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The Columbia History of the British Novelwrote to an 1850 edition of the novel, she praised the descriptions of the natural world (not offered as background or "spectacle," but "as what [the author] lived in, and by"), worked to find among characters "spots where clouded daylight and the eclipsed sun still attest their existence," labeled Heathcliff "unredeemed," and-most importantly-said that Emily Bronte imitates no action: "He wrought from a rude chisel, and from no model but the vision of his meditations." Charlotte Bronte's sense that Emily Bronte represented what she lived "in, and by," places her work in a metaphysical landscape that few Victorian novels, striving for moral signification and a realism of social -373- and psychological representation, would seek ...» |
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