Introduction:
The Victorian era is known for the galaxy of female
novelists. CHARLOTTE BRONTE, EMILY BRONTE, Mrs.
Gaskell and GEORGE ELIOT are in prime focus. They also
include Mrs. Trollope, Mrs. Gore, Mrs. Maroh, Mrs. Bray, Mrs. Henry, charlotte
younger, Miss Oliphant, and still more. However, the four most important women
novelists, who yet are quite important, are charlotte Bronte, Emily Bronte,
Mrs. Gaskell and George Eliot. Of the four, the two first named were sister,
and their methods and achievement as novelists met at many places. But each of
the remaining two priced her own line and made herself known in the field of
English novel in her own way.
The three Bronte sister – Anne, charlotte,
and Emily – collectively known often as the “ Stormy sisterhood”, who took the
England of their time by storm, were in actual life Shy and isolated girls with
rather uneventful lives. All of them died young and died of Tuberculosis. Hugh
Walden to assert: “The Bronte belongs to that class of writers whom, it is
impossible to understand except through the medium of biography.” Thus Samuel
Chew observe “The three Bronte sister have been overlaid with so much
biography, criticism, and conjecture that is reading about than there is danger
best their own books be left unread.”
Charlotte
wrote four novels - ‘The professor’, ‘Vilette’, ‘Jane Eyre’ and ‘Shirley’.
The first two novels were based on her personal experiences at a Brussels
boarding house where she most probably fell in love with the Belgian scholar
Hager who perfectly answered her conception of a dashing hero of the Byronic
type. The heroine of her third novel is a governess, just like her sister Anne.
Her tempestuous love affair with Rochester – a combination of wonderful
nobility and meanness is the staple of this novel.
Charlotte
Bronte in her novel revolted against the traditions of Jane Austen, Dickens,
and Thackeray. Thackeray’s Vanity Fair she praised in glowing terms,
but she herself never attempted anything of the kind. Her novels are novel of
manners but of passions and the naked soul. Her characters – mostly the
effusion of her own soul – are elemental figures aching in the back drop of
elemental nature.
According to
Compton Rickett, three characteristics “detach themselves from the writing of
charlotte Bronte”. They are the note of intimacy; the note of passion and the
note of revolt. The note of intimacy is caused by the markedly autobiographic
slant of her novels. The note of passion is struck by lonely sensitive woman on
behalf of woman. Her point of view is the point of view of a woman. As regard
the note of revolt, we must emphasize that she was a rebel by nature and a
puritan by training. She could not reconcile these two elements. Though she did
not fully or even appreciably, revolt against social conventions, she at least
revolted against the conventions of the novel.
GEORGE ELIOT (1819 – 80)
With George Eliot we come to
the most philosophy of all the major Victorian novelists, both female and male
philosophy is both her strength and weakness as a novelists. It keeps her from
falling into bathos or triviality, but at the same time gives her art an ultra
serious and reflective quality which makes it “heavy reading”. Even her human –
the faculty in which she doubtlessly is quite seen – has about it the quality
of ponderous reflectivity. George Eliot’s important novel are the
following:- ‘The mill on the Floss’, ‘Adam Bede’, ‘Felix Holt’, ‘Daniel
Deronda’ and ‘Middlemarch’. All of them are marked by extreme seriousness
of purpose and execution. As Samuel Chew observes, “in George Eliot hands the
novel was not primarily for entertainment but for the serious discussion of
moral issues”. She is indeed, too didactic and make every incident a text
moralistic expatiation. In her novels we invariably meet with the clash of
circumstances with human will. She indeed, believed that circumstances
influenced character, but she did not show circumstance entirely determining
character. A man called upon to choose between two women or a woman to choose
between two men is the common motif of the novels.
Another
important feature of her novels is their very deep concern with human
psychology. Her novels are all novels of character. “She”, says Compton –
Rickett “was the first novelist foray the stress wholly upon character
rather than incident; to make her stories spiritual rather than physical
dramas. In her characterization she displays both subtlety and rarity. Her
studies of the inner man, but more particularly the inner woman, are marvelous.
George Eliot
excels at portraying the tragedy of unfulfilled female longing. She identified
herself with her chief female characters unfold their inner feelings with
masterly strollers. Compton – Rickett points out: “Maggie’s was for
fuller life, Romola’s for ampler knowledge, Darothea’s for larger opportunity
for doing well”. She stands at the gateway between the old novel and the new, a
massive caryatid heavy of countenance uneasy of attitude, but noble,
monumental, profoundly impressive”.
EMILY BRONTE (1818 – 48)
Emily was a poet as well as
novelist, and her only novel ‘Wuthering Heights’ is a poem as well as
a novel. “There is no other book”, says Longinus “which contains so many of the
hassled, tumultuous, and rebellious elements of romanticism. She is fiercer
than over charlotte, but her fierceness is strangely accompanied by numeric
strokes of intuitive illumination.
Wuthering
Heights is a story of primal passions enacted amongst elemental
environment. Walter Allen observes: “The central fact about Emily Bronte is
that she is a mystic.” Her mysticism lies not only in her handily of the voice
of the dead Catherine cabling Heathcliff to her, but also in her use of
symbols. In many of her poems, too Emily tries to give expression of her
mystical experience.
Mrs. Gaskell (1810 – 65)
Mrs. Gaskell had nothing of
this passion and frustration of the Bronte sister. She was wife of a quite
Unitarian clergyman in Manchester – one of the bugging centres of English
industry. She was mother of seven children.
What
distinguishes the novels of Mrs. Gaskell is her deep social consciousness
combined with a compassionate observation of the life around her? Her novels
divide themselves into two well defined categorizes. First, we have novel like
‘Mary Barton’ and ‘North and south’ which deal with the social and industrial
problem arising out of the masters workmen struggles which were a features of
the industrial age which had then just got under way. Being herself a resident
of Manchester, Mrs. Gaskell was a witness to the blessings of the Industrial
Revolution. Secondly we have novel like ‘Ganford’, ‘Ruth’, ‘wives and
Daughters’ and ‘Sylvia’s Lovers’ which eschew all industrial problems and are
concerned with rural life and manners which she knew
So well,
thanks to her long stay at Knutsford with her aunt, before she settled at
Manchester with her husband. Of all the novels of this category the best known
is ‘ Coranford’ which is a disguised name for her own Knutsford Ganford is a
classic of its own kind. It portrays a world in habited by woman alone. These
women belong to middle – class families.
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