Anne Bronte's Rocks
A correspondent, in reply to my remark that it was becoming difficult to find things suitable for this blog, sent me THIS LINK to the journal "Bronte Studies". This journal does not usually find its way to the top of my reading list but it takes us back to a time when being educated meant being interested in everything!
If you go to the Bronte Parsonage Museum you will see Anne Bronte's collection of stones.
Anne Bronte’s collection of stones, as displayed at the Bronte Parsonage Museum. Courtesy of the Bronte Society.
The collection has been studied and found to be largely carnelians - a form of the silica mineral chalcedony. There is also a piece of flowstone and a couple of agates. The stones could not all have come from one site and they seem to have been deliberately chosen.
The article suggests that Scarborough is the most likely place where Anne collected her rocks. Her work as a governess took her to the place. She may have collected them herself or purchased them from a lapidary, of which there were several within the town. Some of the carnelians are of high quality and suggest that Anne knew what she was doing while making her collection. She certainly valued her collection enough to take it back to Haworth.
(You have probably noticed the plethora of links in this post. This is a new feature of Blogger, the app which I use to write this blog. I suspect that I will turn it off in future posts.)