Agnes Grey

English language

Published Jan. 8, 1967 by Oxford University Press.

ISBN:
978-0-14-043210-7
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3 stars (1 review)

Drawing heavily from personal experience, Anne Brontë wrote Agnes Grey in an effort to represent the many 19th Century women who worked as governesses and suffered daily abuse as a result of their position.

Having lost the family savings on risky investments, Richard Grey removes himself from family life and suffers a bout of depression. Feeling helpless and frustrated, his youngest daughter, Agnes, applies for a job as a governess to the children of a wealthy, upper-class, English family.

Ecstatic at the thought that she has finally gained control and freedom over her own life, Agnes arrives at the Bloomfield mansion armed with confidence and purpose. The cruelty with which the family treat her however, slowly but surely strips the heroine of all dignity and belief in humanity.

A tale of female bravery in the face of isolation and subjugation, Agnes Grey is a masterpiece claimed by Irish writer, George …

3 editions

Review of 'Agnes Grey' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Agnes Grey is much more personal than the other Bronte stories. This is the tale of (shock!) a governess. The reader is treated to a gazetteer of all that it is to be a woman of little means in a world deaf to her misfortune. Agnes Grey is faithful to the rest of the Bronte ambient, including the imminence of death's knocking on the heroine's door.