‘Brocklehurst Mr.’ See Wilson, Carus.

Bromsgrove, [134].

Brontë, Anne Chapter vii., [181-203] birth, [51]; baptism, [56], [57]; at Haworth, [60]; as governess, [19], [88], [90], [97], [112], [128], [150], [296]; at Brussels, [128]; at Scarborough, [197], [198], [199], [200], [201]; in Miss Branwell’s will, [103]; and Charlotte, [113], [159], [352]; as Emily’s chum, [120], [144], [145], [147], [148]; and Miss Nussey, [160], [182-4], [208], [209], [219], [307]; and the Misses Robinson, [137], [182], [288]; and Mr. Weightman, [286]; her dog (see Flossie); her drawings, [67]; her letters, [144]; her unpublished MSS, [25], [61], [62], [71-2], [144]; her novels (see Agnes Grey and The Tenant of Wildfell Hall) her poems, [325-331]; her portrait, [123]; her illness and death, [175], [176], [185], [186], [187], [189], [190], [191], [192], [193], [194], [262], [281], [393], [439], [440], [467]; her grave, [203].

Brontë, Branwell Chapter v., [120-143]; birth, [51], [123]; baptism, [57]; at school, [123], [290], [291]; at the Royal Academy of Arts, [14], [15], [124]; at Luddenden Foot, [127], [147], [148], [150], [152]; in his aunt’s will, [103], [104], [105]; and Anne, [154]; and Charlotte, [25], [81], [92], [93], [119], [120], [121], [122], [131], [140], [141]; Charlotte’s letters to, [112-14], [115], [120], [239]; and Emily, [142]; and his father, [137], [138], [139], [142], [465]; and Hartley Coleridge, [125-7]; and F. H. Grundy, [128]; Jane Eyre, [14], [143]; and Miss Nussey, [106], [219]; and the Robinsons, [18], [19], [112], [128], [129-31], [136], [137], [182]; his sketches, [14], [67], [123]; his writings, [72], [73], [123], [125-7]; his translation of Horace, [126]; his portrait, [138]; his character, [124]; his idleness, [133], [134], [135], [137]; his death, [61], [138-41], [165], [191].

Brontë, Charlotte birth, [51]; baptism, [57]; her place at the Haworth dinner-table, [60]; childhood, [56-73]; her father (see Brontë, Patrick) her mother (see Brontë, Mrs. Patrick) her sisters (see Brontë, Anne; Brontë, Emily; Agnes Grey; Tenant of Wildfell Hall; Wuthering Heights) her brother (see Brontë, Branwell) her school life (see Wooler, Margaret; Cowan Bridge; and Roe Head) her school friends (see Nussey, Ellen; Taylor, Mary) at the Sidgwicks’ (q.v.), [79-84]; at the Whites’ (q.v.), [85-94]; at Brussels (see Héger M. and Madame; Jenkins, Rev. Mr.; The Professor; Villette; Wheelwright, Lætitia); in London, [14], [107], [214], [268], [270], [416], [417-28]; her father’s curates, [280-92] (see also De Renzi, Rev. Mr.; Nicholls, Rev. A. B.; Smith, Rev. Peter Augustus; Weightman, Rev. W.; and Shirley) her lovers, [293-324] (see also Nicholls, Rev. A. B.; Nussey, Rev. Henry; Taylor, James) her literary ambitions, [325-369]; her unpublished literary work, [61-7], [68]; her published work (see Jane Eyre, The Professor, Shirley, Villette, Poems); her publishers (see Aylott & Jones, Newby, and Smith Elder & Co); her literary friendships, [429-463] (see also Gaskell, Mrs.; Martineau, Harriet; Smith, George; Thackeray, W. M.; Williams, W. S.); her critics (see Eastlake, Lady; Kingsley, Charles; Lewes, G. H.; and various periodicals); her marriage, [8], [261], [464], [491] (see Nicholls, Rev. A. B.); her appearance, [22], [74], [293], [457]; her death, [500]; her grave, [54], [500]; her will, [24], [500]; her biography, [1-26] (see also Gaskell, Mrs.; Grundy, F. H.; Leyland, F. A.; Nussey, Ellen; Reid, Sir Wemyss); her portrait, [123], [294]; on affection for her family, [88]; on children, [376-8], [381]; on female friendships, [205]; on governessing, [84], [228], [382]; on ladies’ college, [277]; on women in the professions, [378], [382], [395], [396]; on marriage, [261], [295-6], [298], [303], [304-6], [307], [310], [383], [394], [493], [494]; on spinsters, [134]; on men, [199], [490]; on authors and bookmakers, [165]; on her critics, [176], [269]; on lionising, [266], [270]; on literary coteries, [270], [353], [389], [399]; on money rewards of literature, [275]; on the art of biography, [385]; on her heroes, [345]; on the French, [411]; on French politics, [343], [373]; on war, [264]; on Shakespeare-acting, [270]; on dancing, [211]; on the Bible, [213], [216]; on religion, [140], [166], [193], [211]; on the value of work, [203], [396].

Brontë, Elizabeth, [51], [56], [74], [358].

Brontë, Emily Chapter vi, [144-180]; birth, [51]; baptism, [57]; at Haworth, [59], [60]; her childhood, [74]; her school days, [145]; as a teacher, [15], [145]; at Brussels, [97], [100], [102], [111], [133], [145]; as Anne’s chum, [120], [144]; in Miss Branwell’s will, [103]; and the French newspapers, [241]; Charlotte’s letters to, [25], [91], [114], [116], [117], [119]; her religion, [14], [100], [145]; her portrait, [123-4]; her likeness to G. H. Lewes, [432]; her messages to Miss Nussey, [160-1], [208], [209]; her dog (see Keeper); her sketches, [67], [154], [157]; her unpublished writings, [61], [62], [70], [146], [148], [150-2]; her novel (see Wuthering Heights); her poetry, [144], [154], [325-31]; her illness and death, [165], [166-75], [186], [345]; her character, [60], [111], [112], [144], [146], [167], [177]; Matthew Arnold on, [145]; Charlotte on, [4], [165], [337]; Sydney Dobell on, [145]; A. Mary F. Robinson on, [121], [122]; Swinburne on, [146]; Dr. Wright on, [157], [158];

Brontë, Hugh, [55], [158].

Brontë, Maria, [51], [56], [57], [74], [404].

Brontë, Museum, [23].