with lyricism.

Structure of the Study

As this study is based on the correlation between the real world and the imaginary world
introduced by Charlotte Bronte in her novels. So it will be much easier to take a detailed view
through the following chapter heads.

Chapter1: Introduction

As a renowned novelist, Charlotte Bronte was one of the most perfect novelists of the 19th
century. Although it is visible that she had a narrower range of writing compared to Dickens,
it is understandable considering her narrower range connected to her inner life and her private
passion. Despite the fact, that Charlotte had passed a lot of ups and downs in her life with
bitter experienced and her works are a clear reflection of that the genius she possessed gave
her strength, name and fame. Every novel is connected to such experiences whenever a reader
reads it he/she can experience the clear relationship between the private and fiction, world of
the author. This study finds and discusses those points, especially where Bronte's real life
experience and imaginary world correlate together.

Chapter II: Charlotte Bronte and her world

This chapter makes a detailed study of each of her best novels from different point of view.
For example, Charlotte Bronte uses the imagery of nature mostly in Jane Eyre, where she
comments on both nature and its relationship with human nature. Many natural themes run
inside the novel, such as the image of a stormy sea, flying birds, gothic imaginations,
telepathic relationship etc. After Jane saves Rochester's life, she provides metaphors for their
relationship. Another interesting image is Bronte's treatment of birds(Steere2020).
Wewitnessquickly howJanehad identifies with the bird. According to her birds is the way of
escape, the solution to fly above the everyday problems in life. The narrator also guides to
feed the birds very often.Possibly Bronteistelling usthat thisideaof flyingisjust anideabecause
the bird has to come back for nourishments. Further, the integral relationship between her
personal and fictional world to that of the contemporary social world shall be also studied in
this chapter. ChapterIII:Plotconstruction(FourNovels) Charlotte Bronte was one of the well-
known writers of the Victorian England era. Her novels have been called a revolution in
English literature. She had a differentviewof understanding lifewhichsheimplemented
itintheimaginaryworld of literature. Themainliterary constructions which
madeherfamousovernight were Jane Eyre (1847), Shirley (1849), Villette (1853), and The
Professor (1857). Jane Eyre was the most famous novel by Bronte in which thefirst person
narrative style was introduced by the writer. Although a female writer was writing with a
male pseudonym of currer Bell the feminine mark could not be missed. Shirley was the
second publication by Charlotte Bronte. This isalso written with the male pseudonym of
Currer Bell. This novel is mainly based inYorkshire in 1811-12 during the depression period
due to the industrial revolution resulting from the Napoleonic wars. Villette was the third and
the last novel that was published in her lifetime (Diniz 2020). This novel's plot
wasalsoextremelyentertainingandenthusiastictopulltheinterestofthereaders without any doubt.
The first written novel by Charlotte Bronte was The Professor, but due to the lack of interest
of publishers, this novel was published unfortunately afterthedeathofCharlotte
Brontein1857.Theplotconstruction ofCharlotte Bronte was though, not as immaculate as that
of Jane Austen but they show the ramblingsofpoetic and imaginative mind quite successfully.
ChapterIV:StylisticDesign Charlotte Bronte's writing style was her own. It was
quiteinnovative for her time. In her writings, she had written in extraordinary expressions
with powerful statements by the characters making it unique from the usual novels. Voerman
(2020) stated thatinJaneEyrethestyle and thesyntax of thesentences arecomplex, and phrases
and clauses are connected elaborately.After studying the biography of Charlotte Bronte, it is
clear that the personal experiences of the writer are recreated in the novel and are very
balanced.Thus this chapter will be an honest effort in studyingand analyzingthe stylistic
designs ofthe novelist. ChapterV:NarrativeArt A narrative text can be based upon various
aspects, like oral or written, the articulated activity of language, etc. A proper novel remains
in the present tense all the time (McCarthy 2019).But Bronte'snovels represent
exceptionalform. It follows theinstinct of human psyche. Intheconventional method itcannot
becalled lyric or poetry. It rambles from present to past and vice-versa. The narrative art is
also enfarced to go beyond conventional methods to express the spontaneous outpouring of
the soul of the author. Jane Eyre was written in the first-personpoint of view, where the
narrator is Jane (HAMOU 2020). Jane mainly narrates from ten years earlier from start to
end. Actually charlotte Bronte has mixed the narrative style of the'omniscient'author with the'
first person singular' technique in her novels.Consequentlyallthefournovelsshall be
studiedfromthis point ofview. ChapterVI:Conclusion After going through thestudy of
theliterary works byCharlotte Bronte andalso afterdiscussingthebackgroundandheart-
touchingsorrowfullifestoryof the writer, it can be uncovered as a conclusion that Charlotte
Bronte's literary works are not only theunique literarywork from theview of writing style,
narrative art but alsoit isasilent protestbyheragainstthemaledominance. Itisalsoobserved
thatwhatever be the situationBronte didn't give upand keptonwriting and created a permanent
nicheforherself. Infactthe 'conclusion' shall beanattemptinestablishing thefact that the
intensemoods of her own heart and imaginationfound way in expressing the moods of her
fictional characters, there by touching the nerve and the mood of the race. -----------------------
X--------------------------- Chapter2:CharlotteBronteandherworld OverviewoftheChapter
Charlotte Bronte was one of the most famous and remarkable female novelists of theearly
nineteenth century. But she was rather typical in her ways. Her world in her novels
aresomewhat narrow likethatof JaneAusten asit wasdrawn completely out ofher private life,
Butperhaps the basicdifferencebetweenthese two novelist is that while Jane Austen presented
the contemporarysocial world that was private to her, Charlotte Bronte drew heavily from her
private imaginativeworld. Yet she has passed the test of time .Her works continue to
befamous among scholars of all times. She has left behind many great works that still allure
the readers of this modem world. The aspects of man's external life like that inspired Dickens
or Thackeray also energized her creativity in her writing. William Makepeace Thackeray was
the first English writer who made his novels the mode of conscious criticismoflife. Andas
that ofBronte,the transportofpersonalrevelationbecame a conscious process of criticism of
life. As her range of writing was limited and narrow, her private consciousness of the hero
and heroines of her novels were stimulated.Inher famous book Jane Eyre, she delineated her
ingenious life; in Villette, shefocused on her true moral life;inShirley, shefocused on how
shecame out alittle tougher, very little though.Sheportrayed thesideof Yorkshire where she
lived and whatevershehadseeninthemortalcommunity. Respectivelyallherbooks contain very
lively characters. The characters in her novels Jane Eyre, Villette and thegreatest partsof
Shirley arenotof theexercise of mind but ratherthecries of the heart. It is not a conscious self-
diagnosis but rather a spontaneous self-revelation. Primitively her main characters are all
same person. Charlotte's emotions and impressions are direct!y expressed in the emotions and
impressions of a person in her novel. The world she fabricated was her own inner life.She
was her theme. But that did notlimit her writing toher character. She was an excellent
storyteller, and a story narrated acharacter inoperation asif thecharacter is in contact withthe
world ofoutermost affairs.InShirley, theimagination aloneplayed agreatrole.And where
imagination is supreme onecan beassured thatit will runlike wildfirein the woods, and like
that of a strong wind. Her concern for conducting a subjective impression
madeCharlotteasubjectivenovelist.Herreactionstowardtheexternalworld
signifiedhowshepicturedthe externalworld.Butshenevertranscribednovelsto instantiate any
distinctive moral percept. Socialframework:thestudyofmoralspiritual,andsocialproblemsof
women in Bronte's time The Victorian era started in 1837 and lasted till 1901, This period
saw session of enormous changes in the history of England. The changes came from all sides
socially andeconomically. England appeared asthechief industrial hubof theworld and centre
ofthe huge colonialempire.But Britainwas distant from being heaven in the mortal world.
Many criticisms took place on the squalor and deprivation that waslurking around in
thecorners of cities. The number of poor, unattached, women wasrapidlyincreasing
andtheyhad veryfewlimited methods tosupport themselves. Among them being a governess
was the most common option for the unmarried surplus women, to meet their needs. It was
such a horrible experience for many women because agoverness was anindividual
withnorespected positioninsociety. Being agoverness was a curse among the middle-
classwomen in the Victorian era. In that era women who did not have any financial support
from a man had very limited time to earn a living.Most of the women in 1800 mainly used to
work in mills or factories to earn their living. But the unmarried daughters of merchants,
physicians, and lawyers got more suitable jobs that offered them amore respectable lifestyle.
Charlotte Bronte was a governess for herself. She lived with an upper-middle class family
who hired her to teach their children. In addition to earning a modest salary, she also acquired
herself a comfortable and suitable lodging. As she was a woman only very few options
wereavailable toher. Once she mentioned toSt.John Rivers that she will beadressmaker, she
will bea plain workwoman, aservant, ora nurse if she did not get any chance to be better. And
she knew in her heart of heart that Literary writing is the only area which will provide her
mental sustenance and meaning to her life for all times to come. Because she knew that her
feelings, torments, needs combined with social issues expressed throng creative writing. But
for afemale writer itwasgoingtobeachallenging task. Yet therewas noalternative no doubtto
satisfy the creative urge she had to become currer Bell, a name and personalitythat was wore
acceptableto the society. The social scene of the age was such that man was regarded as the
supreme authority in the house women were considered inferior to men in faculty and social
standingas well. They were expected to be homely and virtuous. No wonder then, that when
charlotte Bronte sent the manuscript of her selected poems to the famous Robert Southey, the
than poet laureate of England for comments. He obliged her with the,opinion that home
andhearth is best suited towomen like her, Hisexact reply sent on march 12, 1837 has become
infamous:-"Literaturecannot be the business of a woman'slife and it ought not to be The more
she is engaged in her proper duties, the less leisure she will have for it, even as an
accomplishment and a recreation .Tothoseduties you havenot yet been called, and when you
areyou, you willbe less eager for celebrity'' Bronte preserved his letterin a wrapper inscribed
Southey's Advice, Tobe kept forever. But her prodigious literary output tells a different story.
If only charlotte hadfollowed hisadvice, theliterary world would have suffered the loss of one
great writer. In spite of all these social and financial constraints she continued to follow the
dictates of her heart and soul and surely the literary world became enriched by her passion. In
fact, catering to the demands of time, Bronte incorporated poetic features into the more
viableform of novel, and became a successful literary professional in Victorian England. The
early Victorian ideal stated thatwomanwas the'angle of home' and she shouldbecompliant,
chaste, physically feeble,extremely religions andquitecapable of tremendous discipline.
Charlotte Bronte's novels high light how, the potential of woman was destroyed at that time.
In Jane Eyre, she has presented her heroine Jane as a job seeker because for her work or
activity that earned daily bread also brought forth intellectual and emotional gratification.
when Bronte herself, was offered the job of school-mistress she welcomed it and recognized
it as the best among all the unsatisfactory jobs of governesses that had been offered to her
earlier. Reading and writing alone was suited to her peculiar individualityand originality.Yet
she was not the writer who was still engrossed by theoutward spectacle, fascinated by life's
multitudinous variety, exhilarated by its humors and touches by its pathos. She was
awaketothecallof thedeeperimagination penetrating beneaththeskin andtouching
thebaseheartandsoul.That'swhyinhernovelswefindthattheliteratureof
mannersandmoralsgaveplaceto literatureofspiritandpassion.W.H. Crosshas aptly opined in the
developmentofthe EnglishNovel, '' at any rate, her significance in the course of fiction is that
she delineated the intense moods of her own heart and imagination, which have their
rapportin the moods of the race...(Cross,D.DEN,1972) Thus it would be quite interesting to
find out how much equally on the same level asher daily personal life was this worldthat
thetwoaremingled soorganically in her novels. Perhaps this is because she herself is the
heroine and the secondary charactersdrawn from circle inwhich she moved. Charlotte Bronte
and her siblings grew up in a verysmall village ofHaworth on the Yorkshire moors where
they lived with their father, who was a local pastor, their mother, three sisters and a brother.
Their father brought all of them into their family home when two sisters fell ill due to
uncomfortable living conditions in the orphanage. Bronte loved reading books by
Shakespeare, Milton, Byron, Scott, the classics, and the Bible. As she showed signs of being
a writer at an early age, she wrotemanyminuscule books aboutthefantasy
worldsofherformation withthehelp of her sisters. In their entirechildhood, the Bronte children
kept themselves amused by creating exotic stories. They created an imaginary world that was
filled with myth, history, current affairs, and society-based stories, inspired by a set of twelve
wooden soldiers their father brought for them. Slowly and gradually Bronte found her interest
in romantic stories rather than histrionic tales. Once she began with her ''wretchedbondage''
this outletprovidedan essentialoutletfor her creativity.Duetocomplications in her pregnancy,
she died in 1855, just afew months after shegot married. In her last letter to her friends, she
mentioned the profound bonding between her andherhusband.Shementionedthatinher
husband shefound the most caring nurse and the best husband she has ever seen till her death.
Bronte sympathizedwith theobstacles that a women writer had toface at that time, but she
never allowed them tolimitherfrom writing orbeing an influencer forother women writers.
Though she was a very brave and plucky woman she was not such a daring woman that she
would write under her original name. She declined to take a pen name of a male for writing
her novels but rather insisted on taking a female name. Her displeasure towards this injustice
inspired her more about the writings in her novels. Her writings carried very influential
negotiator in her effect. Bronte's
writingscametoapeakbecauseofthescenesandairspaceinherstories.The sketches in her novels
focused on love and character, through which they disclosed their authority and it also
extended the identical scope to her strength. She was very brilliant because her creativity and
imagination were extraordinary. She was always loyal to her imagination which played a vital
key role in writing her novels. Notwithstanding the frustration that women feel when
surpluses, she had a very practicalattitude towardsmarriagebecause she believedthat
respectwithout affection was not quite enough. In her work, she intensified the same principle
and married her heroines to the men they loved and also made sure that they areliving a
happilymarried life. But in her later life she gave up on this principleby marrying Mr.
Nicholls, a man she paid huge respect to but was not sure of herself whether she lovedhim or
not. Brontewas so much ofa Victorianand a little less ofa Puritanto be more than being
affectedby any negativity. She was most approximatelyanxious to describe afrustratedlover.
Moreover,shecan narrate happy love fairly well. Love isthe celebrationofher
fewvictoriousjourneysofhumor. Besides being a great novelist, Charlotte was also a great
poet, and her poems were genuine lyrical poetry of passion. Charlotte Bronte pronounced
some limits in the field of the story in time and place. She also cautiouslymarked political,
social, and religious impacts.
Sheshowedinhernovelshowawoman'.)slifecanbeshapedbysocialattitudes
overwhichtheyhadnocontrol.Theheroinesincharlotte'.)sstory wereallbeautiful and almost
everyone had a noble birth. She presented teaching and writings as unsuited conflicting
activities, which Bronte sometimes attempted by closing her
eyeswhilewritinginclasstoarousethecuriosityofthestudents.Aftercomingback
toRoeHeadSchool asateacher inn1835Charlotte became homesick, despite the love and care
providedby her mistress. Shesaw her visionarylife as kin to a different farm of religion, which
she could not renounce. Her duties as a reputable schoolmistress were recognized as an
intolerable constraint by the rebellious hallucination. Her romanticviewofpoetryinspiredherto
feelthatshehadonetalent that willneverdie.Despite herpedagogic frustrations, sheremained
determined to encourage an authorial identity through her secret writings. She was granted
the freedom to return home and write anything without any moderation at the end of
1838whenwastiredofalltherules.InMarch1837Charlottereceivedaletterfrom Robert Southey,
agreatpoet, which influenced heralot.Itseemed fairthat Bronte acknowledged Southey's good
faith and made a positive response. She replied to him by writing a letter in which she
thanked him and tried tofabricate herself asa teacher, and also claimed herself as a perfect
being. In her journal, she wrote that in 1836 she found out that she is not satisfied with
teaching, although shedoesherduty withstrict measures anddoes her chores quite well.
Naturally, doubts started to arise about her duties as a Christian and fitness for preservation.
With the help of the novelettes, Charlotte Bronte modified her point of inspirationalgenius by
knowingthe use of discipline if she was supposed to write publishable works. Her attempt to
make herself a realistic author had seen very less success. She soon started to lose her
confidence as a pure inspired visionary asher creativity wasgetting hard tocompletely rely
on.Charlotte with the help of restorative tuition from M. Heger gained quite a fascinating
knowledge of the language and also developed skills and a more disciplined slant.
Simultaneously the process she undertook not only strengthened her authorship but also the
probability of future success was boosted. The association with Heger gave hermeans
ofselfimprovementratherthanan escapefrom reality. Furtherwiththesupportof hersisterssheself
constructed thepseudonym currer Bell. Her long pursuits to make herself a respected woman
author and to beforever known as female wisdom stayed implicit. comparably, Lucy Snowe
is Quiet and concealed in Villette, but she contends energeticallynot to lose her independence
and towards the finish of her excursion she comes before us in control of her monetary and
profound security. Similarly, Shirley keeldar in Shirley is the depiction of Emily Bronte, who
seemed to lack the capacity of sending letters. Letters were only the last alternative in that
sense, since there were better activities, for example, walking around the fields or truly being
it the company of common folks.Butfrom abigger perspective, thislittlefictitious diversion
addressed areturn from'The Teacher's'lost cause to the possibility of using epistolary method
as an extraordinaryvehicletodepict thewoodof hopelessness inJaneEyreandtobemore
enhancedin Villette. Charlotte Bronte utilized the letter to bring into play the
associationbetweenherselfand the authorialpersonal currer Bell.
ReviewofCharlotteBronte'sliterarywork: Charlotte Bronte wrote successfully in various ways.
She was a realistic and
romanticpoetwhosewritingswerebasedonheremotion,feelings,aswellasa fantasy world.
According to Ross (2021), her writing texture is a power of nature,
innerlife,desires,anddissension. Herliterary work was influenced byherera.Apart from this her
personal life, and personal feelings also affected her work. She built a strong relationship
between thefictional worldand her personal life. Apart from the novel sheworked proudly
onthepoem aswell.Shemadeapersonal spaceof literary work which is a perfect combination of
humanlife and the real world. In that era when male writers were predominant in literature
Charlotte Bronte established herselfthrough novels and poems. Bronte was a writer who
draws inner feelings, and emotional needs, in her novel. Women's feelings, actions, pain,
attitude, and inner quality everything reflect in her writing. Her powerful narrative work'Jane
Eyre. is significant for a woman's life journey inconflict withherdesires and social situation.
Itisalsoher published work.This novel wasthesuccessfully beginning of Charlotte's career
asawriter.Shewasfromapoorbackgroundandwasinaturbulent era of conflict. When glorious
authors like Tennyson, Browning, Scott also present. In that competitive time, Charlotte
worked in her way, gently and she reached her peak. She focuses her writing on human
psychology, emotions, feelings, conflict, social problems, and nature. Her literary works were
influenced by her siblings, family background, education, and social situation as well (Bayley
2018). She was alsofullyinspired bybeautiful nature, shealways triedtounderstand human
feelings especiallywomen's emotions,and life events. BeforeCharlotte Bronte unleashed
JaneEyreonthe world,she was already in secret an accomplished fantasy writer. Her and her
siblings collaborative worlds of Glass Tower and Angria are as complex as Game of Thrones;
fantastical, magical kingdoms steeped in violence, politics, lust and betrayal. In private
letters, Bronte called it her ''worldsbelow'',a private escapewhere she couldset out her desires
and multiple identities.Written in dozens of miniature books, these manuscripts - with
curious, secretive titles such as A peep into a picture Books, The Spell, A leaf from
anunopened volume-arenotonly astonishing examples ofcraftsmanship,but contain
extraordinary uncensored content. Late Bronte recaptured and represented themin various
ways in her four novels. Over the course of 10 years, she created characters and events that
became inextricably bennol with her own selfuood, some ofwhenwhomwe knowand love in
her later novels. The fiery, passionate dynamic between Jane and Rochester in Jane Eyre has
captivated the readers and writers forever.Rochester'sdark, brooding sexuality matched
withJane'sstrong mind and determined nature notonly makes them one of the most powerful
couples in English literature but also shows their Bearings with Bronte's privatelife.Angrian
figures modified-appear in Jane Eyre; the Reeds, Adele, John Rivers, Rochester himself and
his lunatic wife BerthaMason. Certain scenes arerechanneled forhernew
purpose,likeRochester's teasingofJane when heletsherthink that heisgoing tomarry Blanche
Ingram, andlater her refusal to become his mistress. And into the proud, a
moral,scornful,semi-aristocratic world of Angria penetrates the insignificant looking
governess, Miss Eyre, who breaks up thisworld before she conquersit. As we moveforward
wecatch glimpses and then realcharacterizationsof real lifeimagesin JaneEyreform the
moment thatDavid JaneEyreflaresoutatGoliath Mrs.Reed,we the Readers identify ourselves
with her The crushed orphan- governess has her day -dreams fulfilled by adherence to the
rules,togetherwith a great deal of luck and personal integrity.Romanticand realistic elements
are dexterous!y blended in the novel. Most of the realistics' incidents and characters are
drawn from the novelist's own life and experiences. Jane Eyre's life at Lowood
schoolisherownlifeatCowan Bridgeschool.Thehapless Helen Bwens ishersister Maria and
Miss Temple and Miss Scahtered are also drawn from real life. Charlotte like Jane had
worked as governess and later as a school teacher in other wordswe can say that through the
life of Jane we peep into the life of the authoress. Both Charlotte andJanelearnt French
toearnbetterlivelihood andwereskilledinpainting and drawing Both were keen to establish a
school by their own efforts.IfJane's CousinJohn Reedisspoiled and
wasteful,Charlotte'sbrother Branwell wasacause of perpetual grief toherfamily. Mr.Rochester,
thehusband of amad with, whotries toheal youngJaneintomarriage was atranscript of
acasewhich hadbecome known to Charlotte at Miss Wooler's school at Roe Head like Jane's
delayedmarriage to John Rivers,Charlotte's own prospects ofmarriage with Anther Nicholls
herfather's curate -was delayed. Like Jane, thenovelistherself was small and diminutivein
appearancebut endowedwith indomitablewill and sense ofprinciple. In 1829, before entering
intoher world of novels Charlotte Bronte had begun buildingawildexotic
kingdominTwoRomanticTales.Seton thegoldenshores of west Africa, this volume transports
readers to the home of gods with their haunted misty mountains ofthemoon.Shetakes
ustotheburning airof Sahara desert where brutaltribesmen urgeforwar.Shedelights
inthedenseforests thatnestletheestates and palaces of gentry and royalty. Itisin oneof these
secluded palaces that wefind the hint of an early Rochester;the dangerouslydark duke of
Zamora. However when Bronte, turned 24, she changed her way of thinking about women.
Her new female character Elizabeth Hastings comes before us as strong novelistic woman
who refuses tosubmit to passion without theprospect of marriage. This description actually
serve the basis of poor obscure plain and little Jane, a girl who falls in love with a married
maninJaneEyre. The same girl, in order tokeep herintegrity, fights againstherheartand sentto
confarm towhat she feels is right. Both women areofcourse versionsofCharlotte herself,
whoaccording tothe memoirs ofherfriends, considered herself''oldand ugly''. LikeElizabeth,
JaneEyre is a mirror into Bronte's sent,who,through herlegacyof heroines,unleashedan
inspirational new voice for woman kind. That woman need not succumb to the whims and
fancies of men. WhenJane rejects the offer of becoming Mr. Rochester's mistress it reminds
the readers'afeeling of secret triumph' to be left alone entirely tofollowone's own guidance.
Jane Eyrecontinues tobean archetypal romance in English fiction and the model for countless
conscious and unconscious imitations. The mix of reality and fantasy takes it to great levels.
When Jane as a child resiststhe bullyingof John Reed, she exclaims;
''wickedandcruelboy!........Youarelikeamurderer-youarelikeaslave driver -you are like a
Roman Emperor!'' (J.EP.6-7) It is an act of self assertion by Jane in and through the power of
reading and identification. It can be also taken as the author's unconscious rebellion against
her particular fate as well as typical and representative of societalnorms. Charlotte Bronte and
her siblings lived cocooned into the world of fantasy they created. But later, she breathed life
into her suppressed self and dreamsthrough her novels. It was through her discontent that the
Characters of Jane Eyre and Lucy snowe were born. It has been rightly pointed out that her
characters are ''too life like to be the merecreation offancy .......several of them wealmost
feelpersuaded wehave met within real life''. Obvicrsly her heroines are none but fragments of
herself' They speak, resist, fight, laugh, cry and aspire, what the novelist herself must have
experienced, desired orfelt.Thereaders arenotalientotheseemotions. They easily recognize
them Charlotte's modelwere people she had herself known formally or
informally.Withthissheexquisitelywebbedinherownimaginationandfancy .Oftenthecopyingnea
redsoclosetotheoriginalthattheidentitywasexposed causingembarrassmentandresentment. Like
most of the Characters of her novels her heroes too are not without an original .Dr. John is
presumed to be the copy of her publisher Mr. Smith. Besides, Graham, has three literary
antecedent. One of them is the author's own creation - Martin Yorke in ' Shirley'wholoves to
tease thewomanhe admires. Another noticeable point in her heroes is, that, they need notbe
handsome and young but must bepassionate (almost Byronic), magnetic, intensely romantic
and authoritative as her Zamorna kings. TheProfessor 1857, though herearliest novelcould
not bepublished until her death in 1855. In this novel she records her impression of
Brussels'life.It is autobiographical in tone and the characters are drawnfromher personal
acquaintance. Infact, itcan be said that the novelist describes hergirlhood init.She draws how
a girl struggled in life, how she overcomes her problems and how she tackles society. The
Professor,Mr. William Crinsworth is the narrator ofthe tale Allthemajorcharacters
andsituations inthestory areidentifiable withthe novelist's personal world. An
Englishmanplays the Part of Mr. Heger and acontinental Lady plays the part of her own. As a
matter of fact the novel is mainly based on the novelist's experiences inBrussels,whereshe
studies as a Language student and served as a teacher as well in1842. Later the same subject
was reworked by the novelistfromthe perspectiveof a female teacherin her
novel'Villette'while the title character of the professor, Mr. WilliamCrimsworth, is based on
Constantine Heger, the headmaster of the school, a married man with children with whom
Charlottehadfallen in love, the heroine Franees is none other than the novelist
herself.Althoughthisnovelrepresentsaweretemporaryexperimentin Charlotte's literary
developmentit will continue tobe consideredas first revelation ofa genius that Bronte as a
romanticnovelistwas to be. Shirley (1849) the second published novel of Charlotte Bronte
under the pseudonym currer Bell was, when intothe process of creation The two remaining
siblings of the novelist, her troubled brother Patrick Bran wellfollowed by her sisters Emily
and Anne died. Consecutively this lengthy novel has two female protagonists the celebrated
Shirley keeldar and Caroline Helstons . It is again set in Charlotte's native Yorkshireagainst
the backgroundof the textile industry's Luddite uprisings of 1811 and 1812. The novelist
herself had confined in Elizabeth Gaskell, - who later became thefirst biographer of the
novelist after her death, that the Character of Shirley was imagined after Emily Bronte had
she the privilege of wealth and status like thefictional heroine. The other character are drawn
from real lifepeople with whomthenovelist wasassociatedinlife.Shemodeledthecharacters
afterherfamily andfriends asunfalteringly andfrankly asDickens did inportraying the
weaknesses of hisownfather andmother toensurehisliterary fameand worldly fortunes. Shirley
is considered a social novel as it depicts the story in the backdrop of theindustrial depression
in England resulting from the Napoleonicwar and the war of 1812. Consequently it is also
realistic andfactual in character. Love of Coralline for Robert Moore is another fictitious
portrayal of the novelist's love for Heger. According to E.A. Baker, this novel is full of
portraits and reminiscencesfrom personal life. The novel follows the life of two women from
very different social circles who show in their own way that woman are capable of doing
something on their own. It is considered the most feminist novel of Charlotte Bronte.
Therapport of female Friendship shared by Shirley and Caroline shows the independent and
spiritedyoungwomen in patriarchalsociety forgingtheir ownway. The last novel villette (1855)
is the story of a self- made woman who is successful in her career. The heroine Lucy Snowe
is actually the novelist herself charting out her life journey and professional path. An exact
balance between imagination and practicalityis maintainedhere The ups and downs in Lucy's
life and her hopeless passion for Paul Emanuel is the transcript of Charlotte's
relationshipwithHeger.ThecharacterofPaulwithhisinsightandpowerto dominate is the
subjective representationof her life's realism. The transportation of LucySnowe, after some
family disaster, to the fictional French -speaking city of Villette from her native England, is
somewhat'likeJane Eyre's tour to Thorn field Halla world ofadventure and Romance. The
novelist's ownexperiences inBrussels the Villette of the title -a poor, helpless, ordinary,
young woman teaching in girls' schoolembedded inthelifeofLucySnowe, presents
afineexampleofpsychological realism laced withGothic romance. Though this novel isoften
criticized on account of emotional overstrains and glaring improbabilitiestheflashes
ofimaginative brilliancewhich dazzled the literaryworld could not be missed. And at the end
of the novel Lucy's union With Paul Emaneul after three year pause represent genuine
otherworldliness -neitherphysicalnor sexual -simplyprofound. Thus the story of all the four
novels of Charlotte Bronte revolve around life- events problems, difficulties, solutions and
emotions. The way thenovelisthas expressed thefemininefeelings alotofreaders, usually
women,couldvisualize their picture in the mirror of the novels. The framework of all
Brontenovel starts with, especiallywomen'sinner feelings in relation to society and elaborated
in the imaginary world.Thatisallhernovels arethecompilation of twocomponents -real world
and imaginary world. And the imaginary world comes to her fictional world from her
personal life. She was such a creative writer in that era who seldom wrote about social
problemformally. Insteadshe tried to reach human psychology and
innerfeelingsinthatshewasintheleagueof words- worth,for whom human being was an
isolatedphenomenonto be studied individually. Conclusively itcan be affirmed that aliterary
review of Charlotte Bronte and her fictional world helps to understand the background of the
novelist, the backgroundofher literaryworld thestrugglesofher journeyas a womanwriter, The
artistic mixing of the imaginaryworld in the fictionalworld createda new era ofnovels
inthenineteenthcentury. Thesenovelsfocus on individual wish fulfillment; they express the
subjective interior world not only in thoughts, dreams, visions and symbols but
alsobyprojecting inner states through external objects, secondary characters, places, events
andevenweather.Charlotte Bronte wasindeed right when sheutteredThat'imaginationis
a'restless faculty which needs to be heard and exercised. ImpactofherfictionalworldonNovels:
This analysis is covering how to impact the fictional world in every novel by Charlotte
Bronte. Charlotte isafamous English novelist who writes novels basedon her characteristic
view. Female novelist Charlotte came to light on the nineteenth century only reason for her
subject of writing (Abdullaeva et al. 2019). She tried to express women's emotions, pain, and
feelings through her literarywork. And she can describe that entire component in her writing.
Each novel or poem describes a different segment of human life. The fictional world also
impacts her work from every side. By discussing her novel, readers can understand her
process of thought, and imaginary visuals in her novel. This study is a clarity of
understanding of how shebecamea successful writer and how complex her fictional thought
or imagination is with nature. A literature review of Charlotte Bronte and her fictional world
helps to understand the background of this novelist, the background of her literary works,
components of her novel or poet, thestruggle of her writing journey, the imaginary
andfictional worldinhernovel,howsheincludeandrelateimagination onhernovel (Mcdonagh et
al 2019). A review of herliteraryworkhelpsto understand the novelist's background in her
family, how does shestarted herjourney toward novel, how shecreated anew eraof novels,
how shebecome afamous female author in the nineteenth century, and what are the main
components on her novel or poem, how sherelates human feelings withreal-lifeand
event.Theimpact of herfictional world onhernovel helpstounderstand
howfictionalthingsareincluded inherevery novel, how she draws women's emotions through
her novel and relates to the real world. Charlotte Bronte is a famous female English novelist
who started a new era in literaturewhere shereflectshumanpsychologyalongwith the
realworld. ------------------x----------------------- Chapter3:Plotconstruction JaneEyre In the
history of English literature, Jane Eyre is one of the most popular novels written by very
successful novelist Charlotte Bronte. This novel is the first step to success in her career. The
publicationofJaneEyre is agreatwork in literaturework culture. Thisfamous novel was
published in various journals, and magazines in that era (Fata et al. 2016). The most powerful
lady Charlotte Bronte had shown her feelings of domestic romance in her novel Jane Eyre as
well as her whole literary work.JaneEyre isnotonlya novel it'saperformance ofgreatthought,
imagination, reality, beauty, power of youth, romance as well as girlhood and inner feelings.
In this novel author had shown how she observed a feeling of women, how much womenare
facing problems describe their problems,and how societyperforming. In that era in English
literature where Scott, Austin, Jane, and other successful authors were present in novels as
well as literature platforms, that period writing a novel by a woman writer was noteasy todo
with aninner conversation of alady. In that period of literature Charlotte Bronte become
astrong author with her powerful novel Jane Eyre with a new component in literature. This
powerful work affects readers as well as the market of English literature (Lu et al. 2015). Jane
Eyre also takes time to own success on her journey. This novel also faced lots of problems,
ups, and downs, difficulties, and uncertainty. This work of writing is an example of the inner
appearance of a woman. Jane Eyre has also seen multiple rejections to publication. For
rejection, most of the reason was thelanguage of this novel, where the author described
romance and the inside feelings of a woman or another. The writer reflected allher thought
andfeelingsin thenovel through visualized women's sprit. As a successful novel, Jane Eyre is
one of the best works in the English literar•y world. So the study of plot construction of this
novel is also very important toknow about that particular novel's journey towards success,
history of the novel, backend thought of novel or whatother thestepsofthenovel.Analysis of
thenovelJaneEyre plot structure also has shown the same. This analysis is a brief discussion
of the structural component andjourney of this novel.Thisnovelisapurelovestory where agirl
child how suffering in her ownlifebysociety or herfamily as well.Thisnovel described
women's love, war,innerfeelings, romanticism, pain,friendship, jealousy, sex, and extra.In
writing her survival inlife author fight withsociety.Inthat period, it was not easy as now to tell
about women's feelings openly. Fighting with society as well as fighting with owns self she
became a very powerful woman writer who writes women's life journey first time in English
literature. Huan et al.(2019) stated that lots of criticisms also were there but after that also she
writes in their way of
writing.Usually,resultsbecamespiritualgrowthalongwithemotionaladventure through her
successful novel Jane Eyre. Overview of the study of Jane Eyre's plot construction described
several elements related to her literature journeyAt age twenty, charlotte bronte sent an
instance of her verse to britain's creator laureate, robertsouthey. His comments encouraged
her to go away each single scholarly pursuit: "writing can not bethe problem of afemale's
lifestyles, andithaveto not to be. The extra she is participated in her valid responsibilities, the
much less rest will she have for it, at the same time as an success and a diversion." his
reaction demonstrates the political hardships ladies seemed as they tried to go into the
scholarly subject in victorianbritain;homegrown obligations had been speculated to require all
their electricity, bearing in mind ingenious pastimes. Notwithstanding a scarcity of assist
from the relaxation of the sector, charlotte bronte tracked down good enough internal concept
and energy from her sisters to show into an powerful essayist and equilibrium her familial
and creative requirements. Delivered into the arena on April 21, 1816, Charlotte was born in
Thornton, Yorkshire, making her Patrick Brant and Maria Branwell's third child. In 1820, her
dad got a priest submit in haworth, a much off city at the yorkshire moors, in whichcharlotte
consumed the giant majority of her timeonthe planet. In 1821, mrs. Bronte passed on to the
great beyond primarily based on what turned into believed to be disorder. Marianne,
Elizabeth, Emily, Anne, and Branwell areCharlotte's four sisters, have been stepup essentially
viatheirunsavory, femaleauntie, Elizabeth Barnwell, whosupplied them with little control.
Similarly to the fact that the children loose to were wander the fields, but their dad accepted
them to peruse anything intrigued them: shakespeare, the center japanese evenings, pioneer's
development, and the sonnets of byron have been acomponent of their topalternatives. On the
point when aschool fortheladies of unfortunate ministers opened at cowan extension in 1824,
mr. Bronte selected to send his most seasoned four little ladies there to get conventional
training. Most biographers contend thatcharlotte's portrayalof lowood schoolinjane
eyreprecisely mirrors thehorrible situations at thisfaculty.Charlotte'smaximum mounted
sisters, maria andelizabeth, passed onin1824of tuberculosis they gotten smaller duetothe
unlucky administration of the faculty. Following this misfortune, patrickbronte pulled out
charlotteand emily from cowan scaffold. Theprofessor The Professorisalso a greatwork bythe
successfulnovelistCharlotteBronte.She
wasagreathumanbeingwhounderstandrealityandoriginality-basedwritingishow muchimportant
in theliterature world.Sheisthefirstlady whobecame asuccessful author of romance writing. At
the back end of her literature journey, lots of crucial events are available. Her personal life
and society as well as a male competitor also present there. But she plays asunshine
roleinEnglish novel history only because of her power of writing, the craze for exploration,
and her aim of becoming a success and starting a new era of English literature (Akbarovna et
al. 2022). Being a strong novelist her all novels and poems also become successful and
famous. In orderly every stage of English literature her literary works also became more and
more successful. Like all those novels The Professor is also a very successful novel. The
Professor isastory of a young man namedWilliam crimsworth. In this novel author described
all about man's life journey such as his every step of life, his maturation, his personal life, his
relationship, his career, romanticism, his experience of life or difficulties in his step of life.
Author Charlotte Bronte had shown young man William crimsworth life journey. Ashe
wasanorphan child sohe wasdependent on his uncle. This story shows how an orphan young
man trying is becoming self dependent, and how he trying to follow his business father's
ideas. This is a story between two brothers also. They have a fixation on the position of
counting clerk. William crimsworth was agood English teacher. Hesucceeds in a teaching
position in a boy's school. Soon after a new student came named Mlle Hemi was
unfortunately dismissed by Mlle Reuter based on jealousy. William searched Mlle Henriand
he foundout also his aunty'sdeath.After that, he left his job and started tofindanewjoband
marry MlleHenry.Afterbecoming aprofessor attheuniversity he
startedanewhappylifewithhiswife and sonVictor(Lelakovaetal. 2022). Analysis of this story's
plot construction shows how a man suffers being an orphan child. Howmuch he sufferedin
his personal life to grow in his career.Howmuch he faced problems getting into a job and
building a career. Apart from all careers object how much a man suffered in his personal life
toget hislove in life (Chrest et al. 2020). Novelist Charlotte Bronte's novel The Professor is an
example for the audience to knowthe importance of hard work or struggle in human life. The
story ofThe Professoris a journey ofa youngmanwho followsthe path ofhis life step by step.
She begins from zerobut after a long struggle, he won success in hiscareer as well as his
personal life. After struggling hebecomes the hero and The Professor novel became a
masterpiece of English literature. Charlotte bront, then twenty, sent
anexampleofherversetobritain'screatorlaureate,robertsouthey.Hisremarks encouraged her
togoaway each unmarried scholarly pursuit: "writing cannotbethe matter of afemale's life, and
itshould nolonger tobe.Thegreater sheisparticipated in her valid responsibilities, the much less
relaxation will she have for it, while an success and a diversion." his response demonstrates
the political hardships girls regarded as they tried to enter the scholarly discipline in
victorianbritain; homegrown responsibilitieswere purported torequire alltheirelectricity,
takinginto account inventive pursuits. However an absence of assist from the relaxation of the
world,charlotte bronte trackeddowngood enough insideproposal andstrength from her sisters
to show into an effective essayist and equilibrium her familial and imaginitive necessities.
Added into the world at thomton, yorkshire on april 21, 1816, charlotte become the 1/3
offspring of patrickbronte and maria branwell. In 1820, her dad got a clergyman publish in
haworth, a much off metropolis at the yorkshire moors, where charlotte fed on the full-size
majority of her time on the earth. In 1821, mrs. Bronte passed on to the great beyond based
totally on what became believed to be disease. Charlotte and her 4 sisters, maria, elizabeth,
emily and anne, and their sibling, branwell, have been raised essentially through their
unsavory, girl auntie, elizabethbranwell, who furnished them with little control. Similarly
tothereality that theyoungsters unfastened tohad been wander thefields, but their dad
authorised them to peruse anything intrigued them: shakespeare, the middle jap evenings,
pioneer's development, and the sonnets of byron were a component in their pinnacle
selections. On the point whilst afaculty for the girls of unfortunate ministers opened
atextension cowan Mr. Brant decided tosend hisfour most favoured young women there in
1824 to receive a conventional education. Most biographers claim that Charlotte's depiction
of theLowoodfaculty in Jane.While seeking tomakeafew workthat might allow her tomaintain
upwith her autonomy, charlotte shaped starting her own faculty at haworth. To build her
showing competencies prior to beginning this enterprise, she enlisted as an understudy, on the
age of 26, at the pensionnatheger in brussels so she ought to make bigger her familiarity with
french and study german. Charlotte loved the possibility and revel in of residing in some
other tradition, and formed an severe, however uneven, electricity for the wedded dean on the
college: monsieur heger. Following two years in brussels, experiencing maybe her affection
for heger, charlotte weregiven backtobritain.Theassociation toopenherownfaculty become a
unhappiness,as she couldn'tdrawin a solitaryunderstudy. 37 Villette Author Charlotte Bronte's
other famous novelisVillette.Inthe year1853, shewrote this novel in her literature journey in
life. As discussed before this topic author Charlotte Bronte wrote hernovel
basisonhervisualization oflife,thejourney oflife aswellasthestruggleofherlife.Charlotte
Brontewasawoman author whosuffered from her family also. According to Lutteretal.(2022),
this Villette novel is a framework of herownlife.Astory like when she moved totheFrench-
speakingcity Villette from her nativeplace England. The full story shows a new journey of the
author's life, her profession, adventure as well as romance in her own life. In this story,
authorCharlotte Bronteintroduced someimportant characters withanew way of life. Important
characters in this story are Paulina, Mrs. Breton, Mr. Home, M. Paul Emanuel, and extra. In
this novel all characters have their view of life, their struggle, love, or relationship (Ramos et
al. 2021). The character of this novel Lucy Snowed was a patient, she was a teenager. She
develops love feelings towards John Graham in her adulthood.Another side, John falls in love
with a selfish girl. Their relationship does not work between them. This novel is an analysis
of critical interpretations. In this novel, women do fights for their rights, for their
independence. View of own prospect of author charlotte Bronte, Villette is the most artistic
power of her literature journey of life.Inthis novel drawn nothing is immediately reached out
to women as well as the heroine of this story. Charlotte Bronte was the first novelist who
writes about the reality oflife for a woman. She goes deeply personal, observes inner feelings,
and seems original in human life (Gonzalez 2020). While looking tomake afew work that
could allow her tohold up together withher autonomy, charlotte fashioned starting herown
faculty athaworth. To buildher showing abilties prior tobeginningthis endeavor, she enlisted
as an understudy, atthe age of 26, at thepensionnat heger in brussels soshecould enlarge her
familiarity with french and research german. Charlotte cherished the possibility
andrevelinofdwellinginanyothertradition, andfashioned anextreme, butuneven, strength forthe
wedded dean at thecollege: monsieur heger. Following two years in brussels, experiencing
perhaps her affection for heger, charlotte got again to britain. The association to open her
own college changed into a disappointment, as she couldn't attract a solitary understudy.
Analysis of the plot structure of the novel Villette is a mirror of women's feelings.
Itisthesupervision of womeninsociety.Inthisnovel, women aredealing with a lead role in
society as well as with their inner fight. This is the first novel where theauthor explores
gender rolesinoursociety (Drozetal.2021).Endof the novel allleadrolesidentify theirjourney,
struggle, anddifficulties towardssuccess.
Thisnovelislikeanopenmirrorintheauthor'slifewheresheexpresses herthinking
power,observation power,quality,andintegrityinwomen'slife.Publishing Villette
isoneofthegreatexamplesinherLiteraturejourney inEnglishliterary history.The reverend Arthur
B. Nicholls, aminister for Mr.Bronte at Haworth starting in1845,
diedin1852.,proposedunionwithcharlotte.Previousinherexistence,charlottehad dismissed afew
propositions tobeengagedconsidering thefact thatsheturnedinto looking forward totodiscover
true romance, but forlornness following the passing of her ultimate threekinfolk would
possibly have pushed her torenowned nicholls' proposition. Announcing
shehad''regard''butnolongerlovefornicholls,charlotte's relationship together with her better
half of was actually no longer the thoughts boggling power of jane and rochester.
Herdad'sdesirous resistance tothe wedding drovecharlotte at thebeginning to push aside
nicholls, who left Haworth in 1853- the year Villette was allotted-before that year. Reverend
Brant's opposition to the unionhadsignificantly wanedby1854,and theaction wasfinally taken
onJune 29 of that year. After themarriage, Charlotte hadlittleenergy for writing because she
hadtotakeontheresponsibilitiesexpected ofapriest'ssignificant otherandcarefor her ageing
father. During the early stages of her pregnancy in 1854, Charlotte contracted pneumonia
whileout on along,rain-soaked walk in thefields. Amonth beforeherthirty-tenthbirthday
celebration, onMarch31,1855,shedepartedforthe great beyond. The teacher, which Mrs.
Gaskell wrote in 1846 and 1847, was published in 1857 along with Charlotte Brant's life.
Shirley Charlotte Bronte wrote many novels and poems on her literature journey.
SomeofhernovelsbecameamasterpieceinEnglishliterature.Fromthere,Shirley is also the
topmost published novel in her life. Shirley was published in 1849. This novel was the
second published novel in her life. But Shirley was published by a pseudonym.Before
publishing Shirley Jane Eyre was successfully published. She
alreadybecameknowninEnglishliterature.Duringtheirperiodofwriting,Shirley Charlotte Bronte
faced various obstacles in her life such as her sibling's death (Erdelyi 2018).The novel Shirley
is an example ofa social novel in the period of the middle 19th century. This story considers
the original background of the textile industry. The story Shirley is a mirror of real history
between 1811 to 1812 textile industries Luddite uprisings. The novel Shirley is a summary of
bread and butter related topoor men or women who are working in thetextile industry; the
story isa description of labor injustice, poverty, and bias against women or more. Plot
construction of Shirley is very important toknow about thestruggle of women who are
involved in the textile industry, how much they are suffering, and what is the problemthey
arefacing through. Literatureisamirrorof society (Maueretal.2021). Usually, Shirley became
areal mirrorof thenineteenth era.There aremany reasons to write Shirley. Charlotte Bronte
was the first writer who understandsthe struggle or feelingsofwomen, and how theyare
sufferingthroughsociety. One of the noticeable features in this and the following chapters
which are concerned withthelettersis the manner in which the narration presents the material
to us. In Chapter 21,'Reaction', whenthe letter first appears, it is described at a distance asit
passes through the hands of Rosine, the portress, and then M. Paul. In the following chapter,
entitled 'TheLetter', we aregiven Lucy's opinionofthe letter. Then at the opening of the
Chapter entitled'Vashti' (Ch. 23), Lucy tells the reader that theletter hasbrought sunshine and
nourishment to thedim,dank, misty dell she has metaphorically inhabited. She declares 'Anew
creed became mine-a belief in happiness' and informs us that the first letter now has four
companions. She leaps forward to a later time (but not necessarily the time of current
narration) when she looksback and can say of them that'theywerekindletters
enough':'Time,dear reader, mellowed them to abeverage ofthismild quality' (V, p. 334). The
unspoken is that there is no lover's content, and overall there is something curious about this
refusal togive usverbatim anything ofDrJohn's letters toLucy. Managing themfor the reader in
this way is suggestive of an idea that letters-certain letters -must remain private:
amanipulation of themeaning of letters inanovel as writing within writing. What we do get in
the'Vashti'chapter is access to Lucy Snowe's soul when previously shehas hidden her self
from us(forexample the letter in Chapter 12that Dr John intercepts creates emotions in Lucy
which she does not elaborate upon).
'Doesthereader,rememberingwhatwassaidsomepagesback,caretoaskhowI answered
theseletters: whether under thedry,stintingcheckofReason, oraccording
tothefull,liberalimpulse ofFeeling?/Tospeaktruth,Icompromised matters' (V, p. 334). She
writes two types of letter, one from the heart, and the other the type of lettermore appropriate
as to afriend.Itis thefriendly one that goes toDrJohn. This isonce more writing as acathartic
activity, letters as conventional emotional outlet, but the 'true'letters, the lettersfrom the
selfand soul, 'poured out' from a 'sincere heart',are kept private. Having
heldoffReasonforaslongassheand Feeling can
doso,'thedoorsofmyheartwouldshake,boltandbarwouldyield,Reasonwould leap in,
vigorousand revengeful,snatch the full sheets, read, sneer, erase, tear up, re- write, fold, seal,
direct,andsenda terse,curt missiveofa page. They were added into the arena at thornton
vicarage, yorkshire. Their dad turnedinto an irish clergyman.The familyearlierthan
lengthymovedto haworth, to the excessive parsonage which was their deep rooted domestic.
The lofty slope town withitsdimcobbledroads, andtheawfulclassassuming thesurrounding
fields were developmental consequences on the children. Their mother, adelicate cornish girl,
handed on from malignant boom the 12 months the own family showed up at haworth. Her
sister, elizabethbranwell, was satisfied to transport to sodden and blustery yorkshire to take
care of the youngsters, five young women and a kid referred to as branwell. She confirmed
little fondness for her prices, and, relatively, lessfor the wild wideopen they
soloved.In1824,patrickbronte figured out the way to tune downa college cowan extension(run
byusing fireplaceup. Cowan) for the 4 extra seasoned young women. The scale of the cost
(&14 every yr) mirrored the disregard and undernourishment continued by using the young
ladies. There they drove alive of subject, accommodation,moderation, subject and
suppression which in charlotte imparted the severe and enduring hatred she communicated
nearly two decades after the reality in jane eyre. Their sisters maria and elizabeth surpassed
on there of tuberculosis multiple months after their look.Charlotte and emily had been
brought returned where emily stayed there for the subsequent decade and charlotte for 6.
However guided by their dad, from whom they procured an enthusiasm for verse, they grew
up liberated from huge numbers of the difficulty typically put on kids. Their auntie stayed
away from them and their dad became a far flung figure who even took his feasts on my
own.So the younger brontes moved closer together (emily turned into nearest toher extra
youthful sister anne) and earlier than lengthy
havebecomesubmergedintelling,then,atthatfactor,composinganecdotesabout
dreamlandstheymade. Theywanderedup to 20 miles each day over the fields and in the course
of those strolls their innovative mind became sorted with tales of the powerful advised by
means of their methodistservanttabithaaykroyd, a widow of fifty six.Thenarrating
commenced in1826,whiledadbrought again acrateof wood troopers; every teen picked one
and started out recounting the epic tale of glass town's characters. Emily created the"gondal"
stories when still only 12 years old, whileCharlotteand Branwell
introduced"angria's''adventuresto them. CONCLUSION In other words, if you are
predisposed tobeoptimistic, M. Paul did indeed
returnandalliswell.Theimplicationofcourseisthatifyouarepessimistic,then M. Paulperished,
and this reading is possible aswell since the boat's name refers directly to the novel Paul et
Virginie (1788), in which lovers are separated and communicate byletters before Virginie
diesatseainher attempt toreturn toPaul.18 There was some correspondence with Charlotte
Bronte from readers asking for 'exactandauthenticinformation
respectingthefateofM.PaulEmanuel!' towhich
Charlotterepliedthatshehadwordedherresponses'toleavethematterprettymuch where it was.
Since the little puzzle amuses the ladies, it wouldbe a pity to spoil
theirsportbygivingthemthekey'.19. Mr.Brantsufferedaterribleillnessin1830. Itshowedhim how,
if he persisted, his children might becomebeggars without regular teaching. Inthisway,
withfinancial support fromCharlotte's godparents, she was sent back to school and was given
a wonderful ranch-style home in Roe Head. She absorbed all the roe head she needed to train
and got her lower back in about a year and a half. The three years that followed were spent in
domestic tranquilly, or assimilation, as a hard duplicate heartfelt angrian indicates. Charlotte
received a position asaproper handinstructor atRoeHead when shewas 19along with asmall
stipend andsome informaltutoringfora student who was regarded as one of her sisters. After
just 3 months emily, the divinely selected man or woman, were given returned.She
overlooked the liberty of the country. Composing 15 years after the occasion, charlotte stated
of her sister, "freedom changed into the breath of emily's noses, without it, she died...Every
monring whilst she woke, the vision of domestic and thefields hurried on her...Her wellbeing
became without delay damaged...Ifelt in myheartshe might kick the bucket withintheevent
that she did not go
domestic...''charlotteherselfbackfollowingthreeyears.Sheturnedintonotableto endure the
upheld friendliness of the school. The following yr, 1939, charlotte diverted down a
proposition from fire up. Henry nusey, sibling of her long lasting accomplice ellen, whom she
met at roe head. After two months she became short coach to 2 unreasonable children. She
got lower back beneath two months after the reality and got one extra proposition from a
younger irish minister her dad knew. Years exceeded at haword before she tracked down
some other role. In the meantimeemilyremained atdomestic, feelingherself tobeasadness, she
wastossed simplest into the organisation of branwell, a sadness of byronic energy. She pulled
out from the social global into her dearest secures, her dogs, felines and her hen of prey. She
felt''stupendously and moronically and significantly inept''. In 1837 she tried tofill in as coach
but gotten returned soon to stay there for the following four years,whilstcharlotteand anne
kept on functioningas tutors. A more significant interpretation is that the ending suggests both
the real Paul (living) and the biblicalPaul (dead). At the end of the Acts of theApostles,Paul
(as aprisoner)isshipwrecked onMalta.However,heforetells:'AndnowIexhortyou to be of good
cheer: for there shall benoloss ofany man's life among you, butof
theship'(Acts27.22).Theopenendingthenbecomesatestoffaithforthereader: if webelieve
theBible,weknow thatPaulissaved; if wearenon-believers wholack the truth of religious
imagination, Paul is drowned. There is an added irony, given the anti-Catholic nature of the
novel, yet a transcendence of religious difference by both Lucyand M. Paul, in that the
biblical Paul is setting sail for Rome (Acts27- 28). Remember also that it is a letter which
ends Jane Eyre, when St John Rivers predictshisown deathas theclose tohis
Indiamissionarywork (Jane Eyre, p.458). But that ending appears to subordinate the romantic
bond between Rochester and Jane to the higher spirituality of St John, which is not quitein
keeping with the general tenor of the novel. Theending of Villette, where it melds writing,
spirit and love in the exchange of letters betweenM.Paul and Lucy,isthus perhaps more
aesthetically justified. To rely on ambivalence deliberately affords at least two triumphs: the
lovers are rendered unknowably timeless, and writing itself is the medium through which
characters and readers experience the world at its profoundest.
TheanalysisoftheplotconstructionofCharlotte Bronte'snovelsisvery
importanttoknowinwhichsituationshewroteallherpoemsaswellasanovel,thatera was how much
difficult to write for a women novelist, what are the difficulties shefaced, and how hard to
beat her competitor in theliterature world. By facing all problems in her life she became
stronger, power of her literary work provides her energy to writing about women's feelings.
From her own experience of life and society, observation is the real plot of her every novel.
Presenting through originality,realfactsoflife,especially women'slifeshebecameawonderful
novelist in English literature. Her literary work aims to explore women's power in front of
society. Of all novels, Shirley isthe best example of this. Apart fromShirley her all novel is
alsoa prominent example of women's feelings. She covered the serious and real side of a
women's life. Her literature provided a maturity in the literature world. Her work signified
social problems, solutions, situations, or the reason behind them. She had such aspiritual
power to read theinner feelings of women, especially in some parts of lifesuchaspain,
love,relation, heart, orextra. Shehad observed social problems, positions,and proper action as
well. Beinga female author she choosesher corner of writing and she followed her way. She
introduced the first time women's psychology in that generation.Her way of literature plot is a
broad application in literature history. Sheisa very fascinated author in part of the privet life
of women, their inner thought, and obstacles. Her own experience and observation of life
created astrongliterary plotfor her.For thesereasons, real problems, obstacles, and difficulties
arereflected clearly inher novel. Readers can relate them to allincidents of the character of the
novel. Her family condition as well as her struggle in life made the plot for her every novel.
Villette et al. (2022) rectified how important to understand woman psychology to live a
peaceful life, and how much struggle they havetowin theirfight.Pros andconsrelated
tothestruggling lifeof awoman.These all crucial and real fact ofa women's life is theonly
platform as well as a great plot ofsuccessful female novelist Charlotte Bronte's literarywork.
One reason for Jane Eyre's fascination with her own experience and the understanding with
which sheexamines itis that, as the nearly convoluted storyline unfolds, the reader realises
that it is more like records than a story. If the heartfelUgothic novel is, in a single feel, sheer
desire, jane's victory (wife to ruler Rochester, all things considered, and mother to his baby-as
it barely wishes be said) addresses a desire satisfaction of extraordinary elements. Jane Eyre,
who is partnerandmotherin1819,isrelatingtheeventsof1799-1809inalanguagethatis unfailingly
mind-blowing definitively inlightof the fact that it's miles someday later.The stuff oflegends
andfantasies, perhaps; butalso,occasionally, thistime at any rate, of life. Because we are
persuaded to trust Jane Eyre's voice, we are persuaded to believe she has achieved
achievement. It's miles, in its straightforwardness,its regret and slightly included rage,
startlinglymodern-day; andaffirms the simple knowledge that all display-stoppers are
contemporaneous both with their very own instances and with our own. 4 jane eyre was
composed underneathapencallcharlottebronte become31yearsof age,aloss,asithadbeen, of
adecade of bondage asaeducate. "but, currer ringer'' became anobscure author and of
indistinct sex, thenovel was recounted very quickly after being proposed to thedispensing
areaofsmith,senior;itwasdispensedinsidethespanof7weeksand changed into asecond
achievement. Like bronte's heartfelt legend ruler byron, the brand new writer ''arose
onemorning morning to discover herself widely recognised.'' A huge part of the pressure Jane
Eyre receives comes from a logic the creator inconspicuously seeks after on a few primary
tiers. For instance, in the most
important,maximumopenfeelthenovelisreadypersonanimatedintoimprovement -without a
doubt noteworthy improvement-by way of location: jane eyre, stranded and possibly
uncovered, and a simple younger woman, reveals the power
ofherpersonviathedifficultiesofsomedifferentiatingsituations-thereedfamily, in which she is
scorned;lowoodfaculty, where she unearths a model in pass over sanctuary and an
otherworldly sister in helen consumes; thornfield,inwhich she develops, with beautiful
effortlessness, a percentage of sexual power; whitcross, where, subsequently, she obtains the
similarity to a own family; and ferndean, rochester's retreat, a resort of "giant relic . . .
Profound included in a wooden,'' wherein she is subsequently marry. 6 in addition as these
painstakingly brought locations assessment distinctly from every other, so jane varies
exceptionallyin them;onehasthefeelingofaspiritinendlessimprovement.Asakidwithinthereed
circle of relatives, censuring mrs. Reed, janefeels afeeling of shiny victory:"erei had finished
this answer, my spirit commenced to extend, to glory, with the maximum abnormal feeling of
possibility, of win, i at any factor felt.Maybean undetectablebondhad exploded, and i had
battledout into unhopedfor freedom." bronte's feeling of human character is that it is
malleable, liquid, and dwelling, in activate (andfrequently disobedient) reaction
toitsenvironmental factors; now not that it's far nonetheless up in the air, as though etched in
marble.Jane eyre is no picture of a lady besides for the narrative of a youngerfemalein a
"courageous'' form,ashelpless asanyguytofretfulness andboredom whenresistance neglects to
providea purposeagainstwhichto battle.Cometo be exhaustedat thornfield,for example, earlier
than the appearance of the professional,jane yearns for a pressure of imaginative and
prescient that could bridge the restrictions of her sequestered existence, non violent for all
intents and functions. Extraordinarily like the anonymous train of henry james' the flip of the
screw,1 jane strolls agitatedly approximately, on my own,''blanketed within the quiet and
isolation," and enthusiastic for experience: or, in other phrases, sentiment. Girls ought to be
quiet, jane says, yet women feel exactly as men do, requiring workout for his or her resources
and experiencing stagnation. On the 1/3 ground of thornfield she walks round, an awfullot the
same as the hostage bertha in her retrogressive and-steps beforehand, permitting"my
creativeness to stay upon whatever that incredible dreams rose before it -and, undoubtedly,
they had been severa and sparkling; to permit my heart to be hurled by using the elated
improvement, which, while it extended it in a tough state of affairs, prolonged it with
existence; and, the great element is that to open my inner ear to a tale that became long past
on forever-a story my innovative mind made, and described constantly; inspired with all of
episode, life, fire, feeling, that i desired and had not in my proper presence.'' janeis charlotte
bronte telling usof theentrancing mental enjoy of thecomposition of jane eyre. (It was written
in five months.) Chapter 4: Stylistic Design Romanticism in Bronte's Novel English novelist
Charlotte Bronte is one of the most famous authors in literary history. Her novel work is very
unique and realistic. She is the first woman author to write as a female fighter; she has broken
all the obstacles to writing based on her own experience as well as the situation in society. In
the nineteenth century, raising women's voices was easy to do. In that period of the era,
society was controlled by males, and the literary world was also operated by male authors
(Zhao 2019). So usually no one introduces women's feelings in literature. Charlotte Bronte
first brought Romanticism to English literature. Her novels are literary works based on
female feelings, originality, inner thought, and romanticism. Presenting romance in literature
is an art. Charlotte Bronte assumed this art properly through society, woman issues,
challenges, arguments, or imagination. Enlightened romanticism is a movement or
exploration in literary history. Bronte lived her own life and saw various aspects of the
journey towards success. She experimented with women's problems and obstacles in their
personal lives. These all notices are helping Charlotte Bronte debutromanticism in her
novels.Ofallnovels,JaneEyre is one of the greatest examples of romanticism. In this novel
author shows the formulation of
romanticism,thediscourseofwomen'sinnerfeelings,thevisionofanywomen's life, expression of
a female face or another. This novel is the best example of
romanticisminCharlotteBronte'sliteraturejourney(Allen2019). In recapping her tale, jane
usually acquaintswhat is occurring implied withincite standard dating with recognize to the
peruser (to whom, concerning a companion, jane talks absolutely) and afterward, interiora
passage or , deftlyqualifies or discredits it. The tale's rationalization, it thoroughlymay be
said, is its veryvery ownplot movement,very precise from jane'sphysicalgames.A
postulationofkinds is delivered; be that as it could,would it not be a good concept for us we
answer it, the storyteller will restore us: for she is constantly in fee of her
story.Weexamine,withjane,thatwhat'sbyusingallbillsseldomis;inany
occasion,whilstrochestermaskshimselfasafortune-tellingwanderer, unrealistically tricking his
site visitors, jane is adequately sharp to suppose"some thing of a cover." in the
ultimatescene,jane solutions before everything like all heartfelt champion, envisioning a
wordsworthian consolation within the moorland: "not abind holds metohuman subculture
asof now-nolonger anenchantment or agree with calls me in which my individual animals
are-none that saw me would have a worrying concept orincredible wantfor me.I have
norelative besides for the general mother, nature: i can look for her bosom and ask
relaxation.'' untouchable that sheis from human subculture, jane realizes herself adored
commonly, to which shegrips with an open "obedient affection":''thisevening, at any fee, i
might beher visitor, as i was her child: my mother would hold up me without cash and
without price. I had any other piece ofbread.... My craving, sharp previously,was, within
theoccasion that not fulfilled, conciliated through this loner's dinner.'' as her dream proceeds
with jane estimates approximately god, a he set near nature'sshe:"we comprehend that god is
all over; however definitely wefeel his presence maximum when hisworksare at the
maximumsplendidscopespreadout earlierthan us: and it is within the unclouded night time
sky, in which his universes wheel their quiet path, that we examine maximum clear his
vastness." jane's enliveningsubsequent morning is to a harsh disclosure: she begins to stumble
upon certifiable craving and to experience the embarrassment, mounting nearly to real dread,
of near hunger. Devotion speedy disappears; heartfelt wayoftalkingisdropped.
Brontesuppliesthis toughrecess withsuchexactitude thatonecannotquestion shecomposed
fromdirect perception, as her earliest biographer mrs. Gaskell suggests.2 few scenes in
english writing aresohighly nerve racking as those in which jane defeats her satisfaction to
askforfoodandisgivenacovering ofbread,ormealsimpliedforswines,orrepelled by way of and
large. ("i accused none of the folks whorepelled me. Ifelt it became regular.'') craving has end
up proper to jane such that the maxims of"nature'' and "god'' are not. (one is helped to
keepinmind the''narrow, ghastly, and empty checked out" lucy snowe, who, facedwith a
renoir-like representation of a curvy girl, apparently cleopatra, answers with surprising
viciousness. For positive, bronte herself issoenraged withtheaidofthis"hugepieceof drivel''
that,forsurepassages, the exactingly quelled writing of villette is jazzed up by a certifiable
energy:''i decided that this woman ...Would reliably abandon fourteen tosixteen stone. She
was, for positive, rather all round took care of: plenty of butcher's meat-to no longer express
some thing of bread, veggies, and fluids-must shehave consumed to accomplishthat
broadnessand degree,that abundanceofmuscle, that opulence of flesh.... She had
nocommercial enterprise to relax away the early afternoon on a couch. She have to
furthermore to have worn suitable pieces of clothing; an outfit masking her accurately." lucy
snowe is a more pro and disillusioned jane eyre, drawingagain from the real insignia
oftissue.) Analysis of romanticism is the best part of Charlotte Bronte's literature journey.
Several components in her way of writing reflect romanticism as one integral topic. The
author wants to elaborate on the romantic value of a women'slife. In the
nineteentheraofEnglishliterature,manyauthorsCharlottewasthe first female writer who brakes
choice of writing, established the root of a romantic novel, and evolution came in English
literature. In the novel, The Professor or Shirley Bronte's female characters express their
feelings, originality, and romanticism openly. In her novel,femalecharactersare
livestheirlifewithoutanyhesitation.Theyfightfor
theirrights,theypassthroughlotsofchallenges,andtheyalsofacedvarioussteps
ofpersonallifesuchaslove,pain,romance,feelings,andmore.Inthenovel, Bronte's female
characters express their feelings and romance openly. Bronte's
literaryworkisanopenbooktoexpressfemaleoriginality. Bronte'sheroin Charlotte Bronteisoneof
thefemaleauthors inEnglishliterature who writes heroin character-based novels tointroduce
thefemale character inour society. Her every novel reflects a different type of women's
character. Bronte's novel aim to explore women's feelings, inner quality, originality,
difficulty, and challenges. She isthefirstnovelist
whofocusedtocreateheroininherliterarywork.The goal of her making women character in the
novelis that she wants to raise female originality, female life journey, andfemale
struggle.According to Galban(2018),Bronte develops female characters in her every novel. In
the end, she became a successful female author who introduced females as super heroin in her
literature. In her, in every novel female character are not like same. Female characters play a
crucial role in her different novels. Love, romance, sex, tragedy, struggle, and difficulties are
each elements of a woman's personal life that author Bronte describes in her novel. In every
female character, she draws a perfect real line between events, incidents, and everything. The
authors show how women became a stronger part of man,how women faced every challenge
in their lives,and how they overcame them. The author represents female characters as well as
heroines in her novel, like the protagonist of the story and the lead character of the story. She
represents the female character of her novel, Anangle of the Home, a heroine of romance
(Hackenberg 2019). The younger brave girl's voice is what first astounds readers of''Jane
Eyre" since it is so explicit, bordering on obtuse. Instead of snobbish younger female
reasoning, thisviewpoint issurprisingly flimsy, if notquestionable. Attenyearsold, the
homeless Jane can already see through the hypocrisy of her afflicted Christian elders. "People
believe you a decent girl, but you are nasty; unfeeling," shesays her teasing auntReed.
You'redishonest!and ''I'mpleased you're notoneof myrelatives; as long as I'm alive, I may
never refer toyou as an aunt."When I'm an adult, I won't
evergobacktoseeyou.IfsomeoneweretoaskmehowIfeltaboutyouandhow
youtreatedme,I'dbeabletorespondthatjustthinkingaboutyoumakesme weak.'' (In actuality, Jane
is given permission to visit her auntie while she is old and dying and forgives her. In any
case, this is clearly wrong from this point on.) Jane battles the fundamentalcriticisms of
Christianityin the capacity ofa learnerwith the aim of becoming anadvanced philosopher,
asafactual substituteforFriedrich Nietzsche to return: "I have tostand up tothose who continue
todespise me and to those who reject me unfairly.It's far quite enough of the norm for me to
appreciate those who give me warmth or stand by my side when I feel that it's worth it. and
this startling claim, which would haveappeared extreme and "unfeminine" toreaders
in1847(or, in actuality, 1947): On April 21,1816,Charlotte bront was introduced to Maria
Branwell andPatrickbront in the arena in Yorkshire, England. Since Charlotte's mother passed
away when she was five years old, Charlotte's aunt, a devout methodist, helped her brother
raise his children by getting married.Charlotte, together with her sisters Maria, Elizabeth, and
Emily, were sent away to Cowan Extension, a school for young priestesses, in 1824.
Charlotte and Emily had been returned whenaTBepisoderesultedinthedeathsof Marisa
andElizabeth. Charlotte eventually returned to high school, this time at Roe Head, England,
quite some time later. In 1835, she started working as a teacher at the college, but after a
while she made the decision to start teaching privately, everything else being equal. She was
hired in 1839 to remain with and care for the children of the wealthy Sidgewick
familycircle.However,shesoonleftthepositionbecauseshefoundit hopeless.Charlottereturned
toworkingasacoach, butthistimefor atradingfamily after realising that her dream of opening
her own school was no longer likely to come true anytime soon. After becoming just as
frustrated with her teacher's assignments the second time around, Charlotte asked her sisters
to enrol her in a more rigorous foundation course for aschool. It has been more than one
hundred and fifty years since the first novel of then
31yearsoldCharlotteBrontewasfirstpublished.Thenovel'stitlewasJaneEyre
andwiththisbookcamethebeginningofCharlotte'sprofessionalcareerasa novelistwhose name is
still not to be forgotteneven though she used a pen name for her first publications. Even now
her novels keep attracting readers from all over the world, new film adaptations of her work
are being created and her stories are also penetratingothergenresofart
likemusicals,operasandmore.However,itisnot
onlyCharlotteBronte'sliteraryworkwhathasbeenprovokingcuriosityandattractedinterest.Her
lifeandthe livesofher family,especiallyhersistersalso knownasinfluentialfemalewriters,are for
manypeoplealmostequallyexciting. This fact may be supported by the numbers of biographies
and documents which are continually being produced and which keep drawing interest of
large audiences. This January- in 2017, Britain's TV ChannelBBC Oneaireda brandnew two-
hourlong TvfilmdedicatedtothelivesofBrontesiblingswhichprovesthatpeoplearestill
hungryformorematerialonthisfamousliteraryfamily.Italsosuggeststhatitis
muchmoredifficultthanwithotherwriterstoseparateBrontes'worksfromtheir life
experiencealthough the lives of all siblings were only short ones. Despite the fact all three
Bronte sisters died before they reached the age of 40, much has happened in their lifetimes
and their lifestories were (and still are) romanticized by many, contributing tocreating
aBronte myth assuggested by author Lucasta Miller in her book bearingthe title ofthe same
name. This''myth-making''was started togetherwiththe publication of Elizabeth Gaskell's The
Life of Charlotte Bronte. Afterwards, all the Bronte sisters and Charlotte especially were
never fully perceived by public only asinfluential authors of timeless novels picking
bravethemesfortheir times suchastheroleof women in society or the clash of morality and
desires but also as tragic heroines of their own, theirlivesbeingpicturedinanovel-likemanner
explaining andjustifying theirwork. However, although it is undeniable that their home near
the moors and all the tragedies that happened to them must have been an inspiration for their
work, the sole influence for them was not only misery and depression, on the contrary, the
main themes wemay observe in their. Even though the Bronts' school was rendered useless,
their artistic endeavours were successful. Early examples of their common writing ability
include the children's creation of the fictitious continent they called
Angriaandtheircountlessdebts,sonnets,andplays.Theseearlyexamples
eventuallyinspiredEmily,Anne,andCharlottetopursuecareersaswriters. Charlotte suggested
that she, Anne, and Emily collaborate on a volume of sonnets as adults. The three sisters
distributed their 11under the aliases of men: wascurrer ringer,evenasEmilyandAnnecomposed
asEllisandActonchimed,oneatatime. In light of thefact that the verse volume received Iittle
public attention, the sisters decided to write about independent volumes under different pen
names.Anne and Emily finished writing their magnum opusesin1847, butCharlotte never
managed to find a willing publisher for The Trainer during the course of her life. Charlotte
immediately started writing Jane Eyre following that. One of the best works of its era, both
conceptually and financially, the book examined Victorian fears about orientation and social
class. There are obvious private elements throughout Jane Eyre. The death of Charlotte's
sisters at Cowan Extension is influenced by Jane's connection withLowoodSchool,
whereherclosest partnerdiesof tuberculosis.The misguided rigid zeal of the director, Mr.
Brocklehurst, is partially based on the outreaching preacher who oversaw Cowan Scaffold,
the reverend Carus Wilson. Through blaming it for the fictitious lowood, Charlotte exacted
revenge on the college that had treated her so poorly. The tragic death of Jane's friend Helen
Consumes from tuberculosis recalls the deaths of two of Charlotte's sisters, Maria and
Elizabeth, who succumbed to the same disease while working at Cowan Scaffold.
Additionally, the existence of Charlotte Brant's brother Branwell, who
developedopiumandalcoholaddictionsintheyearsprecedinghisdeath,maybe seen as a reflection
of John Reed's descent into alcoholism and breakdown.Finally, just like Charlotte, Jane
assumes the role of an instructor, providing a mostly independent vantage point from which
to express and portray the severe social beliefs and customs of Victorian society in the
nineteenth century. finest works are ratherfierce,boldandpassionate which wasavery
unconventionaland among many not exactly welcomed occurrence in Victorian England they
lived in, suggesting the sisters were not merely victims of their tragic lives but also strong
and intelligent women. However, women were not supposed to be passionate and brave back
then, they were not expected tohave desires forequality and adventure, and therefore the
novels of the Bronte sisters were accepted with alot of confusion and mistrust from both men
and women -for men this was a threat to their status in society and for women a threat they
would be perceived as immoral and undeserving. Elizabeth Gaskell, whowished tomaintain
herposition asbotharespectable femalewriterand as an obedient wife and mother knowing her
position in Victorian society, tried her best to redirect the attention from the novels of Anne,
Emily and Charlotte to their Iives which were also a great basis for writing a novel-like
biography of the last surviving sister. Today,we must admitshe hadalot ofsuccesswith
thismissionand she did create a surviving Bronte myth. Nevertheless, in time, the literary
works of all sisters gained attention and critical appreciation they deserved and Bronte sisters
are nowadays established as respectable female writers who provided the literary world with
timeless and influential pieces of art.Even so, up to this date, readers keep wondering how
three women living basically in seclusion somewhere in Yorkshire without much contact
withotherpeople, couldcreatesuchpassionate andvividcharacters (especially male characters
areasource of muchconfusion) anddescribe allthese deep,sophisticated relationships.On
onehand, Brontesisters werenot assecludedfromsociety assome biographies may suggest as
their family had some connections and acquaintances and Haworth was not just a small
village but growing industrial town. Moreover, Charlotte and Emily had spent some time
abroad in Brussels where they
undoubtfullyhadachancetomeetmanyinterestingpeople.Nevertheless, asallthree sisters were
spinsters when they wrote their works, it is still puzzling how emotionally and realistically
they portrayed all the complicated love stories. This ability may only be attributed to keen
observation of their surroundings and to having the opportunity and permission (from their
father) to read extensively basically anything they could which they combined with their own
great literary talents and imagination that may have been enhanced by the poetic view on the
moors laying just behind their windows. The story of Jane Eyre isstructured like a
bildungsroman, aliterary work that tells the story of a child's growth and focuses on the
feelings and experiences that accompany andtrigger thatchild'sdevelopment
intoadulthood.Therearefiveclear sequential events inJane Eyre, eachrelated toaspecific
location: jane's enjoyment ofgrowing upinGateshead,
hereducationattheLowoodSchool,herexperience as Adele's tutor at Thornfield, herinteractions
with theStreams family at Morton and atBathroom Give Up(alsoknown asDiscipline
Residence), and hergathering and
unionwithRochesteratFerndean.Janedevelopsintotheknowledgeableandreliable given girl who
displays the radical introspectively as a result of thoseunique interactions. However, the
gothic startling story, a third scholastic tradition, separates Jane Eyre'sbildungsromanstoryline
fromits aspectof societal criticism. The gothic style was born inGermany, much like the
bildungsroman. It gained popularity inBritaininthelateeighteenth century and primarily
depicts successful encounters, faraway settings, and perplexing events that are all meant to
create an atmosphereofanxietyanddread.Jane'sexperimentswithghosts,murkyinsider
information,andevil machinationsgive the book an extravagantand suspenseful sense of
imagination. Inthatinfluencedherandhowshedevelopedasawriterwithrespecttohow shegrew
and matured as a person and how herideas and opinions changedduring
herlifewhichshereflectedinherbooks.Asalreadysuggestedabove,Ihavechosen theoldest sister
whohas gained most popularity andrecognition notonly during her lifetime but also
afterwards -Charlotte. The thesis is divided into two parts-in the first one, the attention is paid
to the broader historical context and consequently to Bronte's biography. The focus in this
part is laid on Bronte'supbringing,family, education and working experience as all these
elements had impact and shaped Bronte as a writer who produced writings since her early
childhood and who later published four complete novels. These novels are further analysed in
the second, more analytical part of the thesis. For the fullviewof Bronte's professional
development, allfour novels areanalysed inthefollowing order:TheProfessor, Jane Eyre,
Shirley and Villette in this order -i.e. in order these were written and not by the date of their
publishing so that the analysis of the literary development and changes of narrative style and
features is logical. Along with commenting on the changes, I will also concentrate on the
commonelements and similaritiesbetween all four novels to define Charlotte Bronte's
personal writing style and recurrent themes which often reflected on the changing historical
and personal background. By using these approaches, combining biographical study
andliterary analysis,Iam hopingtocreateathesis providing acomplex overview
ofBronte'sworkasIbelieve, and per her words Charlotte did too, the authors of literary works
draw their inspiration mainly in their souls, surroundings,and experience, and it is impossible
to separate the writer from his or her work, but it is also important to observe
thelinesandbearinmindthat novelisnotautobiography.AsstatedbyTomWinnifrith and Edward
Chitham in their Macmillan literary lives edition Charlotte and Emily
Bronte:''Similaritieshave beenfound betweensomecharacters intheBrontes' lives
andsomecharacters intheir works, butsimilarityisnotidentity, norcan,orshould,
wefindreallifemodelsforallBrontecharacters.''Followingthepublication ofJane Eyre, Charlotte
revealed her identity to her publisher and went on to write more unique books, most notably
Shirley in 1849.Shedeveloped into arespected figure among London's academic elite over the
ensuing years. However, the deaths of family members Anne in 1849 and Emily and
Branwell in 1848 left her feeling depressed andhonestlyconstrained. Despitethefactthatshedid
notadorehim,she marriedthepreacher Arthur
Nicholasin1854.Thenextyear,shepassedawayfrom pneumonia whilealsobeingpregnant.
Charlotte Bronteenthusiasticallyentered the e-book.Before her, there were two ways that
sexual love was viewed: on the one hand, as abarely visible affection between aman
andhispartner, and ontheother, as a sound creature eroticism, as we hear in
TomJones.However, with all the emotion the writers conveyed, something that transcended
ordinary natureduetoa blending of thesupernatural andthephysical becamechallenging
tofathom. Aside from being a powerful and airy emotive work, Jane Eyre is also a deeply
unique account of a young, despised vagrant woman'stransformation into a free
woman.Manyof Charlotte Bronte's charactersare basedon people sheknows, and she or he
gives them an intimidating intellectual realism that was groundbreaking
forherday.Oneadditional of hertalentswastheabilitytocreateanexhibitthatwas
consistentlyexcellentandsuitedthevividelectricityoftheclever.Therelationship
betweenJaneandRochesterformsthebook'sheartandprovidesitsdrivingforce. Thereader finds
their admiration tobeappropriate andpoignant, andthey attribute muchofthisbelief
toJane'svivacious andexuberant personality.Theradicalisabig part of Jane's story as well, and
it concerns her passionate desire to distinguish herself from the others who are putting
pressure on her from society. Her growth includes a confrontation between the forces of
reason and the terrifying forces of nature, one that reaches its peak when Jane clashes with
the devoted St. John
Waterways.AsCharlottenotedintheintroductiontoJaneEyre'ssecondpublication,
hergoalwastohelpreadersremember"certainessentialinsights,"suchasthenotion that"expectancy
is not ethical high-quality, affectedness is not religion." There is opposition inJane Eyre
between oppressive religion andinherent kindness. The work of Charlotte Bronte and her
sisters is often connected to the place of their home in Haworthin Yorkshire,which is
believedto be ofa greatinspirationto all three sisters. Although the Haworth village and
Bronte's parsonage have beenwildly romanticized over the time, there is no doubt that Bronte
sisters had a deep
connectionwiththeplacewhichisevidentespeciallyinEmily'sWutheringHeights
wherethemoorsplaysignificantroleinthestory.CharlotteBronteusedthemoors most evidently in
Jane Eyre as a symbol of infinite loneliness and wild despair. Haworth, however, was not just
moors -it also offered a cultural lifefor its citizens and thus also had its role in the
development of Brontes'writing. The Brontes first arrived at Haworth in 1820 when Charlotte
was 4 years old and already at this time thetown of 4668inhabitants contained about thirteen
working millsexpanding over timeas thetown became more and moreindustrial.29 And
likemost other industrial towns, Haworth also had its philanthropic and
educationalsocietiesand various public lectures took place there as well as in the nearby
Halifax where it was also possible toattend different cultural events.30 However, Elizabeth
Gaskell portrayed Haworth as much gloomier and dark place as she focused on describing the
''graveyard(which) rises above the church, and isterribly fullof upright tombstone''3land she
carefully chose suggestive adjectives such as 'wild', 'bleak', 'lonely'or'isolated'for the
descriptionof theplace tomakeit seemmore remote and personal at the same time.32 This
awoken the typical view of Bronte sisters as three lonely women living in the middle of
nowhere having nothing but their wild imagination. Analysis of the heroin character in
Charlotte Bronte's novel is very prudential to know about the pattern of charlotte's writing,
thought process beyond the novel,
aimstointroduceheroincharacterinhereverynovel.Bronte'severynovelis
energeticanddemandingbecauseofheruniquewritingmethod,whichaimstoraise the reality of the
femalecharacter, reflecting society's mirror in her literature. Of various female characters in
her novel, one of the is Zenobia Ellington. This is an important female character in her
writing. Zenobia was the most talented and educatedgirl.Inthenovelauthordescribed
howshebecamefamous,howshefaced challenges from society, andintheend howshebecomes
areal fighter. Apart from allthosepointsZenobiacharacter alsoreflectedlove,romance,
andinnerfeelingsin herlife(Olivieri 2021).Caroline Vernon isanother femalecharacter
whoisalsoan example of Bronte's heroine. Elezabathe Hastings is also an example of
Charlotte Bronte's novel heroin. She exemplifies her passionfor life, imagination, and cool
presentationwithcalmdecisions.ThefemalecharacterZamornaisalsoamodelrole in Charlotte
Bronte's novel. Her feeling, pain in life, and difficulties are described
authorinhernovel.Eachfemalecharacter isinBronte's novelconsidering acrucial part of thestory
sousually, they became super heroininBronte'sliterature. Woman'svoice
Women'svoiceisamajorpartofCharlotteBronte'sliterature.Intheperiodof thenineteenthcentury,
whenmaleauthorsareleadingEnglishliteratureinthattime Charlotte Bronte came to be the first
womanwriterwhointroducewomen asthe superheroine inher novel.She wants tointroduce
women's life. Not only women's
lifejourneysthatallstepsofawomen'slifeshetriedtoelaborate.Bergren(2019)
statedthatsheistheonlyauthorwhofeelstheimportanceofhighlightingwoman characters in the
literature world. Charlotte's novel is thecenter of the romantic experience of a woman's voice.
Romantic elements are influenced by the author'slife journey. Charlotte faced family as well
as personal life issues in her life. She fights with her situation so usually, she understoodhow
other girls also suffer in their fields.Her every novel or literary work is not only important for
creating women characters in her novel, but she is also famous to draw realistic women
characters in original life, their obstacles in every step of life, women fighting for their rights,
independency, their inner feelings likelove, like,relationship, pain, sex, romance, adulthood,
heartbreak oranother. Bronte isonly theauthor whoenlightens all theseelements of a woman
living inherliterature world (Munro etal. 2019). She knew very well raise female voices and
describe their life struggle and how much important tocome out in society. As a woman
author, she had also lots of barriers. But she never stops. To make open about the female
journey she goes against society. She fights against typical social rules. In that era of
patriarchy, she became thefirst female writer who wrote a female story. Achieve success was
not simple as that. For publishingher first novel Jane Eyre she took a pseudonym.Step by step
she developed her novel and created a new character from a different way of life. Charlotte
aims to set women's journey in front of society. Her first novel is thefirst romantic novel
inEnglish literature. InJaneEyre, shepresented self-expression,this novelactasastory of
aparticular girl'slifejourney. Inthenineteenth century writing a women's voice was sodifficult
that telling a woman's story was also not allowed. In the nineteenth century, Jane Eyre
became a female story but not feminine. This novel is the real expression of a woman's reality
(Zhao 2010). The female role of Jane Eyre is not just romantic heroin; it's a challenging face
of the story, own perceptions of life. The author introduced romanticism throughout women's
voices in this novel. Her novels use common iconography as an illustrative device
throughout. Regular occurrences usually anticipate or accompany changes or failures in the
human circle. Charlotte used shoptalk articulations, French words, and ordinary figures of
speech to convey her special priority. She was more concerned that her sentences
beanauthentic reflection of herquestions thanthatshewritewell.Despite thefactthat
shetravelledverylittle,herfewdomesticvisits provided herwith useful backgroundinformation
for her composition. A Lancashire villa, the mountainous area, and her own moorland view
eventually find their way into her work.The four distinct stages of Jane Eyre are divided into
four distinct sections with intriguing names: youth at gateshead; girlhood at lowood; pre-
adulthood at thornfield; improvement atswamp stop; and culmination, almost as a humility in
anadventure, with pride in marriage at ferndean. A fair deal of the book's impact depends on
the readerrecognisingaffiliations,andtheelementsareobviouslylinkedtogether(like
inShakespeare)bysymbolismandimageryratherthanbeingdirectlyrelatedbya storyline, as in
many earlier fictions. As an illustration, symbols in the text include books, birds, and the
chesnut tree in the day-to-day existence photo at Thornfield Plantation.In order to show her
sisters that abold woman might be alluring without being excellent, Charlotte frequently
insisted that Jane Eyre be described"as undeniable and as little as herself." At the same time,
she added,''she isn't always myself any farther than that." Along with several interactions at
the ardent college, Janehadbeen relocated. Jane,Diana, and Mary are impressions of
Charlotte, Emily, and Anne Bronte's choices, demeanours, and personalities at the
neighbourhood residence. The vintage worker is supported by the bronte's personal
employee, the dark-striped cat, and St. John Waterways relies on a disregarded admirer of
Charlotte. Charlotte was required to take part in Mr. Rochester's waterfall activity, which is
where the blinding comes from. The pattern of Charlotte Bront's writing is a little different
from any other. Her work, composed of a novel or another, was different in its body of work.
Bronte started to write a poem when she was a child. She went through different struggles in
her personal life. Her journey started with input from mid-childhood. She encountered
various experiences and obstacles throughout her personal life (Ziolkowski 2018). So usually
her own experience is reflected in her literary work. Her writing style is also separate from
another.Herliteraryworkwasbasedonlike a great command of language, simplicity, and
flexibility of word choice and combined them in some manner as phrases, clauses, and
sentences. The tone of Charlotte Bront's novel is classified in some aspects. The tone of the
literature is confessional, philosophical, and mysterious. She expressed real events in her
novel history. Her writing pattern, manner,language, and way of expressing herself directly
touch readers. In Jane Eyre's novel, she added personification, allusion, onomatopoeia, or
extra. As one of the best romantic novels, Jane Eyre was written descriptively. Here,
sentences are so long but with perfect use of word stock, colons, and semicolons. As a
famous novelist, Charlotte is known for her different style of writing. The author was very
much influenced by her own life, the death of her sister, her relationships,andherprofessional
and her professional life when she spent time as a teacher or governess. Those obstacles and
family issues affected her literary journey. Influenced by her journey, she underwent changes
in her literary work and writing patterns (Burton 2018). Her every novel or piece of writing
was different in another way. Every single character draws on different aspects of life as well
as women's lives. The main ingredients of her literature were love, relationships, pain,
challenges, struggle, romanticism, and the originality of any woman's life. Through all these
components, Bront's literary pattern is also created. Her literary pattern is an emotional
setting. According to Caponnetto (2020), she wrote descriptively and formally. Writing a
human story is her passion. The author shows her writing passion in every novel. For
example, Jane Eyre is full of writing passion, representing women's originality in front of
society. For her formality and representation of the pattern of writing, she explored it in the
middle of the nineteenth century. To make her writing pattern more attractive, she used
symbols, animal imagery, a variety of structures,and language. Her choice of words is also
unique to explore her literary pattern. Regularly, women descended on this planet in light of
the fact that the circle of relatives fortunes imploded within the still-shaky situations of early
Victorian assignment (i.e., Eagnes dark). The offspring of ineffectively paid talented men, for
example, Charlotte's Cambridge-taught priest father, have been confronted with destitution,
assuming the issuer became unable or passed away (he, as a matter of fact, matured at 60
while Charlotte became 21 and outlasted all of his children). One clean choice for the
devastated girl of her word turned into living with family individuals. Many taught but
unfortunate courteous women procured a desolate repayment showing in foundation faculties.
Dressmaking was regarded as a "state-of-the-art" profession for a terrific female, but, as a
trendy rule, it was frantically unrewarding. The business changed into uncertain, the hours
terrifying, and the wages insignificant. One more technique for purchasing away from
destitution and corruption changed through marriage, which was the usual, yet marriage had
excessive disadvantages for a woman of unfastened soul. Aspouse became the professional of
her character, furthermore of her assets and pay—a situation that just helped with the aid of
wedded women's belongings acts from 1870 onwards. A partner was imagined to submit to
her tremendously different will, take on his perspectives, and run the family so that he stayed
liberated from its issues. Charlotte Bronte's companion and biographer, Mrs. Gaskell, turned
into one of the lucky few ladies whose scholarly gifts authorised them to make a decent
living, but even she became obliged to paint on the lounge location desk with the intention
that her substantial other could contain the evaluation and he or she ought to display screen
the employees and the children. A girl's valid spot was the home, public office, the callings,
and the faculties were undeniably close to women, even as enterprise and tough paintings
were essentially now not accurate. In any event, nursing the debilitated turned into now not
considered affordable work for a woman; clinical caretakers had a questionable status until
Florence Songbird raised the situation with nursing for the duration of the Crimea War in
1856. Composing turned into an amazing calling for ladies, mostly on the grounds that it very
well can be finished at home. In Charlotte Bronte's Novel in the Middle of the Nineteenth
Century, Charlotte Bronte introduces a new era of literature. By holding the hand of a female
author, Charlotte Bront explored English literature patterns (Haque 2018).Charlotte wrote
based on her own experience of life,her journey, ups and downs,family incidents' or another
part of life. She usually reflected a woman's psychology in her novel. She wrote based on
women's rights and woman's independence. In that era of English literature, the literary world
was operated by male authors. In that period, Charlotte was the one and only female writer
who wrote for women. Especially for women, feelings, originality, rights, independence, and
pain are elaborated in a good manner or language (Barotovna 2021). A middle-classwoman
named Charlotte faced family pain, love, sex, and romance that were sexually undemanding
in her own life. Their whole lives, she fights for her success, liberty,independence, rights, and
love. Her own experiences have explored the classic story so that usually her every novel or
literary work reflects a woman's voice, rights, and independence. Her literary aim is to
become an independent author who can write women's stories openly. Their whole lives, she
fights for justice and for the meaning of life. Every literary work or novel is an identification
of independence,going forward through success in life (Williams 2018). As a female author,
she writes based on women's psychology. Jane Eyre's first published novel is the best
example of a woman's voice. Through this novel, the author creates relationships between
women's psychology and society. An analysis of independence in Charlotte Bront's novel is
very crucial to know about: what is the reason behind writing the novel, what life experiences
the author gained, how those experiences came out in her literature, and how she observed a
woman's life journey from her author's eyes. Author Charlotte visualised her own life as well
as another woman's life journey (Stables 2019). So she understands the importance of
enlightenment women feel, fighting for women's rights and independence. To create an
environment for the woman, she tried to raise the woman's voice as well as the independence
of her character in each novel. The author draws a clean picture of women's life journey, their
pain in life, and how much they are suffering for their right to speak and the right to explore
society and culture. So overall, along with many prudent designs or styles in Charlotte's
literature, the point of woman's independence is the most important based on that period
(Ross 2021). Terrible Jane meets with a progression of powers that compromise her freedom,
respectability, and bliss. Characters epitomising those powers are: Auntie Reed, Mr. .
Brocklehurst, Bertha Artisan, Mr. . Rochester (in that he asks Jane to dismiss her soul and
give up to enthusiasm), and St. . John Waterways (in his encouragement of the opposite
limit). The three guys likewise address the notion of an intensely man-centric society.
Blanche Ingram, who at the beginning disrupts the general waft of Jane's family members
with Rochester, likewise epitomises the notion of an unbending magnificence framework—
another strength protecting Jane again from pleasurable her expectancies. Chapter 5:
Narrative Art Concept of CharlotteBronte is a famous English author in the literature world.
She is the first lady who writes a novel in the Victorian era. In the platform of English
literature, Charlotte Bront's novels are very popular. The language,character, way of
writing,and originality of her every novel make a new era in the literature world. Her own life
and family background influenced her to view her life journey, struggles,andupsand downs
(Bronteetal, 2018). All those life issues motivate her to write about women's feelings, history,
difficulties, love, and romance in literature. The narrative method or concept in Charlotte
Bront's life was introduced by her life journey. In her three famous novels, Jane Eyre, The
Professor, and Villette, she employed new creations and modules throughout her lifelong
backend journey. She was inspired mostly by her first published novel, Jane Eyre. The author
visualised her own life, felt every situation on the life stage, fought, learned, and throughout
this whole experience, narrative plot came into her literary work. She explored her literary
world by writing about women's voices, crazes,rights, and independence. In the nineteenth
century, women had no right to express their feelings or their pain. During that period,
Charlotte draws a clear picture based on her female life journey. In her novel, female
characters are modern; they are fighting for their success,and they express their
feelings,emotions, and purity of life. Anarrative text or writing is based on some literary
components such as imagination, language variety,stories, and originality. All these aspects
are creating a concept, method, and platform of narrative text.In the life of Charlotte, all
components were present. She utilised her perception of life, used all stages and societies,
and made a narrative plot in her novels. With her novels, she is successful in the world of
poetry (Bronte 2021). After a few times, her novels became famous and achieved a vast
number of readers and huge publishing. The concept of narrative is very crucial for the
literary platform. This concept depends on some aspects, like the perfect meaning to speak or
write, verbal exchanges, realistic events, or circumstances in life. It depends on some other
event or story; it can be real or fictional, and those subjects are linked to create a great
narrative plot. The analysis concept of narrative is an important part of the literature world. It
is a literary relationship between events and the real world. A narrative plot is a place to
understand the author's motive, read the author's subconscious mind, or aim to write.
Narrative creation is a sign to observe the author's visualisation and imagination (Bronte
2021). Author Charlotte Bronte created her narrative plot through her personal life, personal
experience,observation, and inner examination. Charlotte Bronte became a successful female
author in the nineteenth century based on her creative plot, fascinated narrative concepts, new
cultures, and characters introduced in her literature. Every novel reflects a different,
energetic, and realistic narrative plot. In that period of English literature, all authors avoided
writing about female journeys or histories. Charlotte Bronte became the first female writer to
introduce the female voice in literature history through her unique and natural narrative plot.
NarratorCongruenceandDifferences Charlotte Bronte is a successful female author in the
literature world who introduced the female character as well as the female voice in English
literature. By writing novels or poems, she gives her own life to a visualized woman's life
journey. According to Ross (2020), her family background, own personal life, love,
relationship, professional life, and career—everything helps her to write something about a
heroine or woman. The situation of her own life was not so easy; she expressed her pains and
situations in novels or poems. Personal life observation becomes a powerful narrative plot in
literature. She created real characters, described the authentic story, and raised especially
women's voices in her novels. She provides her full effort to draw a woman's character and
journey towards a life in her literature. Essentially, her expectations came to be fulfilled.
Primarily, her first novel, Jane Eyre, got rejection, but after that, and also after publishing this
story, Jane Eyre became the best example of a woman's voice.A huge number of readers liked
it, and this novel became a masterpiece of Charlotte's literary journey (Pizzoetal, 2020). The
novel Jane Eyre is the best example of Bront's narrator, its congruence, and its difficulties.In
the novel, Jane Eyre's author draws a character picture of Alice, who fights with her personal
life, professional life, love, girlhood, sex, and pain. The author shows how a girl or woman
faces a problem expressing their voice and their expectations. Actually, behind the girl, Jane
Eyre reflected her character in the novel. She expressed her difficulties in the novel that
happened for the first time in English literature. In the nineteenth century of English
literature, so many stars operated in the literature world, such as kits and words worth. But no
one writes anything based on a female character. Charlotte Bronte is the first female novelist
in literary history who understands the importance of women in society, the importance of
women's rights, and independence raised women's voices.Charlotte feels every side of a
woman's life so usually; she described everything through poetry, poetry, and novels. She is a
powerful novelist who raised women's voices in front of society as well as literature. The
design of every novel's character is so unique.Charlotte created a real character, a real
journey, authentic visualization,and modern and optimist heroine with the inner feelings of a
woman and made a platform for woman's independence. Charlotte's novels are a set of
examples in English literature from which readers can visualize a woman's situation in
society and know the inner feelings of alady (Mills 2018). 75 In fact,Haworth offered
valuable cultural life, especially with regard to music, as the place of one of the oldest
philharmonic societies in the country, which held regular concerts in the town despite the fact
there was no train connection at that time. This also somehow contradicts Gaskell's depiction
of local people as assavage, harsh, rough, and unemotional, which she attributed to their
Norse ancestry. The Haworth parsonage to which the Bronte family and their two
maidservants moved in 1820 was built in 1779, located on the outskirts of the town at the top
of the hill. It was enclosed by a churchyard, and beyond the house were the famous moors.
This was the environment in which the Bronte family was living and in which the works of
all three famous sisters were created—a not-justifiable place surrounded by windy moors but
also a growing industrial town full of people of different kinds and where living a cultural life
was not as impossible as it may seem. It is, however, no great wonder Charlotte and her
sisters turned to the wild for their romantic inspiration and gave it more space in their works.
than to a common and uninspiring town.Forthesisters, themoors presented asymbol
ofindependence and liberty, and theirconnection tothe wild nature of the moors had, without
any doubt, a significant influence on their literaryworks. Inthischapter, Iwould liketofocus
onCharlotte's family background focusing
mainlyonthefirstimpulsesforhertostartwriting,comingfromher
fatherPatrick,andtoprovideaninsighttoherrelationshipwithhersiblingswhich,inmyview, was a
very important element for her works-both because the siblings worked together on their
writings since early childhood, and for theimpact of their deaths on Charlotte. Therefore,
Iwill put emphasis onthe influence Charlotte's father and siblings had on her work throughout
their lives. As their mother Maria became ill shortly afterthefamilyarrivedatHaworth
andherhealthwasdeterioratingquickly,
andwhilethechildren'sfatherwasbusywiththedutiesofhisnewparish,theBronte children were
enjoying their freedom while exploring their new homeland and discovering all the beauties
of its nature they later so masterfully depicted in their novels.38 They were thus allowed to
nurture their fantasy and imagination and to appreciate thefeelingof beingfreeandinaway
alsoindependent -i.e.elements of utmost importance in their novels. Mrs. Bronte died of
cancer in September 1821, one year after the family moved
fromHartsheadtoHaworthandaftershegavebirthtosixchildren.Afterwards,as Patrick Bronte
failed in his attempts to secure a new mother for his children, it was mainly their mother's
sister Elizabeth who came from Penzance to Haworth to look after all the children, and she
stayed until her death in 1842. Elizabeth's character is
oftendescribedassevereandunmotherlyandasshewasastrictCalvinist,sheis alsoblamed for
Branwell's and Anne's 'fear of damnation', and of Charlotte's'tinged' view of the world as
well.39 Despite thisfact,Elizabeth became a capable ruler of the house and she taught her
nieces sewing, housekeeping and, most importantly, supported theindependence of their
minds although shenever interfered withtheir teaching since this wasthe areaof theirfather,
Mr. Patrick Bronte. Charlotte Bronte's family and their life in Haworth Parsonage gained (and
still does) almost as much interest as her works. This interest was sparked mainly by the
biography written by another famous novelist Elizabeth Gaskell shortly after Charlotte's
death and which was first published in 1857. In this biography, Gaskell portraits Reverend
Patrick Bronte, the father of Charlotte, as a man, who ''wished to make his children hardy,
and indifferent to the pleasures of eating and dress'', she pictured him as a severe, ill-
tempered man who disliked any vanities of life, a stern
ruffian.However,itwaslaterrevealedthattherealPatrickBrontewasmuch different from the man
described by Elizabeth Gaskell. In fact, most of the unfavourable things said about his person
were provided to Gaskell by a dismissed servant and it later showed up the stories of burnt
shoes or dresses destroyed by Mr.
Bronteinhis'gustsofpassion'weremeremyths.Gaskellusedthis portrayalof Patrick Bronte to
explain what was in her times perceivedas unfeminine in the
Brontes'novelsandtheideasthesebookscontainedasshe''justifies''thisbylackofnormalupbringingi
n'lovelessenvironment'.Brontesotherservants-NancyGarrs andlater Martha Brown wholived
with her master until hisdeath both spoke of Mr. Bronte using nothing but
positivewordspraisingtheirmaster'skindnessand generosity. As a person as well as a writer,
Emily is still a sort of a mystery as she either provokes admirationof her wild and free spirit
she reflected in her complexnovel, oracompletemisapprehensionof herunconditional passion
andviolence whichmay be found in Wuthering Heights. Literary critic Clement Shorter even
called her the sphinx ofthe modern literature in 1896 as she did not leave any
significantrecord fordefining her character or opinions beside her only novel and a few
poems. Charlotteprobably destroyed both Emily's and Anne's correspondence,nevertheless,
we can getsomeaccount of what kind of person Emily was from Charlotte's own letters where
she depicted Emily as ''awilfulchild, who has to be humoured or manipulated'' as wellas a
very privatewoman who was afraid to be spied out by strangers and who insisted on her not
tobe recognized as the author of Wuthering Heights. When in the autumn of 1845 Charlotte
accidently came across some of her sister's poems, Emily was not very pleased with this
intrusion into her thoughts,and perCharlotte's account,ittookdays topersuade Emily
topublishthese poems along with some of the poems written by Charlotte and Anne under pen
names.Ofthethreesisters,Emilyinsistedthemostonremaining''invisible''under
herpennameEllisBellandshewasveryangrywhenshelearnedin1848 that Charlotte had revealed
theidentity of Currer, Acton and EllisBell totheir publisher. Nowadays, Emily's poetry is
recognizedas the best and most powerful of all three sistersEmily Bronte, the author of one of
the most shocking novels of her times Wuthering Heights was born two years after Charlotte,
in 1818. Emily was Charlotte's closest companion in their first school Cowan Bridge and
later, in their twenties, they also went together to Brussels in 1842. Nevertheless, Emilywas
always muchcloser toherothersister,Anne, with whomshewasalmost inseparable since they
were children and ''worked''together ontheir imaginary world ofGondal. Asaperson
aswellasawriter,Emilyisstillasortof amystery assheeitherprovokes admiration of her wild and
free spirit she reflected in her complex novel, or a complete misapprehensionof her
unconditional passion and violence which may be found in Wuthering Heights. Literary critic
Clement Shorter even called her the sphinx ofthe modern literature in 1896 as she did not
leave any significant record fordefining her character or opinions beside her only novelanda
few poems.66 Charlotteprobably destroyed both Emily's and Anne's
correspondence,nevertheless, we can get some account of what kind of person Emily was
from Charlotte's own letters where she depicted Emily as ''a wilful child, who has to be
humoured or manipulated'' as wellas a very privatewoman who was afraid to be spied out by
strangers and who insisted on her not to be recognized as the author of Wuthering Heights.
Whenintheautumnof1845Charlotte accidently cameacross some of her sister's poems, Emily
was not very pleasedwith this intrusion into her thoughts, and perCharlotte's
account,ittookdaystopersuade Emily topublishthese poems along with some of the poems
written by Charlotte and Anne under pen names.68 Ofthethree sisters,Emily insisted themost
onremaining ''invisible''under her pen name Ellis Bell and she was very angry when she
learned in 1848 that Charlotte hadrevealed theidentity of Currer, Acton andEllisBell totheir
publisher. Nowadays, Emily's poetry is recognized as the best and most powerful of all three
sisters After receivingbasic education from her father, eight-years-old Charlottewas sent to
the Clergy Daughters' School at Cowan Bridge alongwithher younger sister Emily. Both
stayed at this school for only one year during which their older sisters Maria and Elizabeth,
who studied in the same institution, had died. Cowan Bridge was arelatively cheap school
(£14 a year including clothing, lodging, boarding and education)which
wastoprovideasuitableeducationfordaughtersofthepoorclergy
therewereabouteightypupilsin1824whenElizabethandMariafirstarrived.In
thesetimes,educationforgirlswasstillfarbehindthatforboysastheeducational
reformstookplaceinEnglandonlyduringthesecondhalfofthenineteenthcentury forgirls, thechief
profession they werestudying for was governess. Theschool at
CowanBridgeisveryoftenpresumedtobethechiefinspirationfortheLowood
SchoolofCharlotte'sJaneEyre.InCharlotte'searlybiographies,it is described as 'ill managed'',
food was often burned or tainted, the whole place smelt badly and the young students were all
suffering from a harsh discipline. The greatest villain of the novel -Mr. Brocklehurstwas in
fact basedonareal-lifepersonWilliamCarus Wilson who was the Evangelical patron of the
school -Charlotte even wrote to William Smith Williams that an old clergymen she knew
recognized himself in the characterandonly owingto the pen name she usedwas she spared
ofbeing recognizedastheauthor.ThecharactersofkindMissTempleandevilMiss
Scatcherdarealsobelievedtobebasedontheteachersfromtheschool. Charlotte didnottake much
pleasure in teaching and was not trulyfondof children, therefore shewas not very keenon
becoming agoverness, however, fora womanofherstationandeducation, there was scarcely
much choice available for her. Furthermore, the educationCharlotteand her
sistersreceiveddidnot qualify
themthentoteachadvanced,olderpupilswithwhomtheymaygetalongbetterthan with small
children.Shortlybefore going on the path of this profession, Charlotte received her first
proposal of marriage from reverend Henry Nussey-brother of Charlotte's friend Ellen,
whomshe described as''an amiable and well-disposed man''107 However, asCharlotte did not
feel any attachment towards him-she did
notlovehim,andsheneitherbelievedhelovedherasheknewsolittleabouther.108 Thus,
Charlotteratherchosea professionshewasnot verykeenon thenventuring intoalovelessmarriage-
anoccurrenceveryrelatabletoJaneEyre'srefusalto marry St. John. In the very same book,
Charlotte also masterfully utilized her experience from working as a governess. Charlotte's
first position asa governess outside of schoolwas inthe family of a wealthy Yorkshire
manufacturer Mr. Sidgwick at Stonegappe. Though Charlotte was very pleased with the
nature surroundingthe place and she was quite fond of Mr.Sidgwick, shefound it hard totake
pleasure in her work and herstation and she describesherfeelingsin a letter sentto
hersisterEmilyin June 1839. The solitude ofgoverness' life, her inferiority and feeling
ofunimportancemay befoundespecially inCharlotte'sJaneEyreand thesamefeelings
arealsoprominent in Anne's Agnes Grey. Both Charlotte and Anne found themselves in a
strange position when they were not considered neither as servants nor as family members
while spending most of their time withchildren they could not manage toattach to.
Whiletheloneliness of suchlifemay provokepity,Charlotte alwayshoped forbetter days and
never gave in to the desperation. She claims so in another letter written to Ellen Nussey after
she left her position with the Sidgwick family and returned to Haworth:''I know I cannot live
with a person like Mrs. Sidgwick but I hope all women are not like her, and my motto is ''try
again Analysis of Charlotte Bronte's narrator's congruence'sis very crucial to know in which
situation she writes poems ornovels.What arethesituationsshehadtowrite
women'spsychology?Successful
authorCharlotteisaperfectexampleofapowerfulfemalenovelist.Shemadeher literature journey
byown self.Lotsof difficulties shewent through butshedid not
stoptowrite.HerfirstpublishednovelJaneEyreisamasterpiece ofwoman'svoices in the English
literary world.She raised women's voices in literature history. Throughout their whole
literature journey, he fights for women's rights and independence, which is reflected
inherevery novel (Choe 2018). PlotofNarrative In a novel or any literary work, the plot is the
most important part to create an energetic story in literary history. The plot is the precious
portion to explore, to describe an event or story if it's real or fictional. Analysis of any literary
plot is a complete understanding of that particular writing. Charlotte Bronte was a successful
female writer in English literature that was also successful to create a unique and attractive
literary plot. Accordingto Ross (2021), the concept of creating a plot is a very crucial part.
Making a plot depends on some elementssuch as real or fictional facts in the story, features or
type ofnarrative,characters,role, history,the
backgroundoftheauthoraswellaspsychologicalcharacter. Thesecomponents areplaying
aprimary factincreating an attractive narrative plot. In the century of the nineteenth, so many
famous authors are there to create literature attractive. In that era, a female powerful novelist
Charlotte Bronte introducedanewsidetoliterature.Sheintroducedwomen'scharacterand
psychology inherwritingfortheveryfirsttime.Inthatperiodfemalecharacterwas not present in
any kind of English literature. But she becomessuccessfulthrough this journey(White et al.
2019). For the first time, she reflected on the importance of woman's character in literary
history. Her invented plot is mostly related to the story of writing.Sheelaborates on
herlifejourney tocreatethe most attractive and unique plot for her novel. Her experiments
became a success.Introducingfemale characters and raisingthe female voice took a color in
the Englishliteraryworld. For this innovation,she crossed many difficulties, ups, and downs
but she did not stop. Only because of her personal experience. She went through various
struggles in her life from professional and personal life. Sobeinga powerful novelist she
writesherownexperiences, visualization,andfeelings.Allthoserealandimaginary components
wereherimportantelements tomakeadifferentandnewnarrativeplot inliterature history. From
thesuccessful novel JaneEyretoall novelsshereflected innovation ofnarrativeplot. Results also
she achievedin her life. Her each novel
andpoemcamefamous.HerfirstpublishednovelJaneEyreisoneofthebestnovels of herlife.Itplays
likeamasterpiece inher novel career.Sheestablished anewera of novel
writing.Inhernovelwoman get the position to describe their feelings, originality, love, or pains
(Bayley 2018). Sheestablishedawomanasaheroineinhernovel.Charlottefoughtafullliterature
journeytoraisethefemalevoice,andgainfemaleindependenceinsociety.Inthe end, she was a
successful English author, a powerful woman, and a successful novelist who brings a
woman's face to the light and introduces women's inner feelings, romance, originality, and
pain in the world of literature. She was a famous female author but not a feminist. Her unique
character in the novel, authentic story and situation of society makes a new creation to build
narrative plot in English literature.The studyofthe analysisis a
discussionaboutallthoseaboveprospects orreasonshowbecameaffectedfullto
createanattractiveplotinherliterarywork. Narrator A narrator is a part of any kind of novel,
literary work, or narrative. Every narrative must have a narrator (Ogden et al 2019). This is
thecore area of any narrative work. The narrative is a concept or major portion of the story.
Analysis of the narratorin any other story or novel is a great deal to understandthe plot of that
particularstory or event. Narrator or focalization is an identification of any literary work.
Charlotte Bronte was a great narrator whocreates adifferent plot of narrative work in English
literature. Her way of writing was different from another. Charlotte writes based on the
authentic story of her own life and visualized another female life too. She understandswhat
couldbe the best to expresswomanfeelingsin front ofsociety. She chose female life history and
journey to make her narrative work different from
otherpoetsorauthors.Inthisway,shebecomesa famousnarratorinthenineteenth
century.Narratorandfocalizationbotharecloselyrelatedtoeachother.Thoseare identification of
great literary work. As a powerful novelist vision of Charlotte
BrontewastoraisetheplaceofliteraryworkinEnglishliteratureaswellastocreate something new
tobeagreatnarrator. Herwayof writing wassodifferentfrom that of other authors. She chose a
different way of writing with a new character, an authentic story of a woman's life,
marginalization, and visualization.According to
Bronte(2018),thewayofseeingwoman'slife,andtheirjourney-relatedstoriestook innovations of
the literature era. Her every poem or novel presents realorfictional events which makes the
plot different and strong and Charlotte Bronte became a successful narrator. Inher novel
shedraws awoman character as super heroin that are fighting in their daily life, suffering from
pain, and facing love, sex, and relationship issues. The heroine of Charlotte's is raising voices
for their rights and theirindependence. That was a new element of the literature journey in
English literature. These uniquecomponentsare makingBronte'snoveldifferentand considerher
a great narrator. Raising woman's voices and feeling woman psychology is
aninnovationinEnglishaswellasworldliterature.Wayofvisualizingreal-life
journeys,understandinghumanlifestruggles,thesituationofsociety,or
experimentsofpersonallifeisadifferentprocessin literaturewhichwasdescribed
ineverypoemaswellasanovelbyCharlotteBronte(Feldman2021). Analysis narrator
isanidentificationpart of any literature work.Thisparticular
areacoversthebackgroundofthenovelistorauthor,thebackendthoughtprocessof the writer. From
ascientific point of view, in a narrative work, the most prudential part is always narrating
thesubject andthe second partisthenarrator. The narrator always identifies as a hero or
heroine. If it is an autobiography then the author describes their journey inlife.Narrators are
twotypes, external narrator andbound narrator. Inareal orfictional story
orautobiography,authors areidentifying ahero or heroine to speak for them. One of the best
novels Jane Eyre is considered an author's life journey. As a successful novelist Charlotte
here a great narrator too (Abdessatar 2019). Chapter6:conclusion Analysis study ofEnglish
famous novelist Charlotte Bronte's novel and her fictional world is the most
prudentialsubjectto know the new literature era of writing. Charlottestartsa new period of
English literature through herpoemand novel. This study is related to the time or period in
English literature, what are the challenges of writing a novel as a female author, what are the
difficulties shefaced throughout herprofessional journey, whatcompetitors inthenineteenth
century,and howshestartedherjourney towardsliterature, howsheinput herownlifeexperience
into her novel as well as poem and how she became a powerful female writer who
raisesfemalevoiceinfrontof society aswellasanall-malecompetitorintheEnglish literary world.
This particular analysis study of Charlotte Bronte and her fictional world is an overview to
know in detail about all the above components which are properly described in this
wholestudy.Thisstudy is not only about the social situation inthenineteenth century;
thestudyismentioned about Charlotte's fictional world, herimagination, her adolescent
dreams, desire,love,pain, sex,andextra.The overview of thestudyisabout thepsychological
journey of Charlotte Bronte aswell as the women'slifejourney. This analysis shows how
women feel wasbehind society, how much they are suffering, and how they are fighting for
their rights or independenceinthisperiodonesinglefemaleauthorstruggledalotonlytoraise
woman'svoices,theirpain,love,anddesires. An overview of this whole analysis signified so
many aspects. This research is an important asset to knowing and learning properly about the
most powerful female EnglishwriterCharlotteBronte,herfictionalworld,herimagination,and the
successful platformofherliterarywork.Inthisresearchstudyareaofbackground
istheveryimportant part.Thisparticular portion isaveryinformative part toknow aboutCharlotte
Bronte'sfamily background, thestatus of her siblings, hermother's early death, her native
place, education, oreverything related tofamily or personal life.AssheisfromEngland
andshehadthreesisters.Charlotte started hercareeras ateacher afterthatasagoverness.
Inhercriticalsituationoflife,shestarted writing
apoemaboutherownlifeexperiencesandafterthat,shebecameafamousnovelist.
Inthepartofthebackgroundofthisstudyisapieceofinformation abouthowmuch she faced
problems to publish her book and bringing to woman's story tolight. So many difficult
situations she went through in her life that she described in her literature. The plot of her
novel or literature is totally from her life journey, experiencesandimagination.The
backgroundof this studyalso maintainsthe plot
ofherliterature,sourceofthestory,language,andinformation-relatedstory. This analysis is
veryinformative and crucial to now-bitter experiences in the career of novelist Charlotte
Bronte. The area of problem statement in this analysis
providesknowledgeaboutCharlotte'sbitterexperience inherpersonallife,upsand
downs,thereasonbehindwritingwoman'svoices,lifeincidents,andfictional characters.
Fromherfirstpublished bookJaneEyretoevery novel, shereflectedon originality,
womaninnerfeelings,theirlifeexperience, andtheconnection between personalcharacters
andfictionalcharacters.To publish her first novel JaneEyreshe struggled a lot with society and
her competitor.Fortheveryfirsttime,shepublished
hernovelbypseudonym.ThisnovelcametoamasterpieceinEnglishliterature.The area of
statement in this study is mainly focused on reviews of the novel, its commercial success, and
theintroduction female perspective inthenovel.
Thisstudyanalysisisveryimportanttounderstandcharlotte'sfictionalworldin
Englishnovelsandliterature.Thisresearchhassomeobjectives andaimstoanalyze which are
elaborated in the part of aims and objectives in this research paper. Objectives of this study
such as know about professional difficulties in theliterary life of Charlotte Bronte, her family
background and situations, fictional character
drawings,womencharacters,andanother.Shenevergivesupinherlife.Shecrossed many
difficulties in her professional career and the end, she became a powerful
Englishnovelistwhowriteafirst-timewomanvoice,raisedwomanfightsstoryand she draws
females as a heroine in her novel. The objective of this research is like make a relationship
between real and fictional characters. She made a character in her novel or literary work from
her own life experience. Her family condition and
certaineventspushedhertowriteawoman'svoice,awoman'sjourneythrough
literature.Charlottevisualizedoriginalityfrompersonallifeincidentsandsocietyor
expressedallmethodsthroughnovelsandpoetry.Asaresult,shegotsuccessfuland
becomethemostpowerful womanauthorintheEnglishliterary world.Imagination
andvisualization isthemaincomponent ofCharlotte's novel. Beingawomansheis successful to
draw female characters, their desire, their thought, originality, inner feelings, and another.
Sheespecially fightsforraising woman's voices, theirrights,
andindependence.Inthisarea,Charlottebecameasuccess.Byintroducingafemale character as
heroin shebecame themost powerful novelist inEnglishliterature.
Thesignificanceofthisanalysispaperisprudentialtoknowwhatisthepurpose
towriteanovelinthenineteenth century,theenvironmental situationinthat period to write, and
are the competitors in the literary world. In this research paper particular areaof
thesignificance of thestudy identifies thatinformation. Charlotte Bronte was a famous female
novelist in the English literary world. Her first published novel JaneEyremade agreatchange
inherlife.Shebecame asuccessful author with her way of writing. Understanding her life
issues, events, feelings, struggle, and incidents are very important to know the actual
background or her journey towards her literature platform. First time in Charlotte Bronte's
novel woman's charactersdebuted andtheauthorplacedthemasheroinof novelormajor character.
Through these female roles author Charlotte expressed her own life,
events,struggle,society,andfictionalcharacter.Thesignificanceofthestudy
majorlycoveredhowshestartedherliteraryjourneyinthatperiod,whatarethe exact reasons behind
it, how sheinfluenced by her personal life, and why shechose mainly female characters in her
literature practice. In that era, the nineteenth many other male poets were in front of literary
culture in England. Kits and words wrath are alsofrom thesame category. In that era, this
author was brightened. There were nofemale authors orpoetsinEngland to write in
thatera.Inthat situation, Charlotte Bronte is a single woman who draws her voice through the
novel Jane Eyre. This novelisthemasterpiece of author Bronte'sliterary journey.
Thisisthefirstpublished novel.Charlotte's every novel signifies awoman character in
thenineteenth century. The novel Jane Eyre is about the life journey of Charlotte. Here she
described her struggle in life, difficulties, inner feelings, and originality. The Professor novel
is also a practical or Iive character that plays a good role in English literature.This story tale
of a self-made person's life journey towards a successful end. This professor's character also
signifies a real and practical event in his life. The story shows many difficulties, ups, and
downs, pain, love, relationship,or any other part of human life. Readers can relate
thischaracter totheir real life. Charlotte expresses her imagination in her every novel. She
expressed the real story of a society in that period. Shirley novel also became famous for her
plot and literary style. The narrative plot and energetic story are the core attraction of her
novel. Mainly her motive was to create a natural character, especially a woman character in
the novel, andto describe real-lifeevents, originality,struggle,and fight.Charlotte Bronte's
novel or literary work is based on a mostly fictional world. The author makes a base on
reality and authenticity. She visualized human life
properlyandsheexperienceditfromherlifejourneytoo.Bothauthorsgathered
informationandthatpracticalexperiencepushedhertowritesomethingbasedon originality.
Charlotte was a great author to write realistic stories or events in that particular eraof
literature. Her imaginary work orexperience shedetailed in mostly herevery novel,especially
inthefirstpublished novelJaneEyre.Heresheexpressed the collaboration between real-life
characters and fictional characters. Here she identifiedproblemsin humanlife andthe end she
triestofindoutthe solution. Charlotte Bronte isafamous author inliterature history.She
wrotemany novels as well as a poem. In her every literary work the most common thing is the
authenticity thatconsiders herapowerful anduniquefemaleauthorinEngland. This particular
reason makes her novel plot unique and attractive.Plot-makingis an importantpart
ofanyliterarywork.Thisareaofliteraturecanbuildstrongliterature
aswellasagoodplatformtoexplorewriting.TheCharlottesfourfamousnovelplot issowell planned
based on real-lifeincidents.Shehad agood capture of human life andalsosheexperienceditfrom
herpersonal life. All that experiences sheinputinto her literature. Usually, her novel plot
became different from another andstrong. Her
fournovelsasJaneEyre,TheProfessor,Shirley,andVillettehasdifferenttypesof plot background.
That makes it more successful to become a powerful narrator in the century of nineteenth. In
this analysis area of social framework in that period is very crucial. In the nineteenth century,
only male authors wrote a poem, poetry, or novels. Author
CharlotteBronteisthefirstwomanwriterwhoexistsinthatperiod.Authorcharlotte shows the social
situation, human life, personal feelings, and originality in her novels. Charlotte's novel is such
amirror of society.Shedraws afirst-time woman character as heroin. Expressed woman's inner
feelings, pain,love,sex, struggle, or more. Her every novelstory basis onreality and
authenticity. AstudyoftheCharlotteBronte'snovelsandherfictionalworldisinformation about her
journey towards her profession as a novelist. She filled her every novel plot through
imagination, dreams, desires, and multiple forms. Sheexplored her career withtherightstrategy
of plotmaking aswellasdesigns.Theareaof theconclusion
ofthisstudyisanoverviewoftheimaginary worldandreal-worldrelationsthrough
thefamousauthorCharlotteBronte'snovel.Brontedescribedelaborately imaginary orfictional
worldsalongwiththerealorpractical world.Sheexpressed herownlife experience in her every
novel practically to express the authenticity of the story.
FromthenovelJaneEyretoanothershedescribedimagination,originality,practical
lifecomponents,andsocietalsituation.InthenovelJaneEyre,sheexpressedabout
ownpersonallifejourney,heradosolance,girlhood,sexuallove,desire,imagination, struggle,
social situation, or multiple from. Author Charlotte Bronte wrote about the mixture of
love,sex, pain, problems, and solution. She placed women insociety and raised woman's
voices in front of all. Fights for woman rights and independency. The concept of her literary
work is like a relation between originality and the fictional world. This unique concept of
literary work took changed in the English literature world at the time of the nineteenth
century. According to this concept, great author Charlotte Bronte creates anew method of
narrative plot inthat particular era. The author shows equality inher novel work between
males and females, especially she placed female characters as heroin in her novel history. She
wrote for females mostly but she was not a feminist. Only she tries to establish a woman's
character in the front of society, she works hard to make understand woman's importance,
their feelings, emotions,and problems, and the author shows the solutions also. An overview
of the whole study as well as a conclusion is consideringthose points where English author
Charlotte Bronte became different from other poets in that century. Why her novel or
literarywork is famousin the literature world, which type of plot or platformdoes shemake for
writingastrong novel, andwhy sheis a successful female author in literature.All these
elementsare describedin this whole analysis work.

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