The professor
-
- 2,99 €
Publisher Description
Charlotte Brontë’s first-written—yet last-published—novel, The Professor, draws on her own experiences in Brussels to present a sober, unsentimental view of life and love.
Rejecting the romantic conventions of her era, Brontë introduces us to William Crimsworth, a reserved and principled Englishman who refuses to be dependent on his aristocratic relatives. Seeking his fortune, he travels to Brussels to work as a teacher at a boys’ boarding school and later at a neighbouring girls’ pensionnat. There, he must navigate the petty rivalries and hypocrisies of the academic world, contending with the volatile temperament of the directress, Zoraïde Reuter, and the flirtations of his pupils.
In the midst of this, he finds an unexpected connection with Frances Henri, a quiet and diligent Anglo-Swiss teacher of lace-mending. Unlike the novel’s more flamboyant characters, Frances is defined by her integrity, modesty, and steadfast work ethic. Their relationship develops not through grand passions, but through mutual respect, intellectual companionship, and shared hardship—a slow, steady flame built on equality.
A novel of quiet defiance, The Professor champions merit, perseverance, and moral fortitude over birth and theatrics. It is the clear-eyed precursor to Brontë’s later masterpieces, offering a fascinating glimpse into the development of her revolutionary ideas about gender, class, and the nature of true partnership.