Agnes Gray decides to work as an educator to help her family suffering from poverty. During her work, she meets all kinds of people, good and bad, adhering to her religious teachings and moral principles as much as she can, struggling with the disappointments and sadness that beset her as a result, hoping to win the respect and appreciation of her students and instill Good behavior in them, praying to God to grant her the love of the only man for whom her heart beat.
In Agnes Gray, Anne Brontë presented to us a story that describes the conditions of nannies in the Victorian era, people’s opinions about them, and their treatment of them, revealing the injustice done to them by what they are expected to accomplish at times, and what they are deprived of at other times, with a smooth narration and singing eloquence that enchants the reader and takes him back with her words to a time He is gone, but he is present in spirit in these lines.