The Professor, A Tale was Charlotte Bronte's debut book. The book is written in the first person from the perspective of a young guy named William Crimsworth and narrates his story. It talks about his personal connections, his profession as a teacher in Brussels, and his maturation. Edward offers William a job as a clerk, but Edward is jealous of his intelligence and education. William is relieved of his post by Mr. Hunsden's actions, and he begins a new position at a boys' boarding school in Belgium. Mademoiselle Reuter, the headmistress of a nearby girls' school, accepts William as a "professor." He is first captivated by her and starts to fall in love with her, but he overhears her and Monsieur Pelet discussing their impending marriage and their deceitful treatment of him. Will William Crimsworth be able to settle in his life? Read The Professor, A Tale of the stressful and chaotic life of a person and how he will overcome his situations to a settled phase of life.
The eldest of the three Brontë sisters to live into adulthood, Charlotte Brontë popularly known as Currer Bell (21 April 1816 – 31 March 1855) was an English novelist and poet whose works have become classics of English literature. At the age of 14, she enrolled at Roe Head School in January 1831. She departed the following year to educate her sisters Emily and Anne at home before returning as a governess in 1835. She began serving as the Sidgwick family's governess in 1839 but departed after a few months to return to Haworth, where the sisters founded a school but were unable to draw in students. Instead, they started writing, and each of them made their publishing debuts in 1846 under the aliases Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell. Her second book, Jane Eyre, was published in 1847 despite publishers rejecting her first book, The Professor. In 1848, the sisters acknowledged using their Bell aliases, and the following year they were praised in literary circles in London. Of all her siblings, Charlotte Brontë was the last to pass away. She got pregnant soon after getting married in June 1854, but she passed away on March 31, 1855, most likely due to hyperemesis gravidarum.