- 256 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Winifred Gerin
Biographer of the Brontes
Helen MacEwan
About This Book
The biographer Winifred GĂrin (1901-81), who wrote the lives of all four BrontĂ siblings, stumbled on her literary vocation on a visit to Haworth, after a difficult decade following the death of her first husband. On the same visit she met her second husband, a BrontĂ enthusiast twenty years her junior. Together they turned their backs on London to live within sight of the Parsonage, GĂrin believing that full understanding of the BrontĂs required total immersion in their environment. GĂrin's childhood and youth, like the BrontĂs', was characterised by a cultured home and intense imaginative life shared with her sister and two brothers, and by family tragedies (the loss of two siblings in early life). Strong cultural influences formed the children's imagination: polyglot parents, French history, the Crystal Palace, Old Vic productions. Winifred's years at Newnham College, Cambridge were enlivened by eccentric characters such as the legendary lecturer Quiller-Couch ('Q'), Lytton Strachey's sister Pernel and Bloomsbury's favourite philosopher, G.E. Moore. Her happy life in Paris with her Belgian cellist husband, EugĂne GĂrin, was brought to an abrupt end by the Second World War, in which the couple had many adventures: fleeing occupied Belgium, saving Jews in Nice in Vichy France, escaping through Spain and Portugal to England, where they did secret war work for Political Intelligence near Bletchley. After EugĂne's death in 1945 Winifred coped with bereavement through poetry and playwriting until discovering her true literary metier on the trip to Haworth. She also wrote about Elizabeth Gaskell, Anne Thackeray Ritchie and Fanny Burney. The book is based on her letters and on her unpublished memoir.