newdiv
"I must go in, for the fog is rising."
Yes, she only wrote Wuthering Heights. All her other work was poetry.
(2) this answer is not strictly correct. Emily, Jane, Anne and Bramwell also wrote a series of books based on characters and plots they had developed and acted out together in solitary play and set in the imaginary kindoms of Gondal and Angria. These juvenilia were handmade by the children in a tiny format. One of these manuscripts sold at auction last year for 690,000 pounds.
Although she also wrote poetry, Emily Bronte is remembered for her only novel, Wuthering Heights, which was published in 1847.
she fell ill after attending branwells funearal and got Tuberculosis
Her coffin was 5'6" long, so she must have been several inches shorter than that to fit in, logically. Her dress on display at the Dickinson Museum in Amherst MA is a copy, but it shows the woman was no more than 5'0" if the the dress was worn at floor length. The average person of the 19th century was about 5'4" for men and 5' for women, based on the relatively less nutritious diets of that era and many diseases in childhood.
The three Bronte sisters were Emily Bronte, Charlotte Bronte and Anne Bronte. The most famous of their books were Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights. :)
Wuthering Heights is a classic novel for children ages 8-12. Other than this age group, the novel has no literary value whatsoever to adults above the age of 12 and children younger than 8.
I think someone is playing a trick on you. Wuthering heights is a classic peice of English literature, and considered (for some strange reason) to be one of the greatest love stories ever told.
The first answer here is ridiculous a child 8-12 would have to be exceptionally gifted if they were able to read and understand the language used in Wuthering Heights. Many adults would not. It is a classic piece of literature and as a love story I have read no other like it.