The well-educated daughter of a penniless clergyman, Agnes Grey is treated like a child by her family and so sets out to prove herself by seeking employment as a governess. Soon, however, her idealistic notions regarding the education and care of her wards are dashed as she battles to control the wild Bloomfield children in her first situation, and is then held in low regard by the superior Murray household. Drawing on Anne Brontë’s own experiences, and dealing with themes such as the nature of childhood, the rise of the middle classes and the loneliness, cruelty and even ill treatment that life as a governess could entail, Agnes Grey is full of quiet passion and remains a beloved classic to this day.
Anne Brontë (1820–1849), the youngest of the Brontë sisters, is best known for her two novels The Tenant of Wildfell Hall and Agnes Grey. Like her siblings Emily and Branwell, her life was tragically cut short by tuberculosis.
The most perfect prose narrative in English letters. Agnes Grey is a narrative simple and beautiful as a muslin dress
Anne Brontë, Anne Bronte, Josephine Mcdonagh, Herbert Rosengarten, Josephine McDonagh, Vancouver) Rosengarten, Herbert (University of British Columbia, University of Oxford) McDonagh, Josephine (Professor of Victorian Literature
Anne Brontë, Anne Bronte, Anne Bront, Herbert Rosengarten, Vancouver) Rosengarten, Herbert (Chairman of the Department of English, Chairman of the Department of English, University of British Columbia