问答题
About 150 years ago, a village church vicar in Yorkshire,
England, had three lovely, intelligent daughters but his hopes hinged entirely
on the sole male heir, Branwell, a youth with remarkable talent in both art and
literature.
46){{U}} Branwell's father and sisters hoarded their
pennies to. Rack him off to London's Royal Academy of Arts, but if art was his
calling, he dialed a wrong number. Within weeks he hightailed it home, a
penniless failure.{{/U}}
Hopes still high, the family landed
Branwell a job as a private tutor, hoping this would free him to develop his
literary skills and achieve the success and fame that he deserved. Failure
again.
47){{U}} For years the selfless sisters squelched their own
goals farming themselves out as teachers and governesses in support of their
increasingly indebted brother, convinced the world must eventually recognize his
genius{{/U}}. As failure multiplied, Branwell turned to alcohol, then opium, and
eventually died as he had lived: a failure. So died hope in the one male-but
what of the three anonymous sisters.?
During Branwell's last
years, the girls published a book of poetry at their own expense (under a
pseudonym, for fear of reviewers' bias against females). Even Branwell might
have snickered: they sold only two copies.
48){{U}} Undaunted,
they continued in their spare time, late at night by candlelight, to pour out
their pent-up emotion, writing of what they knew best, of women in conflict with
their natural desires and social condition-in reality, less fiction than
autobiography! {{/U}}And 19th century literature was transformed by
Anne's Agnes Grey, Emily's Wuthering Heights, and Charlotte's Jane
Eyre.
But years of sacrifice for Brauwell had taken their toll.
49){{U}} Emily took ill at her brother's funeral and died within 3 months, aged
30; Anne died 5 months later, aged 29; Charlotte lived only to age 39. If only
they. had been nurtured instead of having been sacrificed.{{/U}}
No one remembers Branwell's name, much less his art or literature, but the
Bronte sisters' tragically short lives teach us even more of life than
literature. 50) {{U}}Their sacrificed genius cries out to us that in modern
society we must value children not by their physical strength or sexual gender,
as we would value any boast of burden, but by their integrity strength a
commitment, courage-spiritual qualities abundant in both boys and girls.
{{/U}}China, a nation blessed by more boys and girls than any nation, ignores at
her own peril the lesson of the Brontes' tragedy.