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Authors: Juliet Barker

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With hindsight, Charlotte was able to recognize that the diagnosis was correct but at the time she was unconvinced. ‘The doctor speaks encouragingly', she told Ellen gloomily, ‘but as yet I don't get better.'
121
Convinced in her own mind that she herself was now suffering from the consumption which had afflicted her sisters at exactly this season three years before, Charlotte did not rally. The death of Keeper, Emily's beloved dog, on 1 December was a further blow, coming as it did less than three weeks before the anniversary of his mistress's death. He was ill for a single night and then ‘went gently to sleep' the following morning; ‘we laid his old faithful head in the garden', Charlotte told Ellen, adding that Anne's dog, Flossy, was ‘dull and misses him'. ‘There was something very sad in losing the old dog; yet I am glad he met a natural fate – people kept hinting that he ought to be put away which neither Papa nor I liked to think of.'
122

Try as she might, Charlotte could not escape the thrall of the past. Two days before the anniversary of Emily's death, she could bear it no longer and wrote to Ellen begging her to come to Haworth, if only for a few days. ‘I am well aware myself that extreme and continuous depression of spirits has had much to do with the origin of the illness – and I know a little cheerful society would do me more good than gallons of medicine', she confessed to Ellen, adding, ‘If you can come – come on Friday –'.
123
The change in date was significant. On Friday it would be 19 December, exactly three years since Emily was torn from the world. It was an anniversary Charlotte was anxious to forget. The flurry of preparation for her guest's arrival would provide a welcome distraction from painful memories and from the fear that she had contracted the same fatal disease as her sister.

Chapter Twenty-Four

VILLETTE

Ellen responded immediately to Charlotte's summons by coming straight to Haworth, though she did not arrive until the day after the third anniversary of Emily's death. As usual, her presence cheered Charlotte, but she could only stay for a week and, after she left, Charlotte had a sudden relapse: ‘my head continued to ache all Monday – and yesterday the white tongue – parched mouth and loss of appetite were returned', Charlotte reported to her friend, ‘– accordingly I am to take more medicine'.
1
Mr Ruddock, who visited that day, identified the source of Charlotte's illness as her liver and prescribed her a course of ‘blue pills', containing a small dose of mercury, which she was to take for a week. Within a few days, however, Charlotte was seriously ill, ‘unable to swallow any nourishment except a few teaspoonsful of liquid per diem, my mouth became sore, my teeth loose, my tongue swelled, raw and ulcerated while water welled continually into my mouth'.
2
These, as Charlotte, unlike her doctor, realized, were the classic symptoms of mercury poisoning. She abandoned the course of pills
and was able to dissuade her father, who was going through agonies of anxiety, from calling in Mr Teale, the specialist whom they had consulted over Anne. Charlotte was able to report with a certain grim satisfaction to Ellen that Mr Ruddock was ‘sorely flustered when he found what he had done', declaring that ‘he never in his whole practice knew the same effect produced by the same dose on Man – woman or child – and avows it is owing to an altogether peculiar sensitiveness of constitution'.
3
Suddenly, Emily's apparently wayward and stubborn refusal to be treated by ‘poisoning doctors' seemed justified.

Looking back over this period, Charlotte herself recognized that illness alone was not responsible for her suffering.

It cannot be denied that the solitude of my position fearfully aggravated its other evils. Some long, stormy days and nights there were when I felt such a craving for support and companionship as I cannot express. Sleepless – I lay awake night after night – weak and unable to occupy myself – I sat in my chair day after day – the saddest memories my only company. It was a time I shall never forget – but God sent it and it must have been for the best.
4

Now that Charlotte was genuinely ill, she had at least an excuse to avoid visiting local grandees who continued to inundate her with invitations. Previously, she had blamed her father's precarious state of health for her refusal to leave home, prompting William Forster to write to Richard Monckton Milnes that ‘there was no use in our trying to get her away from her father … she will not, I expect can not, leave him'.
5
This gave Monckton Milnes, the Yorkshire MP whom Charlotte had met in London, the bright idea of inviting both Charlotte and her father to his home, Fryston Hall at Ferrybridge. Fortunately for Charlotte, this invitation arrived when she was at her weakest and she was able to hand over the task of writing the refusal to her father with a clear conscience. ‘Were I in the habit of going from home, there are few persons, to whom I would give the preference over yourself,' Patrick replied,' – such not being the case, you will permit me to retain my customary rule, unbroken, and kindly accept my excuse.' ‘My Daughter,' he added, almost as an afterthought, ‘I regret to say, is not well enough to be a visitor anywhere, just now – She has been out of health, for some time, and though now better, requires care, And for the present, I should wish her to stay at home.'
6

Another person who tried an appeal to Patrick to get Charlotte away
from Haworth was Ellen Nussey. Alarmed at the reports of her friend's health, Ellen did what she had frequently done in the past and wrote to Charlotte's family to get permission for a visit to Brookroyd which she knew Charlotte herself would decline. ‘I wish you could have seen the coolness with which I captured your letter on its way to Papa', Charlotte informed Ellen, ‘and at once conjecturing its tenor, made the contents my own.' For the moment she was too nauseous to travel but, she assured Ellen, the moment she felt well enough to do so, she would come to Brookroyd. In the meantime, she urged her friend, ‘Be quiet. Be tranquil.'
7

It was not until the end of January that Charlotte was strong enough to make the journey to Brookroyd, even then taking the train only as far as Bradford and travelling the rest of the way in Ellen's brother-in-law's gig. She had given strict instructions to her ‘dear physician': ‘I am to live on the
very plainest
fare – to take
no butter
– at present I do not take tea – only milk and water with a little sugar and dry bread – this with an occasional mutton chop is my diet – and I like it better than anything else.'
8
Ellen's companionship soon rallied Charlotte's health and spirits. Ten days after her arrival she was able to respond positively to a kind letter from Mrs Gaskell.

As the date of this letter will shew – I am now from home – and have already benefited greatly by the kind attentions and cheerful society of the friends with whom I am staying – friends who probably do not care for me a pin – as Currer Bell – but who have known me for years as C. Brontë – and by whom I need not fear that my invalid weakness (which indeed I am fast overcoming) will be felt as a burden.

Certainly the past Winter has been to me a strange time – had I the prospect before me of living it over again – my prayer must necessarily be – ‘Let this cup pass from me'.
9

She was even well enough to receive a visit from Miss Wooler's sister Eliza, who made a morning call with three of her nieces and a nephew, though an invitation to dinner at the family home, Rouse Mill, had to be cancelled when the weather proved too severe.
10

Charlotte returned home on 11 February 1852, but the beneficial effects of her fortnight's holiday were to prove all too transitory. She was particularly chagrined that her brief excursion had caused her to miss George Smith who, on the spur of the moment, had made a detour on his trip to Scotland and called unexpectedly at the parsonage. ‘I do wish now I had
delayed my departure from home a few days longer', she wrote wistfully to him, ‘that I might have shared with my Father the true pleasure of receiving you at Haworth Parsonage. Such a pleasure your visit would have been as I have sometimes dimly imagined but never ventured to realize.'
11

The reason for George Smith's sudden visit to Haworth was never properly explained. Undoubtedly he was worried about Charlotte's state of health and her admitted inability to produce her next novel: perhaps he simply wanted to see for himself whether she really was on the verge of death as London gossip constantly suggested. He may also have been concerned that his recent rejection of Harriet Martineau's latest novel, ‘Oliver Weld', might have been taken to heart by Charlotte, who had not only persuaded Miss Martineau to write her first novel in many years but had acted as broker between author and publisher to secure the book for Smith, Elder & Co. What all had hoped would turn out to be another
Deerbrook
was in fact a thinly disguised and badly written political and religious polemic which put everyone concerned in a difficult position.
12
George Smith was anxious not to offend Charlotte, but the book was unacceptable from both a literary and a commercial point of view. Charlotte herself, who had gone to the trouble of suggesting pseudonyms for the author and had actually read the first volume of the book in manuscript before sending it on to Smith, Elder & Co., was embarrassed by the fact that the golden prize she had hoped to bring to her publishers had turned out to be mere counterfeit. She had admitted her doubts to George Smith in her covering letter when sending the manuscript but, unwilling to hurt or alienate her other friend, had written ‘gloriously' about it to her. Harriet Martineau, after a long silence which Charlotte feared meant that she had taken permanent offence, eventually admitted that the novel had been ‘a foolish prank' but was scornful of George Smith's timidity in refusing to publish a pro-Catholic book.
13
Though Charlotte had reassured George Smith that the whole sorry episode had not in any way diminished her own regard for him, he may have felt it necessary to discuss the matter face to face.

Whatever George Smith's motives in coming to Haworth were, Patrick must have been able to reassure him, for he did not take up Charlotte's invitation to come to her at Brookroyd and never repeated his visit to her home. His frequent expressions of goodwill continued. He persuaded his mother to invite Charlotte to London again in the hope that a change of air and scene would do her good. This Charlotte regretfully rejected. ‘A treat must be earned before it can be enjoyed and the treat which a visit to you affords
me is yet unearned, and must so remain for a time – how long I do not know.'
14
More remarkably, knowing Charlotte's enthusiasm for Thackeray, George Smith sent her the manuscript of the as yet unpublished first volume of
The History of Henry Esmond Esquire
. This, as Charlotte gratefully acknowledged, was a rare and special pleasure. As usual, Thackeray's work filled her with a mixture of admiration and irritation.

In the first half of the work what chiefly struck me was the wonderful manner in which the author throws himself into the spirit and letter of the times whereof he treats … No second-rate imitator can write in this way; no coarse scene-painter can charm us with an allusion so delicate and perfect. But what bitter satire – what relentless dissection of diseased subjects! Well – and this too is right – or would be right if the savage surgeon did not seem so fiercely pleased with his work. Thackeray likes to discover an ulcer or an aneurism; he has pleasure in putting his cruel knife or probe into quivering, living flesh. Thackeray would not like all the world to be good; no great satirist would like Society to be perfect.

As usual – he is unjust to women – quite unjust: there is hardly any punishment he does not deserve for making Lady Castlewood peep through a key-hole, listen at a door and be jealous of a boy and a milkmaid.

Many other things I noticed that – for my part – grieved and exasperated me as I read – but then again came passages so true – so deeply thought – so tenderly felt – one could not help forgiving and admiring.

Interestingly, in the light of her own reluctance to treat social issues in her novels, Charlotte added a cautionary note. ‘I wish he could be told not to care much for dwelling on the political or religious intrigues of the times. Thackeray, in his heart, does not value political or religious intrigue of any age or date.'
15
Charlotte had made the same criticism of Harriet Martineau's ‘Oliver Weld' – ‘I wish she had kept off theology' – and this seems to reflect her own disillusionment with politics. The girl who had once written with breathless fervour about the emancipation of Catholics was now a cynical and uninterested observer, telling Ellen Nussey, ‘I am amused at the interest you take in politics – don't expect to rouse me – to me all ministries and all oppositions seem to be pretty much alike. D'Israeli was factious as Leader of the Opposition – Lord J Russel[l] is going to be factious now that he has stepped into D'T's shoes – Confound them all.'
16
Perhaps as a result of her disillusionment with Branwell,
Charlotte's childhood enthusiasm for politics had gone the same way as her childhood enthusiasm for war.

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