Untitled watercolor of woman in Greek dress
Six months after she finished “Ernest Alembert” (shown below), Charlotte Brontë painted this figure in colorful Grecian clothing. Like her most famous heroine, Jane Eyre, Brontë’s painterly ability is no better than average. And yet we see here her ambition embodied: the woman holds a lyre in one hand, the instrument of Apollo, Greek god of the sun and patron of all the arts. In the other she holds a plectrum with which to pluck the strings. With this portrayal, Brontë expressed her determination to be an artist, a claim she fulfilled brilliantly with her novels Jane Eyre (1847), Shirley (1849), and Villette (1853).
: Henry W. and Albert A. Berg Collection of English and American Literature
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Items in The Written Word
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Yorozu yoshi (Everything Is All Well)
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Watercolor by Charlotte Brontë
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Charlotte Brontë’s manuscript of “Adventures of Ernest Alembert”
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Portrait of Charles Dickens by Jeremiah Gurney
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Jorge Luis Borges’s Manuscript of “La lotería en Babilonia”
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Shakespeare’s First Folio
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