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Agnes Grey

Agnes Grey

In her daring first novel, the youngest Brontë sister drew upon her own experiences to tell the unvarnished truth about life as a governess. Like Agnes Grey, Anne Brontë was a young middle-class Victorian lady whose family fortunes had faltered. Like so many other unmarried women of the nineteenth century, Brontë accepted the only "respectable" employment available — and entered a world of hardship, humiliation, and loneliness.
Written with a realism that shocked critics, this biting social commentary offers a sympathetic portrait of Agnes and a moving indictment of her brutish and haughty employers. Separated from her family and friends by many miles, paid little more than subsistence wages, Agnes stands alone — both in society at large and in a household where she is neither family member nor servant. Agnes Grey remains a landmark in the literature of social history. In addition to its challenge to the era's chauvinism and materialism, it features a first-person narrative that offers a rare opportunity to hear the voice of a Victorian working woman.

Reprint of the Thomas Cautley Newby, London, 1847 edition.
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$4.50
Agnes Grey
$4.50
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Description

In her daring first novel, the youngest Brontë sister drew upon her own experiences to tell the unvarnished truth about life as a governess. Like Agnes Grey, Anne Brontë was a young middle-class Victorian lady whose family fortunes had faltered. Like so many other unmarried women of the nineteenth century, Brontë accepted the only "respectable" employment available — and entered a world of hardship, humiliation, and loneliness.
Written with a realism that shocked critics, this biting social commentary offers a sympathetic portrait of Agnes and a moving indictment of her brutish and haughty employers. Separated from her family and friends by many miles, paid little more than subsistence wages, Agnes stands alone — both in society at large and in a household where she is neither family member nor servant. Agnes Grey remains a landmark in the literature of social history. In addition to its challenge to the era's chauvinism and materialism, it features a first-person narrative that offers a rare opportunity to hear the voice of a Victorian working woman.

Reprint of the Thomas Cautley Newby, London, 1847 edition.
wildfell hall;sister charlotte;bronte family;literary critics;victorian governess;charlotte wrote;emily's wuthering;victorian heroines;romance enters;sisters wrote;clergyman's daughter;sisters charlotte;impoverished clergyman;cautionary morality;family's financial;familial background;christian values;mansfield park;leave home;rich people;social class;wuthering heights;moll;19th century;bantam;flanders;bront;supernanny;annotated;comportment;bloomfield;eyre;vintage;deportment;penguin;villette;clergymen;1847;governesses;brats;curate;rector;brontë;households;tenant;pupils;matilda;bratty;decency;employers;employment;charges;discipline;autobiographical;jane austen;edward weston;defoe;george moore;yorkshire;england;britain;books on 19th centuries;books on pupils;books on leave homes;books on bloomfield;books on bantam;books on penguins;books on bronts;books on governesses;curating;books on victorian heroines;books on wildfell halls;books on eyre;books on vintages;books on literary critics;books on christian values;books on victorian governesses;books on wuthering heights;books on deportments;books on clergymen;books on households;books on mansfield parks;books on social classes;books on sister charlottes;books on flanders;books on moll;books on employers;books on employments;books on rich people;books on tenants;books on charges;books on bronte families;books on comportments;books on disciplines;books on villette;books on brats;books on matilda;leaving home;books on rectors