Jane Austen (1775-1817)
Jane Austen, English novelist, was born on
the 16th of December 1775 at the parsonage of Steventon, in
Hampshire, a village of which her father, the Rev. George
Austen, was rector. She was the youngest of seven children. Her
mother was Cassandra Leigh, niece of Theophilus Leigh, a dry
humorist, and for fifty years master of Balliol, Oxford.
The life of no woman of genius could have been more uneventful
than Miss Austen's. She did not marry, and she never left home
except on short visits, chiefly to Bath. Her first sixteen
years were spent in the rectory at Steventon, where she began
early to trifle with her pen, always jestingly, for family
entertainment. In 1801 the Austens moved to Bath, where Mr
Austen died in 1805, leaving only Mrs Austen, Jane and her
sister Cassandra, to whom she was always deeply attached, to
keep up the home his sons were out in the world, the two in the
navy, Francis William and Charles, subsequently rising to
admiral's rank.
In 1805 the Austen ladies moved to
Southampton, and in 1809 to Chawton, near Alton, in Hampshire,
and there Jane Austen remained till 1817, the year of her
death, which occurred at Winchester, on July 18th, as a
memorial window in the cathedral testifies.
During her placid life Miss Austen never allowed her
literarywork to interfere with her domestic duties: sewing much
and admirably, keeping house, writing many letters and reading
aloud. Though, however, her days were quiet and her area
circumscribed, she saw enough of middle-class provincial
society to find a basis on which her dramatic and humorous
faculties might build, and such was her power of searching
observation and her sympathetic imagination that there are not
in English fiction more faithful representations of the life
she knew than we possess in her novels. She had no predecessors
in this genre.
Her best-known, if not her best work, Pride and Prejudice,
was also her first. It was written between October 1796 and
August 1797, although, such was the blindness of publishers,
not issued until 1813, two years after Sense and Sensibility,
which was written, on an old scenario called "Eleanor and
Marianne," in 1797 and 1798. Miss Austen's inability to find a
publisher for these stories, and for Northanger Abbey, written
in 1798 (although it is true that she sold that manuscript in
1803 to a Bath bookseller, only, however, to see it locked away
in a safe for some years, to be gladly resold to her later),
seems to have damped her ardour; for there is no evidence that
between 1798 and 1809 she wrote anything but the fragment
called "The Watsons," after which year she began to revise her
early work for the press.
Her other three books belong to a later date: Mansfield
Park, Emma and Persuasion being written between 1811 and 1816.
The years of publication were Sense and Sensibility, 1811;
Pride and Prejudice, 1813; Mansfield Park, 1814; and Emma,
1816, all in their author's lifetime. Persuasion and Northanger
Abbey were published posthumously in 1818.
All were anonymous, agreeably to their author's retiring
disposition.
Although Pride and Prejudice is the novel which in the mind
of the public is most intimately associated with Miss Austen's
name, both Mansfield Park and Emma are finer achievements, at
once riper and richer and more elaborate.
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