Sunday, 22 February 2026

Tenant of Wildfell Hall

This is Anne's second and last novel. It is set in Yorkshire, and it starts with a letter from GIlbert Markham, a gentleman farmer, to his brother in law. He is writing to tell his friend about how he, Gilbert, came to marry his wife. He has a prosperous farm, though he sometimes longs for a more exciting life. A few years earlier, a new neighbour came to live at Wildfell Hall, a big house nearby which had not been used for some years. Gilbert is intrigued by the new tenant, an attractive woman who has a son, Arthur. The neighbours find her strange as she does not want to socialise much. She tells them that she has to earn a living and she is a painter so she does not have time for parties. She has few servants and seems rather cold and unfriendly. Mrs Markham, Gilbert's mother does not take to her, she thinks that Mrs Graham is too fussy about her son. She disapproves of drinking, and gives the little boy alcohol mixed with emetic, as a medicine so he dislikes the taste of it. Gilbert is a rather clumsy young man, who flirts with one of the local girls but finds himself being drawn to Helen Graham. But he is not much good at paying court. He begins to be suspicious of Helen, that she has a man visiting her privately. He meets Frederick Lawrence, one of the neighbours on the road to Wildfell Hall and over reacts wildly, attacking the man. Helen is upset and gives him her diaries to read so she can explain that there is nothing wrong in her relationship with Lawrence.

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