- Видео 27
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Bronte Parsonage Museum
Великобритания
Добавлен 9 окт 2012
The Brontë Parsonage Museum in Haworth, West Yorkshire, is the house where the inspirational Brontë family ived and where Charlotte, Emily and Anne wrote their world famous novels, Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights and The Tenant of Wildfell Hall. Subscribe for videos and audio clips inspired by the Brontes and their work.
The Brontë Society: 130 years and growing strong
Principal curator, Ann Dinsdale, tells us what led to the formation of the Brontë Society 130 years ago, and why the support of its members remains so important to this day.
Join the Brontë Society and help preserve the Brontë Parsonage Museum, and the important collection in our care, for generations to come.
Gift memberships available from just £30 per year. Visit members.bronte.org.uk/Join-Online to sign up today.
Find us at:
Twitter: bronteparsonage
Website: bronte.org.uk
Facebook: BronteParsonageMuseum
Instagram: bronteparsonagemuseum
Join the Brontë Society and help preserve the Brontë Parsonage Museum, and the important collection in our care, for generations to come.
Gift memberships available from just £30 per year. Visit members.bronte.org.uk/Join-Online to sign up today.
Find us at:
Twitter: bronteparsonage
Website: bronte.org.uk
Facebook: BronteParsonageMuseum
Instagram: bronteparsonagemuseum
Просмотров: 907
Видео
Hardy and Free (Subtitled)
Просмотров 149Год назад
"I wish I were a girl again, half-savage and hardy, and free..." Emily Brontë, Wuthering Heights The companion film of new installation, Hardy and Free: Carolyn Mendelsohn, at the Brontë Parsonage Museum. Inspired by personal journeys and stories of discovery, renowned artist and portrait photographer Carolyn Mendelsohn celebrates the female connection to nature, examining how feeling connected...
Plant Based Cooking with Katy Beskow
Просмотров 169Год назад
Find us at: Twitter: bronteparsonage Website: bronte.org.uk Facebook: BronteParsonageMuseum Instagram: bronteparsonagemuseum
Wake up with yoga and poetry
Просмотров 86Год назад
Find us at: Twitter: bronteparsonage Website: bronte.org.uk Facebook: BronteParsonageMuseum Instagram: bronteparsonagemuseum
In Conversation with Letty McHugh
Просмотров 166Год назад
This event was recorded as part of the Brontë Festival of Women's Writing 2023. Click here to purchase a limited edition copy of Letty's booklet 'You Still Have the Sky': www.bronte.org.uk/bronte-shop/festival-merchandise/880/you-still-have-the-sky-by-letty-mchugh Find us at: Twitter: bronteparsonage Website: bronte.org.uk Facebook: BronteParsonageMuseum Instagram: inst...
Access Information for Families - Summer 2023
Просмотров 70Год назад
In this short film artist and facilitator Sophia Hatfield explains what families can expect from our workshops this summer, and offers extra information to help your plan your visit - with a bit of help from baby Kai! Find out more about the workshops here: www.bronte.org.uk/whats-on Find us at: Twitter: bronteparsonage Website: bronte.org.uk Facebook: BronteParsonageMu...
Where the Wild Wind Blows with Sophia Hatfield
Просмотров 95Год назад
In this short film Sophia describes the route up to Penistone Hill, where part of the 'Where the Wild Wind Blows' workshop takes place, and tells us what we can expect from the walk. Where the Wild Wind Blows A Creative Family Workshop with Sophia Hatfield Monday 31st July 2023 | 11am to 1pm Suitable for ages 5 Find out more and book here: www.bronte.org.uk/whats-on/1315/where-the-wild-wind-blo...
Museum Week 2023 - Switching to Digital
Просмотров 98Год назад
Development Officer, Nick, tells us why we are encouraging our members to switch to digital ahead of this year's AGM and Society Conference. By sending out papers by email, we can significantly reduce the amount of waste we produce. Find us at: Twitter: bronteparsonage Website: bronte.org.uk Facebook: BronteParsonageMuseum Instagram: bronteparsonagemuseum
Museum Week 2023 - Plant-based Commitment
Просмотров 65Год назад
Museum Week 2023 - Plant-based Commitment
Hardy and Free: Carolyn Mendelsohn (2023)
Просмотров 694Год назад
Hardy and Free: Carolyn Mendelsohn (2023)
Emily Bronte Nature Poetry - Wild Explorer Workshop
Просмотров 877Год назад
Emily Bronte Nature Poetry - Wild Explorer Workshop
15 Minute Brontë Themed Guided Meditation and Relaxation- with EmmaLiveYoga
Просмотров 1962 года назад
15 Minute Brontë Themed Guided Meditation and Relaxation- with EmmaLiveYoga
15 minute Brontë Themed Yoga Class - with EmmaLiveYoga
Просмотров 3392 года назад
15 minute Brontë Themed Yoga Class - with EmmaLiveYoga
The Emily Brontë Bicentenary weekend - July 2018
Просмотров 6595 лет назад
The Emily Brontë Bicentenary weekend - July 2018
Bronte Society Young Ambassador Lucy Powrie reflects on 2018
Просмотров 6056 лет назад
Bronte Society Young Ambassador Lucy Powrie reflects on 2018
"Give Me Liberty" - The Poetry of Emily Brontë
Просмотров 10 тыс.6 лет назад
"Give Me Liberty" - The Poetry of Emily Brontë
The Emily Bronte Song Cycle by The Unthanks
Просмотров 1 тыс.6 лет назад
The Emily Bronte Song Cycle by The Unthanks
I’m not quite sure what prompted me, but in the past couple of months I have read Agnes Grey, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall and the excellent biography “In search of Anne Brontë”. The biography gives a superb account of Anne’s life and of her family. It is incredibly powerful and very moving. Anne was a truly exceptional person. Her two novels are outstanding, full of insights and wry humour. The depictions of character and emotion in “Tenant” are superb and the “no holds barred” approach to the shocking behaviour and hypocrisy of Helen’s husband and his social circle must have been absolutely shocking to Victorian readers. I was amazed to find such brilliant, brutally honest, writing in a Victorian novel. Anne was a genius, pure and simple. It’s neither useful or appropriate to compare her with her sisters but what’s beyond dispute is she is a brilliant, wrongfully neglected, writer and at the very least their equal.
Emily is my favourite Bronte. I would love to have met her, but I rather think she wouldnt have been keen to meet me, being as she was very reticent around strangers.
We are no wiser now, to what made Emily the person she was. Enigmatic in the extreme, very shy, quiet, but inside a turbulent, passionate nature, only fulfilled by her poetry and book. By far the most interesting member of the Bronte family and the one person I would like to go back in time to meet. Although she probably wouldn't want to meet a complete stranger such as i
Anne was the best Bronte writer
Video starts at 25:12
Wonderful..
Wonderful introduction
I wish i could have met her, this why I love her so much thank you for your wonderful work, though I know work isn't the correct word, I think passion would be better, anyway thank you and as you say take courage.
If ever there is a poet who needs to be heard that poet is Jasmine Gardosi
I think the music adds to the poetry.
There's absolutely no reason to believe that Emily had read Blake. Many poets at that time expressed the same. The real mystery to me is, why suddenly appeared to poets a full experience of divine nature in different places, (at least in Scandinavia, England and Germany) - and then to disappear again.
I never noticed the full experience of divine nature didn't appear before and after the romantic age until you mentioned it. I will take a stab at answering the question. Keep in mind this is the first explanation that came to mind. Before the printing press and higher rates of literacy, most people had books, usually the Bible, read to them and didn't think for themselves. With higher rates of literacy and printed works, liberal ideas proliferate and this includes ideas like divine nature. As for after, the romantic age is replaced with modernism and new emerging technologies. Technologies that divorce people from nature. For example, it's very rare I can see the stars at night.
Very interesting she was a fine person sad family so many of them dying yes what a good quote Take Courage
I needed this tonight ❤
I wonder if Emily Bronte and Emily Dickinson would have struck up a friendship had they lived within walking distance of each other. I'm not saying their poetry was the same, but they do have similarities. Or not,.. perhaps they both needed their solitude to write. Perhaps their struggles to make sense of this world was the grain of sand in the oyster shell that produced the pearls.
A lovely essay. Many thanks.
Brilliant! Nature and wildlife are so therapeutic ☀️🌙 very beneficial. I love the Brontë appreciation and link with nature.
Brilliant Jasmine and regrettably still so very neccessary. XXX
Loved this. Anne was truly a compassionate and courageous spirit. It is an injustice that she is still so overshadowed by her siblings and yet I feel she resonates more with today's women.
Do we really need the music (nice though it is)?
So beautifully read and composed... really fills one with the essence of what was Emily Brontë. Love this. Thank you.
thank you, BP - what a gift to share with us!
❤️❤️
So beautiful ❤
That was wonderful.
Her poems are more in line with the spiritual message we find sometimes in Sufism or Sikhism . The human soul seeking liberation, but represented as a lover seeking to merge with the supreme soul, dwelling within the creation. Untamed nature is the divine presence of the forme less God . Her poetry is deeply moving
Emily Brontë was indeed deeply spiritually inclined, but her unconventional divine inspiration is not in line with the Christian faith, it goes beyond. Her poems are deeply moving. Emily and her sisters are amazing
A true mystic
Her poems are sheer genius
A lovely yoga class Emma connects to everyone following with lots of different positions to suit individual needs. Really calming and engaging. Thoroughly enjoyed and amazing benefits it gives spiritually, mentaly and physicaly.
Thank you so much Caroline for taking the time to give this amazing feedback, I truly appreciate it! 😊🙏🏽💮
😊
Gorgeous Emma, I am not as knowledgeable, but this was beautiful and eye opening, a wonderful insight, beautiful meditation 💜
Thank you dear Marie, so glad you enjoyed the journey 😊🙏🏽♥️📚
@@EmmaLiveYoga loved it💙
Thankyou so much for this amazing journey Emma! Have missed your classes… Much love xxx
Thank you Emma, this was wonderful, the imagery on the moorland was incredible ♥️
So pleased you enjoyed the imagery. Thank you so much for practicing with me and leaving a comment. So appreciated 😊🙏🏽🧘🏽♀️📚⛰
@@EmmaLiveYoga so welcome.🦋
From one Yorkshire lass to another .This was precious and it worked wonders transporting me to the moors .Sweet words "curlew's calls and waterfalls".Thank you Emma .
Thank you Jane for this wonderful feedback! I know we have West Yorkshire in common🧘🏽♀️😊🙏🏽📚
I love reading and hearing about The Brontes especially the three sisters, Such a shame they all died in such a short space of each other if only Branwell had lived he could have drawn the pictures for his sisters books he was an artist in portraits his sisters artists in writing together they would have made a brilliant team. I find Anne was the quiet one with a true love of animals and se was right about humans being cruel. Her nature was the opposite of her hard story telling . Only 30yrs and died. Such a terrible sad way of victorians surrounded by death.
Love you Emily ♥️♥️♥️
Gondaling is now on the top of my dearest words list
Were the stories of Angria and Gondal ever published?
Not in the Brontës' lifetimes - they weren't written for publication, but for their own enjoyment. Several of their poems, however, were written about scenes or characters from the juvenilia, and reworked versions appeared in their 1846 collection, though with any specific references to their fantasy worlds excised. The vast majority of the Gondal writings are lost, but you can find published editions of many of the Angrian tales.
That last letter is heartbreaking. Is there anything in the collection suggesting that Emily's death, and even Branwell's death, impacted Anne's writing in any way? Did she not start another novel because of her sibling's death or was she not feeling well herself at that point?
We don't really know for certain - certainly she would have been very weak in the final months of her life, though there are indications that she was still writing poetry. We'd have to go into the realms of speculation, but one might suggest that the commitment of a poem would have seemed less onerous than that of a novel. We know for certain that Charlotte's writing suffered in the wake of her siblings' deaths - she was partway through "Shirley" in late 1848, and struggled a great deal to complete the novel. Academics have suggested that certain elements of the novel may have been changed partway through the writing process, as Charlotte strived to give the character of Shirley - thought to be based on her sister Emily - a happier ending.
she is just amazing
I'm guessing that Anne's letters to her former charges haven't survived? Such a shame, as it would have been wonderful to have more of Anne's personal writings. Did they ever record/share their memories of Anne?
The references we have regarding Anne's communications with the Robinson girls come from Charlotte's letters to Ellen Nussey. To our knowledge, comparatively few of Anne's letters survive. Mrs Robinson was not directly named in Mrs Gaskell's biography of Charlotte, but she was described in such a way that it was fairly obvious who she was, and it rapidly became an open secret, despite changes made to later editions at the behest of the remarried Mrs Robinson's lawyers. Given the threat of scandal, the Robinson girls did not speak publicly about Anne or her time with their family.
you have done an amazing job!! at least on RUclips for us in the states Emily is my favorite as well such a diverse artist