Skip to main content


Access and Info for Institutional Subscribers

Home
Toggle menu

  • Home
  • Editions
  • Images
    • Exhibits
    • Images
  • Teaching
    • Articles
    • Teacher Resources
  • How To
  • About COVE
    • Constitution
    • Board
    • Supporting Institutions
    • Talks / Articles
    • FAQ
    • Testimonials


Walking the Moors


Type: Gallery Image | Not Vetted



I am interested in the moors, and how the Brontë sisters' deep connection with the moors led them to making the moors an integral foundation for some of their novels. A tangible object owned by the sisters were walking sticks that they used to hike through the moors. 

Mick Manning and Brita Granström, Cover to The Brontë Sisters: Children of the Moors (2016), Franklin Watts.

 

Clare Leighton, Wood Engraving for Wuthering Heights (1847) by Emily Brontë, Duckworth illustrated edition, 1931.

 

Edmund Morision Wimperis, "The View of Wildfell Hall", The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (1848) by Anne Brontë, Scribner, Welford & Armstrong illustrated edition, 1873.

 

Neil Theasby, Photograph of Haworth, Cross Roads and Stanbury, 2010, Wikimedia Commons. 



Copyright
©

Vetted?
No
Submitted by Kira Molnar on Mon, 10/17/2022 - 17:58

Webform: Contact

About COVE

  • Constitution
  • Board
  • What's New
  • Talks / Articles
  • Testimonials

What is COVE?

COVE is Collaborative Organization for Virtual Education, a scholar-driven open-access platform that publishes both peer-reviewed material and "flipped classroom" student projects built with our online tools.

Visit our 'How To' page

sfy39587stp18