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  1. 28 feb 2008 · "Alan Adamson - a descendent of Arthur Bell Nichols - provides new material about Nicholls' family, education, and early life in Ireland to give a more balanced view. He explores why Bronte, cool and hostile towards Nicholls in the early days of his curacy at Haworth, came to respect and love him, and shows how Patrick Bronte, her difficult father, grew to rely on him after her death."

  2. 29 giu 2017 · She was 37 that year, and although she was by now a literary success it seemed that she would remain a spinster forever. It was in that year, however, that Arthur Bell Nicholls proposed to her. Nicholls was, like Charlotte’s father, an Irish priest in the Church of England, and he’d served Patrick as assistant curate since May 1845.

  3. Charlotte Brontë, the longest living of the three sisters, married an Irishman, Arthur Bell Nicholls, from Killead, Country Antrim. Nicholls went to school in Banagher, County Offaly and graduated from Trinity College, Dublin. The newly married couple honeymooned in Ireland, visiting Arthur’s relatives. Following Charlotte’s precipitate ...

  4. Arthur Nicholls may refer to: Arthur Bell Nicholls (1819–1906), curate to Patrick Brontë, and husband of Patrick's daughter Charlotte Brontë. Arthur Nicholls (British Army officer) (1911–1944), British recipients of the George Cross. Arthur G. Nicholls (1879–1956), Australian medical missionary. Category: Human name disambiguation pages.

  5. 4 mag 2024 · Arthur Bell Nicholls, who was born in Killead in 1819, was by all accounts a rather bland chap who would struggle to stand out from the crowd. He was bookish, yes, but he was also considered rather dour, strict and conventional. In short, he was a bit of a bore.

  6. In December 1852 Charlotte received a proposal of marriage from her father's curate Arthur Bell Nicholls. Mr. Nicholls had been with Mr. Brontë for eight years, and the proposal came as a surprise to Charlotte and her father. Partly because he thought his daughter too frail to survive a pregnancy, Mr. Brontë objected, and Charlotte declined. Mr.

  7. Arthur Bell Nicholls. A final substantial collection of letters from Charlotte's husband, the Revd AB Nicholls, rounds off the biographical material (Nicholls' hand-copied collection of his wife's poems is included too). Charlotte's final illness, now seemingly associated with pregnancy, is recounted by Nicholls to Ellen Nussey in a remarkably ...