The Life of Emily Jane Bronte, although very short and catastrophic had a massive influence on her work. Distinguishable by violent emotional disturbances, where her youth on the Yorkshire moors showed the folk themed background widespread in Wuthering Heights. Emily was born on July 30, 1818, at Thornton, nearby Bradford, in Yorkshire. In April, 1820, the Bronte family, comprising of the reverend Patrick Bronte, his wife Maria Bronte, son Branwell Bronte, and daughters Elizabeth, Emily, Charlotte, Maria, and Anne Bronte, all moved to a church house at Haworth. Emily never got to know her mother, since Mrs. Bronte contracted ovarian cancer at a very young age and died in September 1821, just when Emily was only three years old. In 1824, Charlotte, Elizabeth, Maria, and Emily were admitted at the Clergy Daughters' School in Cowan Bridge, which was pretty far distant and located about eighteen miles from their home. In the year of 1825, Elizabeth and Maria both fell ill from water consumption and returned home to Haworth, where they passed away. Eventually, Emily and Charlotte left Cowan Bridge and also returned back home to Haworth. In the year of 1831, Charlotte, left home to attend the school at Roe Head, which was less than thirty miles away in distant. Her going away left both Emily and Anne, very close to another, to initiate their independent life. After almost two years, Charlotte returned back home to Haworth in pursuing to educate her remaining sisters. Throughout this time, the three siblings, Emily, Branwell, and Anne were taught music by talent musician A.S Sunderland who gave piano lessons to them. Emily seemed to be comparatively more proficient in music (Ankenebrandt, 121). In 1834, Emily was sent at Roe Head School, where Charlotte started her career in teaching there, but her dissociation from her most adored farmlands was greatly more than she could endure. She tends to worry Charlotte from her health declining that after few months she was sent back home. That’s when Anne took her place as a teacher at Roe Head School. The year of 1836, Emily spent most of her time with Branwell at Haworth, who had returned from London in distress from seeking ineffective artsy fame and fortuity. During this time, Emily composed her first poetry. In 1837, she accepted a teaching position at Miss Patchett's school in Law Hill, near Halifax, where she stayed there for quite a time. Emily immediately returned back at home in Haworth, in 1838, to take care of Tabby, who had a minor leg injury