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Saturday 6 June 2015
Tuesday 2 June 2015
Virginia Rushton
Virginia Rushton, who died recently, was a well-known and very hard-working member of the Brontë Society who will be greatly missed. A singer, she was also well-known in the world of music, and was largely responsible for an extraordinary operatic project for schools in 2006 entitled The Wind on the Moor. It was featured on this blog and can be accessed here:
http://bronteparsonage.blogspot.co.uk/2006/03/wind-on-moor_02.html
She was also the moving force behind the restoration of Emily's piano:- http://www.rhinegold.co.uk/magazines/music_teacher/news/music_teacher_news_story.asp?id=585
The Wind on the Moor 2006 |
She was also the moving force behind the restoration of Emily's piano:- http://www.rhinegold.co.uk/magazines/music_teacher/news/music_teacher_news_story.asp?id=585
Tuesday 19 May 2015
To Walk Invisible: The Brontë Sisters
Sally Wainwright |
The two-hour drama is currently entitled To Walk Invisible: The Brontë Sisters. Charlotte Moore, controller of BBC One commented: “The Bronte sisters have always been enigmatic, but Sally Wainwright’s brilliantly authentic new BBC One drama brings the women behind some of our greatest literary masterpieces to life. It’s an extraordinary tale of family tragedy and their passion and determination, against the odds, to have their genius recognized in a male nineteenth century world.”
It will be produced by BBC Drama Wales, but filmed in Yorkshire. Of course.
Saturday 9 May 2015
Glasstown, Angria and War
Coming to listen to Emma Butcher from the University of Hull (pictured) on the first day of the June weekend?
She's on at 3pm Friday 5 June. You might like to read her fascinating, well-illustrated blog article (from last August) as a preview of her talk - just click here. It's entitled Making sense of war in Charlotte and Branwell Brontë's Juvenilia.
She's on at 3pm Friday 5 June. You might like to read her fascinating, well-illustrated blog article (from last August) as a preview of her talk - just click here. It's entitled Making sense of war in Charlotte and Branwell Brontë's Juvenilia.
'What your favorite Brontë sister says about you'
Here's an interesting blog piece written by Deborah Lutz, sent by American member Paul Danigellis (US Region 3), which seems to assume that Brontë writings are just for women. Deborah Lutz is the author of The Brontë Cabinet: Three Lives in Nine Objects . Contact her if you want to say which sister you identify with most. The blog can be accessed by clicking here.
Friday 8 May 2015
Wednesday 25 March 2015
Haworth History Tour
Richard Wilcocks writes:
The text on the
back cover of this useful little book of historic photographs seems at first
sight to contradict that of the introduction inside: “Behind the tourist
village of today lies a long history of people making a living from the
uncompromising moorland of this area” and “It is a Pennine village that made
its living from farming, stone quarrying and textile manufacture.” That is,
until you remember that the village goes back a thousand years. Tourists,
especially the Brontë enthusiasts amongst them, tend to bear the moorland in
mind rather than the industry, perhaps for obvious reasons.
The book could
easily be slipped into a coat pocket or handbag, and used by anyone who does
not feel like toiling up to Top Withins or sipping tea in cafés but who does
want to know something about local history which is not necessarily linked to the
Parsonage. Sensible shoes are needed, and possibly a strong interest in the
industrial revolution, because many of the places depicted in it are from the nineteenth century. Some of them no longer exist.
West End
Quarry, for example, one of four on Penistone Hill, is now a series of grassy
humps, and Well Street – so called from three large water troughs that used to
be there – was “another casualty of clearance mania”, possibly not an
unfortunate casualty, because the water was so foul that even the cattle
refused to drink it.
Many buildings
have hardly changed at all over the years, for example The Black Bull, and it
is good to find little snippets of information connected with it
like “Max Beerbohm took lunch here with Thomas Hardy’s widow in 1931.” It was
also good to find so many interesting people mentioned, for example Manasseh Hollindrake,
who ran a draper’s shop at number 111 Main Street from 1860 to 1897. One old
photo which is likely to be familiar to Brontë Society members is that of the
old church, most of which (except for the ancient tower) was built in 1755. The
current one dates from 1881.
There is a
useful map in the first few pages as well.
Haworth
History Tour by Steven
Wood and Ian Palmer
Amberley
Publishing
ISBN 978 1 4456
4627 5 (print)
ISBN 978 1 4456
4628 2 (ebook)
Thursday 19 March 2015
Juliet Barker at Headingley Library
Juliet Barker is well known and respected amongst Brontë Society members, a few of whom were in Headingley Library (Leeds) on Monday. She is on a promotional tour for her latest historical work England Arise - The People The King and The Great Revolt of 1381 and the event was the result of a partnership between Leeds Libraries and the Headingley LitFest, an annual feast of literature which is still in progress. Read about it on the LitFest's daily blog here -
http://headingleylitfest.blogspot.co.uk/2015/03/england-arise-juliet-barker.html
http://headingleylitfest.blogspot.co.uk/2015/03/england-arise-juliet-barker.html
Wuthering Heights at the Rondo Theatre, Larkhall
Butterfly Psyche Theatre |
So writes Petra Schofield in her Bath Chronicle review of a production (the second in a trilogy) from Butterfly Psyche and Live Wire theatre. The adaptation is by Dougie Blaxland. Actors Alison Campbell and Jeremy Fowlds are a delight to watch "morphing in and out of the various cameo roles".
(Thanks to Rondo Theatre and Paul Daniggelis for alerting the blog)
Thursday 12 March 2015
Wuthering Heights... a new musical?
Richard Wilcocks writes:
I am very impressed by what I have heard of a new musical adaptation of Wuthering Heights by Catherine McDonald. She is currently working with a UK producer to get the show into theatres, so good luck with that! What do readers of this blog think of the musical arrangement and a voice which I would describe as rich and forceful? I heard her singing in the Parsonage nearly five years ago (in June 2010) and was struck by her vocal skills. You can hear three sample songs on YouTube:
I am very impressed by what I have heard of a new musical adaptation of Wuthering Heights by Catherine McDonald. She is currently working with a UK producer to get the show into theatres, so good luck with that! What do readers of this blog think of the musical arrangement and a voice which I would describe as rich and forceful? I heard her singing in the Parsonage nearly five years ago (in June 2010) and was struck by her vocal skills. You can hear three sample songs on YouTube:
The theme song Wuthering Heights, sung by Nelly, Catherine Linton and Hareton (at the graves) and the entire company of ghosts.
A love ballad, Face to the Rain between Catherine Earnshaw and Heathcliff.
And a big solo number Beyond the Garden Wall sung by the sixteen year old Catherine Linton.
Go to https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hIkYrnQ4liM&feature=youtu.be
You could comment on YouTube - or here, by clicking on the word 'comments' underneath this post.
You could comment on YouTube - or here, by clicking on the word 'comments' underneath this post.
Wednesday 11 March 2015
Laudanum
Jacob Wandel writes:
Laudanum in the nineteenth century was the rough equivalent of the skunk marijuana smoked by so many people in the present day, but more dangerous.
A recent article in the cooking supplement of last Saturday's Guardian (7 March) by Henry Jeffreys was about laudanum, not as an ingredient for your next pudding, I must add.
Under a line which refers to the famous quotation by Karl Marx - 'In Britain, the opium of the people was not religion, it was simply laudanum', he gives evidence of what many Brontë Society members will probably know already: that the red-brown liquid, powdered opium (ten percent) dissolved in alcohol, its extreme bitterness offset by various spices and additives, could be purchased in most pharmacies during the nineteenth century, and that its use was widespread. Jeffreys makes it clear that it was everywhere. Branwell was just one of countless others who used it frequently.
Apparently, according to the article, it was not mainly in the big industrial slums where it was used. The Morning Chronicle in 1850 referred to the 'opium-eating city of Ely' and Thomas De Quincy (Confessions of an English Opium-Eater) described Lancashire towns 'loaded with little laudanum-vials, even to the hundreds, for the accommodation of customers retiring from the workshops on Saturday night". Gee's Linctus, a cough medicine which was available well into the twentieth century (older members may remember it) was made with opium, and that great household manager Isabella Beeton featured recipes for various remedies made with opium, in her famous book. Mary Shelley's character, Victor Frankenstein, used it to help him sleep.
I am now wondering how many others in nineteenth century Haworth would have bought laudanum to ease their pains, help them forget their woes or to finish themselves off. Is there a scholar who has done the counting?
A typical label (early 20C) |
A recent article in the cooking supplement of last Saturday's Guardian (7 March) by Henry Jeffreys was about laudanum, not as an ingredient for your next pudding, I must add.
Under a line which refers to the famous quotation by Karl Marx - 'In Britain, the opium of the people was not religion, it was simply laudanum', he gives evidence of what many Brontë Society members will probably know already: that the red-brown liquid, powdered opium (ten percent) dissolved in alcohol, its extreme bitterness offset by various spices and additives, could be purchased in most pharmacies during the nineteenth century, and that its use was widespread. Jeffreys makes it clear that it was everywhere. Branwell was just one of countless others who used it frequently.
Apparently, according to the article, it was not mainly in the big industrial slums where it was used. The Morning Chronicle in 1850 referred to the 'opium-eating city of Ely' and Thomas De Quincy (Confessions of an English Opium-Eater) described Lancashire towns 'loaded with little laudanum-vials, even to the hundreds, for the accommodation of customers retiring from the workshops on Saturday night". Gee's Linctus, a cough medicine which was available well into the twentieth century (older members may remember it) was made with opium, and that great household manager Isabella Beeton featured recipes for various remedies made with opium, in her famous book. Mary Shelley's character, Victor Frankenstein, used it to help him sleep.
I am now wondering how many others in nineteenth century Haworth would have bought laudanum to ease their pains, help them forget their woes or to finish themselves off. Is there a scholar who has done the counting?
Monday 9 March 2015
The Lost Child by Caryl Phillips
Thanks to US member Paul Daniggelis from Texas for sending us this link to a review of the new book from Caryl Phillips, The Lost Child, a reweaving of the Wuthering Heights story.
http://www.kansascity.com/entertainment/books/article12608414.html
http://www.kansascity.com/entertainment/books/article12608414.html
Friday 1 May, 7pm West Lane Centre, Haworth
Novelist Caryl Phillips visits Haworth to discuss his new novel The Lost Child. Phillips boldly re-imagines Wuthering Heights in 1960s Leeds in a haunting novel about migration, social exclusion and the difficulties of family.
In association with the University of Central Lancashire.
Tickets £6 and should be booked in advance by clicking here or phoning 01535 640188.
Tuesday 9 December 2014
'The Dissolution of Percy' - in Salford
Caroline Lamb writes:
The Dissolution of Percy tackles a notorious series of historical events reflecting the surprising lack of evolution in gender politics between the nineteenth century and the modern day. The pressure and emotional toll of high expectations dropped on young male shoulders, and the crippling effect of an unrealistic sense of entitlement on men in this “man’s world”, are exposed. Can a woman’s worth be measured by her relationships? Can a man’s be measured by any demonstrative display of masculinity? What is the definition of “success” or “failure” for a male versus a female? The Dissolution of Percy plunges its audience into a world balanced in stark counterpoint between high, violent passions, steady, grim pragmatism and gallows humour, to explore matters still fiercely debated today.
A rehearsed reading of a work entitled The Dissolution of Percy is planned for the Kings Arms Theatre in Salford,
Manchester, for January next year. It is about the final three years of Branwell Brontë's life. The company producing it is hoping to take it on a tour which might include Haworth - it depends on the Arts Council funding.
Performance dates are Sunday 25 and Monday 26 January 2015, both at 7:30pm.
Tickets are free, and are currently available here: http://bit.ly/1uYJwnp
Here is the official media release:
Lydia
has never been interested in searching for love, but, gnawed by
loneliness and physical frustration, and immobilized by her station,
companionship and release must be had, and soon. Branwell, a young tutor
and amateur writer, is haunted by a history of creative and vocational
failures. He struggles to fulfill his duties, pursue his ambitions and
maintain a hold of his remaining good sense due
to a growing attachment to alcohol and an intense, obsessive
infatuation with his master’s wife: Lydia. Glowing ecstasy and violent
sorrows, real and imagined, batter the mismatched individuals each in
turn, but, all the while, something secretive and wonderful is happening
back at Branwell’s family home. His three sisters have begun work of
their own. But perhaps that’s of no importance.
The Dissolution of Percy tackles a notorious series of historical events reflecting the surprising lack of evolution in gender politics between the nineteenth century and the modern day. The pressure and emotional toll of high expectations dropped on young male shoulders, and the crippling effect of an unrealistic sense of entitlement on men in this “man’s world”, are exposed. Can a woman’s worth be measured by her relationships? Can a man’s be measured by any demonstrative display of masculinity? What is the definition of “success” or “failure” for a male versus a female? The Dissolution of Percy plunges its audience into a world balanced in stark counterpoint between high, violent passions, steady, grim pragmatism and gallows humour, to explore matters still fiercely debated today.
Donations will be invited, to be divided equally between venue
and company, and the audience will be urged to linger (at the bar?) to discuss the play after the show.
Monday 1 December 2014
President's Advisory Group
Brontë Society President Bonnie Greer is to form a new President's Advisory Group to discuss new ideas, refresh the work of the Society and create firmer links with Haworth residents. The group will include Helen Boaden, director of BBC Radio, and a former producer with Radio Leeds.
Read what she told Yorkshire Post reporter Andrew Robinson (and see her briefly on video) in today's issue.
Read what she told Yorkshire Post reporter Andrew Robinson (and see her briefly on video) in today's issue.
Wednesday 19 November 2014
"I don't do snooty" - Bonnie Greer
Bonnie Greer, president of the Brontë Society, responding to a comment in the Yorkshire Post from a member that she might in some way be stand-offish or even 'snooty' - ironically a word often employed by Americans when describing a certain kind of English person, made the following statement to the newspaper:
“One of the reasons that I accepted the Presidency is not only because I love the work of the Brontës, but because both the members and the Council have been welcoming and supportive. And because of Yorkshire - the people and the region. I’ve been London-centered for all of my almost thirty years in this country. So to get away from the south east bubble to somewhere “real” - to me that’s great!
One of the reasons I love Yorkshire is because I, too, don’t do “snooty” and “snobby”. I never have, don’t now, and never will. And believe me, if I felt that there was an atmosphere like that around me, I’d be out of there.
I’m not the executive. I don’t manage the day to day running of the museum, but I am the President. I chair the AGM and in between spread the good news of these great literary sisters...especially to young people and diverse communities who may feel that the Brontës hold nothing for them. My first Brontë encounter at an event at the Museum was with a Bradford official, a Muslim man with daughters. We talked about Patrick Brontë and how he allowed his daughters to write. And the man I was talking to was also a father of daughters and was very moved by Patrick’s story - as I am. Next to Emily, he’s the Bronte I connect with the most. He promised to bring his daughters to the Museum.
It is these kind of synergies and interfaces which are crucial for all literary societies going forward in the twenty-first century, not just ours.
Almost all literary societies must become younger, more global, more outward-looking, more diverse, more in touch with the digital world, more able to find interesting “off-piste” connections with classic work. And this looking towards the future is just one of the things I find exciting and full of possibility as the Brontë Society heads toward the bicentenaries.
This going forward is the kind of thing – along with other initiatives , too - that most of us are doing, or trying to do. I love our present membership and curators and staff at the Museum are excellent. And my London-born husband has fallen in love with Haworth and the moors. We both have!”
Wednesday 5 November 2014
I have just returned from a visit to Ponden Hall
IMS writes:
1801- I have just returned from a visit to my landlord.
1801- I have just returned from a visit to my landlord.
Wuthering Heights is the
name of Mr Heathcliff’s dwelling.
2014- I have just returned from a visit to Ponden Hall. I had
left my car at the bottom of the hill and as I approached the house a light
shone from a small mullioned window. Mist was floating, as cotton wool, over
the waters of Ponden Reservoir, the sky was black and a little rain had begun
to fall.
I thought of the three small Brontë children, Branwell, Emily and
Anne, with their servant Sarah Garrs, hurrying from the high moors, in 1824,
towards the safety of the porch at Ponden Hall, where the Heaton famly lived, as a thunderstorm raged above
whilst they were out walking. The Crow Hill Bog had burst which sent a great
wall of stones, mud and debris more than a mile down the moors.
The lighting flasht, the
thunderstorm crasht and its tremendous bowels burst. ( sic)
Words from a poem relating to the eruption by John Nicholson, ‘The
Airedale Poet’.
I thought also of Patrick
anxiously looking out of an upstairs window at the Parsonage awaiting their
return. As he heard a deep distant explosion, something different from thunder,
and felt a tremor in the window from which he was looking, how thankful he
would have felt when he heard that they had escaped the worst of the deluge and
were all safe at Ponden.
I reached the safety of the Hall before the rain
really came down, passed a plaque above the porch which said the house, whose
origins were in the 1500s and 1600s, had been refurbished in 1801 by Robert
Heaton and remembered the words in Chapter One of Wuthering Heights: above the principal door I detected
the date ‘1500’ and the name ‘Hareton Earnshaw.’
Is it mere coincidence that
Hareton is an anagram of R. Heaton?
I received a warm welcome from Julie and Steve who own the
property and was thrilled to be inside the house with its many Bronte
connections. I was there to ‘take tea with Mrs Bronte’- well not exactly but to
hear expert Angela Crow speak about Maria Branwell who left Cornwall when she
married the Reverend Patrick Bronte in 1812. A few people sat in front of the
fireplace, a fireplace which Branwell is said to have sketched, others sat
around a long table.
Angela gave an informative talk about the Brontës (
Pruntys) who had humble beginnings in Ireland and also about the Branwells. The
Branwells were a respected family who were merchants in Penzance and Angela
gave everyone a flavour of what it was like in a Cornish fishing town at the
time and gave an insight into Mrs Brontë’s early life there.
Seated at the table eating an
absolutely delicious afternoon tea, provided by Julie, I recalled the story of
Emily taking tea at Ponden and how, much to the embarrassment of her host, a
dog was giving birth to puppies under the very table at which they were
sitting. I am sure Emily would not have cared a jot about that! Very much
replete – the veritable feast had included ham sandwiches with lavender cheese,
pound cake with raspberries, plum cake, almond pancakes- we were then given a
tour of the house.
Upstairs we were led into a
large beamed room.
I fastened the door and
glanced round for the bed. The whole furniture consisted of a chair, a clothes-press
and a large oak case with squares cut out near the top- resembling coach
windows. I looked inside and perceived it to be a singular sort of old
fashioned couch. It fact it formed a little closet and the ledge of a window
which it enclosed served as a table.
Julie explained that they had
commissioned a box bed to be made for this room and its position and style were
exactly the same as the one described by Mr Lockwood which he had found in the
room Zillah allocated to him at Wuthering Heights.
I imagined how it would be
very warm and cosy on a cold winter’s night, with the wind howling down the
chimney, enclosed in that bed. In this room, also, was a window which Emily had
drawn when she was about ten which portrays a broken pane of glass with a hand.
Thoughts of the story of Wuthering Heights forming in her mind even at such a young age?
We then moved on to the room which had been the library in
the Bronte’s time and which was supposed to be the finest library in the West
Riding and included a Shakespeare’s First Folio. Julie pointed out the actual
shelves from which the Brontës could have selected books. She told us that when the last Heaton
died, a bachelor in 1898, the books, which would all have a Ponden Hall plate
inside, were sold in the market in Keighley and those unpurchased were used to
wrap vegetables.
Another large upstairs room illustrated how the house had
altered down the centuries, for it was quite easy to see what had once been
outside walls. In the 1600s a two storey peat loft had been built. In the upper
storey the peat was dried from the heat rising from the cattle which were
housed below. In 1801 when the dwelling was refurbished a new section of house
was built between the main one and the peat loft. It has long been thought that
Ponden Hall was the setting for Thrushcross Grange in Emily Brontë’s
masterpiece but it was remarked upon that there are certainly many
similarities to the Earnshaw’s old
home- Wuthering Heights- within the house. What a really
superb afternoon- Julie and Steve were wonderful hosts and Angela had given an
interesting picture of the family and place of birth Maria left behind to marry
the man she loved We had heard about lives and cultures in three differing
places- Ireland, Cornwall and Yorkshire but places all drawn together by
writers who produced some of the greatest novels in the English Language.
Monday 6 October 2014
Tea with Mrs Brontë
Here is the leaflet for this event. Brontë Society members who have not yet seen Ponden Hall will get a conducted tour. There is now a box bed there - as in Wuthering Heights - built in one of the bedrooms, where the original one was situated until the 1920s. Four rooms are available for Bed and Breakfast. Just a handful of tickets left!
Sunday 14 September 2014
Branwell at Luddendenfoot
Poet Simon Zonenblick (pictured) showed a preview of his new forty-five minute video about Branwell Brontë this afternoon, in Thornton. The upstairs room of the chic little vegetarian café in South Square was full of people who turned out to be terrifyingly knowledgeable about the young man who is often seen simply as a boozer who was fond of opium, but Zonenblick was not in any way daunted when he answered their questions afterwards. According to the video, which is mainly about his time as a railway clerk at Luddendenfoot, just up from recently-industrialised Sowerby Bridge, Branwell wrote plenty of tolerable verse when he was not busy with account books, and produced a number of reasonably good paintings. We saw some of these - a Jacob's ladder with angels, reminiscent of Blake, a landscape in which it was not clear whether the sun was rising or setting, a moonlit scene with a bridge over a canal, a figure which could be from a dream or nightmare entitled The Lamplighter... according to one of the people interviewed by Zonenblick, Branwell's landscapes are ethereal, all about "the spaces between places". The poets of today who meet regularly in Calderdale pubs consider themselves to be Branwell's descendants, to some extent, and some of his poems were read by them with great respect, especially the ones dealing with death and burial.
Daphne du Maurier was mentioned (The Infernal World of Branwell Brontë) in relation to his fascination for the wild bargemen, and there is an amusing sequence where people in a pub attempt to write their name on a piece of paper with right and left hands simultaneously. None of them did very well, but Branwell earned drinks in The Black Bull when he wrote words down like that - Greek with the left and Latin with the right.
But enough! The video has yet to receive its final additions and subtractions, and what we saw was really work in progress. It will be more widely available in the new year. The event was organised by Angela Crow-Woods, who marshalled the audience to another café - Emily's. This is situated two hundred yards away in the house where Branwell was born, and it sells excellent coffee and Italian-style snacks. All the well-known portraits of the Brontës are there, and the customers sit at tables made from used school desks.
Daphne du Maurier was mentioned (The Infernal World of Branwell Brontë) in relation to his fascination for the wild bargemen, and there is an amusing sequence where people in a pub attempt to write their name on a piece of paper with right and left hands simultaneously. None of them did very well, but Branwell earned drinks in The Black Bull when he wrote words down like that - Greek with the left and Latin with the right.
But enough! The video has yet to receive its final additions and subtractions, and what we saw was really work in progress. It will be more widely available in the new year. The event was organised by Angela Crow-Woods, who marshalled the audience to another café - Emily's. This is situated two hundred yards away in the house where Branwell was born, and it sells excellent coffee and Italian-style snacks. All the well-known portraits of the Brontës are there, and the customers sit at tables made from used school desks.
Saturday 6 September 2014
The Rathfriland area breathes Brontë
Marina Saegerman (member of the Brussels Brontë Group) writes about her visit to Patrick Brontë's homeland:
Over the years I have
been able to visit many places related to the Brontës, both in the UK and in
Ireland, but there was one place that I had not yet visited and which is
essential to the Brontë history: the place where Rev. Patrick Brontë was born
and where he grew up. This was my missing link in the Brontë story. So this
year’s mission on our holidays in Ireland was to be a visit to the area where
Patrick Brontë was born and lived until he moved to Cambridge, the area around
Rathfriland in County Down, Northern Ireland. I have always been fascinated by
the Brontës’ Irish ancestry and have read all that I could find on this topic. So you
can imagine that I was very excited to see the area where Patrick Brontë spent
his early years and to visit the places related to his family.
The day of the visit
was to be Saturday 26 July 2014. On our way back home from Boyle to Dun
Laoghaire (Co. Dublin) a small detour was planned to Northern Ireland, where I
booked us into a B&B in Rathfriland for one night. In preparation of
this visit I had been rereading some books on the Brontës’ Irish background.
My main guidebook for the trip was to be The Road to Haworth – the Story of
the Brontës’ Irish Ancestry by John Cannon. It reads like a Brontë novel.
The Schoolhouse |
We set off in the
morning and planned to arrive in the
Rathfriland area around noon. A few days before our
departure I had phoned the secretary of the Irish section of the Brontë
Society, Miss Margaret K Livingston, to see whether we could meet her when we
were in the area. We decided to meet up at 1pm for a picnic lunch at Drumballyroney where the Brontë
Homeland Interpretative Centre is situated. The Drumballyroney Schoolhouse and
Church are also the start of the Brontë Homeland drive.
The Rathfriland area
breathes Brontë: a lot of houses or institutions have a Brontë-related name:
Brontë manor, the Brontë primary school, a Brontë nursery unit, there was even
a house called 'Villette'. We arrived at 12
o’clock on the dot, the time that the interpretative centre opened its doors.
No need to say that we were the first visitors of the day. Since we were well
before the time set to meet Margaret, I had some time to browse around in the
Schoolhouse to see the video on the Brontë family and read all the information
panels, giving information on the various members of the Brontë family,
including Patrick Brontë’s parents and their unusual 'country courtship'. The
small schoolroom also contained some exhibits related to Patrick Brontë and the
Brontë sisters, amongst others a replica of Charlotte Brontë’s wedding dress.
Margaret arrived well
on time and was accompanied by another member of the Irish section, Mr Finny O’
Sullivan. The weather gods were not on our side that day, it was pouring
outside. But a picnic was planned,
and a picnic we would have! Margaret decided to have a picnic in the
schoolroom: since we were the only visitors at that moment, this was not a
problem. We were treated to a real picnic feast: lovely fresh sandwiches,
biscuits, cake, strawberries and cream, tea, coffee and juice… too much
for our poor bellies!
Finny, Margaret and Marina |
During lunch we
received all the information about the Irish section of the Brontë Society, the
Irish ancestry and the Drumballyroney site - schoolhouse, church and Brontë burial
plot.
The schoolhouse at
Drumballyroney was the place where Patrick, at the age of twenty-one, taught for four years, before going to Cambridge. Next to the schoolhouse is the Anglican
Church where Patrick and his brother William were christened and where Patrick gave
his first sermon after graduating from Cambridge University. We
also visited the graveyard at the back of the schoolhouse and church, where the
Brontë family burial plot is situated and where Patrick’s parents and other
family members are buried.
Margaret and Finny had planned to
drive us around the Brontë homeland sites, so we set off in Margaret’s car. In
the meantime the weather had cleared up and the sun was shining again. The
drive was very well sign-posted , we just had to follow the brown signposts
with the book symbol. Next stop on the homeland drive was the Brontë
Homeland picnic site at Knockiveagh where we had wonderful views over the Mourne
Mountains and the area where Patrick grew up. The picnic site contains the
ruins of an old shebeen - an illicit drinking house.
We continued to
follow the 'Brontë road'. We passed the two-storey house near Lisnacreevy where Hugh and Alice
brought up their family of ten children, we passed the 'dancing glen' where they
secretly met according to local legend, and arrived at the next stop on the
drive, Alice McClory’s
cottage in Ballynaskeagh. This cottage was the childhood home of Patrick’s mother, and is still
owned by the McClory family. The cottage was very overgrown with bushes and
ivy, and it was very difficult to see how it would have looked like. Nothing
has been done to keep it in a reasonable condition, and it is in a very bad
state at the moment. What a shame!
The highlight of the
homeland drive was of course the Birthplace Cottage at Emdale, a small two-roomed cottage where
Patrick Brontë was born on St. Patrick’s Day 1777. Or to describe it in Patrick’s own words, from the poem 'The Irish cabin':
“A neat
Irish cabin, snow proof
Well
thatched, had a good earthen floor,
One
chimney in midst of the roof,
One
window, and one latched door.
Little remains now of
the original thatched cottage, but it gives a clear impression of how an Irish
family must have lived in those days.
However, to modern standards, it is difficult to imagine that a family
with two children could actually live in such a small space. A lot of work has
been done to restore the walls, the
site is now protected and in 1956 a commemorative plaque was unveiled at the
site.
Glascar Church |
We continued the
homeland drive to its final stop , Glascar Church and Schoolhouse, where Patrick had his first
teaching post in the 1790s. He was said to have used creative teaching methods
in order to bring out the best in his pupils. He was dismissed from this post
because he had formed a romantic attachment with one of his pupils. After this
incident he took up the teaching post at Drumballyroney schoolhouse and so the
Brontë homeland circle is
complete.
In the Glascar Church
graveyard we could see many headstones with the Brontë name. Descendants of the
Irish Brontës are still being buried here.
We returned to
the Drumballyroney Schoolhouse, still enjoying the wonderful views and the
countryside that Patrick Brontë knew as a child and a young man. It had been a very
interesting and informative
afternoon with Margaret and Finny. One can learn a lot about the Irish Brontë
story from books on the subject but having actually seen and visited the sites
and having received the information from Margaret and Finny who had so much
more to tell about the Irish Brontës and the stories behind the sites, made the
Brontë homeland drive so much more interesting to me and gave another dimension
to my knowledge on the Irish ancestry.
I was really glad
that we had the opportunity of doing the drive with people like Margaret and
Finny who knew the places so well. I’m convinced that if we would have had to
do the drive on our own, although it is signposted, we would have had great
difficulty in finding some of the spots eg Alice McClory’s cottage well hidden
behind bushes and ivy. We took our leave
from Margaret and Finny, thanking them for the time they had spent with us and the information we had received.
On our way to the
B&B in Rathfriland, very close to the Drumballyroney site, I reflected on the afternoon and enjoyed
the satisfaction that I had finally completed my own Brontë circle.
For further reading, the following
books can be recommended:
The Road to Haworth –
the story of the Brontës’ Irish ancestry (John Cannon)
The Brontës of
Ballynaskeagh ( W. Haughton Crowe)
The Brontës in
Ireland (Dr. William Wright)
“The Brontës’ Irish
background” (Edward Chitham)
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