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Definition of Emily Bronte
1. Noun. English novelist; one of three Bronte sisters (1818-1848).
Lexicographical Neighbors of Emily Bronte
Literary usage of Emily Bronte
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The English Poets: Selections with Critical Introductions by Various Writers by Thomas Humphry Ward (1917)
"[Emily Bronte was born at Hartshead-cum-Clifton, near Leeds, in 1819, and lived
at the parsonage at Haworth from 1820 to her death. ..."
2. The Harvard Classics by Charles William Eliot (1910)
"Emily Bronte [1818-1848] 682 LAST LINES No coward soul is mine, No trembler in
the world's storm-troubled sphere: I see Heaven's glories shine, ..."
3. The English Poets: Selections with Critical Introductions by Various Writers by Thomas Humphry Ward (1911)
"Not even the unstinted praise of three great and very dissimilar poets has given
to Emily Bronte her due rank in popular esteem. Her work is not universally ..."
4. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: “a” Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature edited by Hugh Chisholm (1910)
"Among women writers Emily Bronte has a sure and certain place for all time.
As a poet or maker of verse Charlotte Bronte is undistinguished, but there are ..."
5. The Library of Literary Criticism of English and American Authors by Charles Wells Moulton (1905)
"But it should be noted Emily Bronte had no conscious intention of exciting terror.
... Its spiritual counterpart in real life is Emily Bronte, who preserved ..."