Jane Austen (/ˈɒstɪn,
ˈɔːstɪn/ OST-in, AW-stin; 16 December 1775 – 18 July 1817) was an English
novelist known primarily for her six novels, which implicitly interpret,
critique, and comment upon the British landed gentry at the end of the 18th
century. Austen's plots often explore the dependence of women on marriage for
the pursuit of favorable social standing and economic security. Her works are
an implicit critique of the novels of sensibility of the second half of the
18th century and are part of the transition to 19th-century literary realism.
Her deft use of social commentary, realism and biting irony has earned her
acclaim among critics and scholars.
The anonymously published Sense and Sensibility (1811),
Pride and Prejudice (1813), Mansfield Park (1814), and Emma (1816), were a
modest success but brought her little fame in her lifetime. She wrote two other
novels—Northanger Abbey and Persuasion, both published posthumously in 1817—and
began another, eventually titled Sanditon, but died before its completion. She
also left behind three volumes of juvenile writings in manuscript, the short
epistolary novel Lady Susan, and the unfinished novel The Watsons.
Since her death Austen's novels have rarely been out of
print. A significant transition in her reputation occurred in 1833, when they
were republished in Richard Bentley's Standard Novels series (illustrated by
Ferdinand Pickering and sold as a set). They gradually gained wide acclaim and
popular readership. In 1869, fifty-two years after her death, her nephew's
publication of A Memoir of Jane Austen introduced a compelling version of her
writing career and supposedly uneventful life to an eager audience. Her work
has inspired a large number of critical essays and has been included in many
literary anthologies. Her novels have also inspired many films, including
1940's Pride and Prejudice, 1995's Sense and Sensibility and 2016's Love &
Friendship.
Biographical sources
The scant biographical information about Austen comes from
her few surviving letters and sketches her family members wrote about her. Only
about 160 of the approximately 3,000 letters Austen wrote have survived and
been published. Cassandra Austen destroyed the bulk of the letters she received
from her sister, burning or otherwise destroying them. She wanted to ensure
that the "younger nieces did not
read any of Jane's sometimes acid or forthright comments on neighbors or family
members". In the interest of protecting reputations from Jane's
penchant for honesty and forthrightness, Cassandra omitted details of
illnesses, unhappiness and anything she considered unsavory. Important details
about the Austen family were elided by intention, such as any mention of
Austen's brother George, whose undiagnosed developmental challenges led the
family to send him away from home; the two brothers sent away to the navy at an
early age; or wealthy Aunt Leigh-Perrot, arrested and tried on charges of larceny.
The first Austen biography was Henry Thomas Austen's 1818 "Biographical Notice". It
appeared in a posthumous edition of Northanger Abbey and included extracts from
two letters, against the judgement of other family members. Details of Austen's
life continued to be omitted or embellished in her nephew's A Memoir of Jane
Austen, published in 1869, and in William and Richard Arthur Austen-Leigh's
biography Jane Austen: Her Life and Letters, published in 1913, all of which
included additional letters. Austen's family and relatives built a legend of "good quiet Aunt Jane",
portraying her as a woman in a happy domestic situation, whose family was the
mainstay of her life. Modern biographers include details excised from the
letters and family biographies, but the biographer Jan Fergus writes that the
challenge is to keep the view balanced, not to present her languishing in
periods of deep unhappiness as "an
embittered, disappointed woman trapped in a thoroughly unpleasant family".
Life
Family
Jane Austen was born in Steventon, Hampshire, on 16 December
1775 in a harsh winter. Her father wrote of her arrival in a letter that her
mother "certainly expected to have
been brought to bed a month ago". He added that the newborn infant was
"a present plaything for Cassy and a
future companion". The winter of 1776 was particularly harsh and it
was not until 5 April that she was baptised at the local church with the single
name Jane.
George Austen (1731–1805), served as the rector of the
Anglican parishes of Steventon and Deane. The Reverend Austen came from an old
and wealthy family of wool merchants. As each generation of eldest sons
received inheritances, the wealth was divided, and George's branch of the
family fell into poverty. He and his two sisters were orphaned as children, and
had to be taken in by relatives. In 1745, at the age of fifteen, George
Austen's sister Philadelphia was apprenticed to a milliner in Covent Garden. At
the age of sixteen, George entered St John's College, Oxford, where he most
likely met Cassandra Leigh (1739–1827). She came from the prominent Leigh
family (originally of Shropshire and based at Stonleigh, Warwickshire since the
later 16th century). Her father was rector at All Souls College, Oxford, where
she grew up among the gentry. Her eldest brother James inherited a fortune and
large estate from his great-aunt Perrot, with the only condition that he changes
his name to Leigh-Perrot.
George Austen and Cassandra Leigh were engaged, probably
around 1763, when they exchanged miniatures. He received the living of the
Steventon parish from Thomas Knight, the wealthy husband of his second cousin.
They married on 26 April 1764 at St Swithin's Church in Bath, by license, in a
simple ceremony, two months after Cassandra's father died. Their income was
modest, with George's small per annum living; Cassandra brought to the marriage
the expectation of a small inheritance at the time of her mother's death.
The Austens took up temporary residence at the nearby Deane
rectory until Steventon, a 16th-century house in disrepair, underwent necessary
renovations. Cassandra gave birth to three children while living at Deane:
James in 1765, George in 1766, and Edward in 1767. Her custom was to keep an
infant at home for several months and then place it with Elizabeth Littlewood,
a woman living nearby to nurse and raise for twelve to eighteen months.
Steventon
Steventon parsonage, as depicted in A Memoir of Jane Austen,
was in a valley and surrounded by meadows.
In 1768, the family finally took up residence in Steventon.
Henry was the first child to be born there, in 1771. At about this time,
Cassandra could no longer ignore the signs that little George was
developmentally disabled. He was subject to seizures, may have been deaf and
mute, and she chose to send him out to be fostered. In 1773, Cassandra was
born, followed by Francis in 1774 and Jane in 1775.
According to Professor of Literature Park Honan, the
atmosphere of the Austen home was an
"open, amused, easy intellectual" one, where the ideas of those
with whom the Austens might disagree politically or socially were considered
and discussed.
The family relied on the patronage of their kin and hosted
visits from numerous family members. Mrs Austen spent the summer of 1770 in
London with George's sister, Philadelphia, and her daughter Eliza, accompanied
by his other sister, Mrs Walter and her daughter Philly. Philadelphia and Eliza
Hancock were, according to Le Faye, "the
bright comets flashing into an otherwise placid solar system of clerical life
in rural Hampshire, and the news of their foreign travels and fashionable
London life, together with their sudden descents upon the Steventon household
in between times, all helped to widen Jane's youthful horizon and influence her
later life and works."
Cassandra Austen's cousin Thomas Leigh visited a number of
times in the 1770s and 1780s, inviting young Cassie to visit them in Bath in
1781. The first mention of Jane occurs in family documents upon her return, "... and almost home they were when
they met Jane & Charles, the two little ones of the family, who had to go
as far as New Down to meet the chaise, & have the pleasure of riding home
in it." Le Faye writes that "Mr
Austen's predictions for his younger daughter were fully justified. Never were
sisters more to each other than Cassandra and Jane; while in a particularly
affectionate family, there seems to have been a special link between Cassandra
and Edward on the one hand, and between Henry and Jane on the other."
From 1773 until 1796, George Austen supplemented his income
by farming and by teaching three or four boys at a time, who boarded at his
home. The Reverend Austen had an annual income of £200 (equivalent to £27,000
in 2021) from his two livings. This was a very modest income at the time; by
comparison, a skilled worker like a blacksmith or a carpenter could make about
£100 annually while the typical annual income of a gentry’s family was between
£1,000 and £5,000. Mr. Austen also rented the 200-acre Cheesedown farm from his
benefactor Thomas Knight which could make a profit of £300 (equivalent to
£41,000 in 2021) a year.
During this period of her life, Jane Austen attended church
regularly, socialized with friends and neighbors, and read novels—often of her
own composition—aloud to her family in the evenings. Socializing with the
neighbors often meant dancing, either impromptu in someone's home after supper
or at the balls held regularly at the assembly rooms in the town hall. Her
brother Henry later said that "Jane
was fond of dancing, and excelled in it".
Education
In 1783, Austen and her sister Cassandra were sent to Oxford
to be educated by Mrs Ann Cawley who took them to Southampton later that year.
That autumn both girls were sent home after catching typhus, from which Jane Austen
nearly died. She was from then home educated, until she attended boarding
school with her sister from early in 1785 at the Reading Abbey Girls' School,
ruled by Mrs La Tournelle. The curriculum probably included French, spelling,
needlework, dancing, music and drama. The sisters returned home before December
1786 because the school fees for the two girls were too high for the Austen
family. After 1786, Austen "never
again lived anywhere beyond the bounds of her immediate family environment".
Her education came from reading, guided by her father and brothers
James and Henry. Irene Collins said that Austen "used some of the same school books as the boys". Austen
apparently had unfettered access both to her father's library and that of a
family friend, Warren Hastings. Together these collections amounted to a large
and varied library. Her father was also tolerant of Austen's sometimes risqué
experiments in writing, and provided both sisters with expensive paper and
other materials for their writing and drawing.
Private theatricals were an essential part of Austen's
education. From her early childhood, the family and friends staged a series of
plays in the rectory barn, including Richard Sheridan's The Rivals (1775) and
David Garrick's Bon Ton. Austen's eldest brother James wrote the prologues and
epilogues and she probably joined in these activities, first as a spectator and
later as a participant. Most of the plays were comedies, which suggest how
Austen's satirical gifts were cultivated. At the age of 12, she tried her own
hand at dramatic writing; she wrote three short plays during her teenage years.
Juvenilia (1787–1793)
From at least the time she was aged eleven, Austen wrote
poems and stories to amuse herself and her family. She exaggerated mundane
details of daily life and parodied common plot devices in "stories full of anarchic fantasies of female power, license, illicit
behavior, and general high spirits", according to Janet Todd.
Containing work written between 1787 and 1793, Austen compiled fair copies of
twenty-nine early works into three bound notebooks, now referred to as the
Juvenilia. She called the three notebooks "Volume
the First", "Volume the Second" and "Volume the Third", and they preserve 90,000 words she
wrote during those years. The Juvenilia are often, according to scholar Richard
Jenkyns, "boisterous" and
"anarchic"; he compares them to the work of 18th-century novelist
Laurence Sterne.
Among these works is a satirical novel in letters titled
Love and Friendship, written when aged fourteen in 1790, in which she mocked popular
novels of sensibility. The next year, she wrote The History of England, a
manuscript of thirty-four pages accompanied by thirteen watercolor miniatures
by her sister, Cassandra. Austen's History parodied popular historical writing,
particularly Oliver Goldsmith's History of England (1764). Honan speculates
that not long after writing Love and Friendship, Austen decided to "write for profit, to make stories her
central effort", that is, to become a professional writer. When she
was around eighteen years old, Austen began to write longer, more sophisticated
works.
In August 1792, aged seventeen, Austen started Catharine or
the Bower, which presaged her mature work, especially Northanger Abbey, but was
left unfinished until picked up in Lady Susan, which Todd describes as less
prefiguring than Catharine. A year later she began, but abandoned, a short
play, later titled Sir Charles Grandison or the happy Man, a comedy in 6 acts,
which she returned to and completed around 1800. This was a short parody of
various school textbook abridgements of Austen's favourite contemporary novel,
The History of Sir Charles Grandison (1753), by Samuel Richardson.
When Austen became an aunt for the first time aged eighteen,
she sent new-born niece Fanny-Catherine Austen-Knight "five short pieces of ... the Juvenilia now known collectively as
'Scraps' .., purporting to be her 'Opinions and Admonitions on the conduct of
Young Women'". For Jane-Anna-Elizabeth Austen (also born in 1793), her
aunt wrote "two more 'Miscellanious
Morsels', dedicating them to [Anna] on 2 June 1793, 'convinced that if you
seriously attend to them, You will derive from them very important
Instructions, with regard to your Conduct in Life.'" There is
manuscript evidence that Austen continued to work on these pieces as late as
1811 (when she was 36), and that her niece and nephew, Anna and James Edward
Austen, made further additions as late as 1814.
Between 1793 and 1795 (aged eighteen to twenty), Austen
wrote Lady Susan, a short epistolary novel, usually described as her most
ambitious and sophisticated early work. It is unlike any of Austen's other
works. Austen biographer Claire Tomalin describes the novella's heroine as a
sexual predator who uses her intelligence and charm to manipulate, betray and
abuse her lovers, friends and family. Tomalin writes:
Told in letters, it is
as neatly plotted as a play, and as cynical in tone as any of the most
outrageous of the Restoration dramatists who may have provided some of her
inspiration ... It stands alone in Austen's work as a study of an adult woman
whose intelligence and force of character are greater than those of anyone she
encounters.
According to Janet Todd, the model for the title character
may have been Eliza de Feuillide, who inspired Austen with stories of her
glamorous life and various adventures. Eliza's French husband was guillotined
in 1794; she married Jane's brother Henry Austen in 1797.
Tom Lefroy
Thomas Langlois Lefroy, Lord Chief Justice of Ireland, by W.
H. Mote (1855); in old age, Lefroy admitted that he had been in love with Austen:
"It was boyish love."
When Austen was twenty, Tom Lefroy, a neighbour, visited
Steventon from December 1795 to January 1796. He had just finished a university
degree and was moving to London for training as a barrister. Lefroy and Austen
would have been introduced at a ball or other neighbourhood social gathering,
and it is clear from Austen's letters to Cassandra that they spent considerable
time together: "I am almost afraid
to tell you how my Irish friend and I behaved. Imagine to yourself everything
most profligate and shocking in the way of dancing and sitting down
together."
Austen wrote in her first surviving letter to her sister
Cassandra that Lefroy was a "very
gentlemanlike, good-looking, pleasant young man". Five days later in
another letter, Austen wrote that she expected an "offer" from her "friend"
and that "I shall refuse him,
however, unless he promises to give away his white coat", going on to
write "I will confide myself in the
future to Mr Tom Lefroy, for whom I don't give a sixpence" and refuse
all others. The next day, Austen wrote: "The
day will come on which I flirt my last with Tom Lefroy and when you receive
this it will be all over. My tears flow as I write at this melancholy
idea".
Halperin cautioned that Austen often satirized popular
sentimental romantic fiction in her letters, and some of the statements about
Lefroy may have been ironic. However, it is clear that Austen was genuinely
attracted to Lefroy and subsequently none of her other suitors ever quite
measured up to him. The Lefroy family intervened and sent him away at the end
of January. Marriage was impractical as both Lefroy and Austen must have known.
Neither had any money and he was dependent on a great-uncle in Ireland to finance
his education and establish his legal career. If Tom Lefroy later visited
Hampshire, he was carefully kept away from the Austens, and Jane Austen never
saw him again. In November 1798, Lefroy was still on Austen's mind as she wrote
to her sister she had tea with one of his relatives, wanted desperately to ask
about him, but could not bring herself to raise the subject.
Early manuscripts
(1796–1798)
After finishing Lady Susan, Austen began her first
full-length novel Elinor and Marianne. Her sister remembered that it was read
to the family "before 1796"
and was told through a series of letters. Without surviving original
manuscripts, there is no way to know how much of the original draft survived in
the novel published anonymously in 1811 as Sense and Sensibility.
Austen began a second novel, First Impressions (later
published as Pride and Prejudice), in 1796. She completed the initial draft in
August 1797, aged 21; as with all of her novels, Austen read the work aloud to
her family as she was working on it and it became an "established favorite". At this time, her father made the
first attempt to publish one of her novels. In November 1797, George Austen
wrote to Thomas Cadell, an established publisher in London, to ask if he would
consider publishing First Impressions. Cadell returned Mr. Austen's letter,
marking it "Declined by Return of
Post". Austen may not have known of her father's efforts. Following
the completion of First Impressions, Austen returned to Elinor and Marianne and
from November 1797 until mid-1798, revised it heavily; she eliminated the
epistolary format in favor of third-person narration and produced something close
to Sense and Sensibility. In 1797, Austen met her cousin (and future
sister-in-law), Eliza de Feuillide, a French aristocrat whose first husband the
Comte de Feuillide had been guillotined, causing her to flee to Britain, where
she married Henry Austen. The description of the execution of the Comte de
Feuillide related by his widow left Austen with an intense horror of the French
Revolution that lasted for the rest of her life.
During the middle of 1798, after finishing revisions of
Elinor and Marianne, Austen began writing a third novel with the working title
Susan—later Northanger Abbey—a satire on the popular Gothic novel. Austen
completed her work about a year later. In early 1803, Henry Austen offered
Susan to Benjamin Crosby, a London publisher, who paid £10 for the copyright.
Crosby promised early publication and went so far as to advertise the book
publicly as being "in the
press", but did nothing more. The manuscript remained in Crosby's
hands, unpublished, until Austen repurchased the copyright from him in 1816.
Bath and Southampton
In December 1800, George Austen unexpectedly announced his
decision to retire from the ministry, leave Steventon, and move the family to
4, Sydney Place in Bath, Somerset. While retirement and travel were good for
the elder Austens, Jane Austen was shocked to be told she was moving 50 miles
(80 km) away from the only home she had ever known. An indication of her state
of mind is her lack of productivity as a writer during the time she lived in
Bath. She was able to make some revisions to Susan, and she began and then
abandoned a new novel, The Watsons, but there was nothing like the productivity
of the years 1795–1799.[80] Tomalin suggests this reflects a deep depression
disabling her as a writer, but Honan disagrees, arguing Austen wrote or revised
her manuscripts throughout her creative life, except for a few months after her
father died. It is often claimed that Austen was unhappy in Bath, which caused
her to lose interest in writing, but it is just as possible that Austen's
social life in Bath prevented her from spending much time writing novels. The
critic Robert Irvine argued that if Austen spent more time writing novels when
she was in the countryside, it might just have been because she had more spare
time as opposed to being happier in the countryside as is often argued.
Furthermore, Austen frequently both moved and traveled over southern England
during this period, which was hardly a conducive environment for writing a long
novel. Austen sold the rights to publish Susan to a publisher Crosby &
Company, who paid her £10 (equivalent to £860 in 2021). The Crosby &
Company advertised Susan, but never published it.
The years from 1801 to 1804 are something of a blank space
for Austen scholars as Cassandra destroyed all of her letters from her sister
in this period for unknown reasons. In December 1802, Austen received her only
known proposal of marriage. She and her sister visited Alethea and Catherine
Bigg, old friends who lived near Basingstoke. Their younger brother, Harris
Bigg-Wither, had recently finished his education at Oxford and was also at home.
Bigg-Wither proposed and Austen accepted. As described by Caroline Austen,
Jane's niece, and Reginald Bigg-Wither, a descendant, Harris was not
attractive—he was a large, plain-looking man who spoke little, stuttered when
he did speak, was aggressive in conversation, and almost completely tactless.
However, Austen had known him since both were young and the marriage offered
many practical advantages to Austen and her family. He was the heir to
extensive family estates located in the area where the sisters had grown up.
With these resources, Austen could provide her parents a comfortable old age
give Cassandra a permanent home and, perhaps, assist her brothers in their
careers. By the next morning, Austen realized she had made a mistake and
withdrew her acceptance. No contemporary letters or diaries describe how Austen
felt about this proposal. Irvine described Bigg-Wither as somebody who "...seems to have been a man very hard
to like, let alone love".
In 1814, Austen wrote a letter to her niece Fanny Knight,
who had asked for advice about a serious relationship, telling her that "having written so much on one side of
the question, I shall now turn around & entreat you not to commit yourself
farther, & not to think of accepting him unless you really do like him.
Anything is to be preferred or endured rather than marrying without
Affection". The English scholar Douglas Bush wrote that Austen had "had a very high ideal of the love that
should unite a husband and wife ... All of her heroines ... know in proportion
to their maturity, the meaning of ardent love". A possible
autobiographical element in Sense and Sensibility occurs when Elinor Dashwood
contemplates "the worse and most
irremediable of all evils, a connection for life" with an unsuitable
man.
In 1804, while living in Bath, Austen started, but did not
complete, her novel The Watsons. The story centres on an invalid and
impoverished clergyman and his four unmarried daughters. Sutherland describes
the novel as "a study in the harsh
economic realities of dependent women's lives". Honan suggests, and
Tomalin agrees, that Austen chose to stop work on the novel after her father
died on 21 January 1805 and her personal circumstances resembled those of her
characters too closely for her comfort.
Her father's relatively sudden death left Jane, Cassandra,
and their mother in a precarious financial situation. Edward, James, Henry, and
Francis Austen (known as Frank) pledged to make annual contributions to support
their mother and sisters. For the next four years, the family's living
arrangements reflected their financial insecurity. They spent part of the time
in rented quarters in Bath before leaving the city in June 1805 for a family
visit to Steventon and Godmersham. They moved for the autumn months to the
newly fashionable seaside resort of Worthing, on the Sussex coast, where they
resided at Stanford Cottage. It was here that Austen is thought to have written
her fair copy of Lady Susan and added its "Conclusion".
In 1806, the family moved to Southampton, where they shared a house with
Frank Austen and his new wife. A large part of this time they spent visiting
various branches of the family.
On 5 April 1809, about three months before the family's move
to Chawton, Austen wrote an angry letter to Richard Crosby, offering him a new
manuscript of Susan if needed to secure the immediate publication of the novel,
and requesting the return of the original so she could find another publisher.
Crosby replied that he had not agreed to publish the book by any particular
time, or at all, and that Austen could repurchase the manuscript for the £10 he
had paid her and find another publisher. She did not have the resources to buy
the copyright back at that time, but was able to purchase it in 1816.
Chawton
Around early 1809, Austen's brother Edward offered his
mother and sisters a more settled life—the use of a large cottage in Chawton
village which was part of the estate around Edward's nearby property Chawton
House. Jane, Cassandra and their mother moved into Chawton cottage on 7 July
1809. Life was quieter in Chawton than it had been since the family's move to
Bath in 1800. The Austens did not socialize with gentry and entertained only
when family visited. Her niece Anna described the family's life in Chawton as "a very quiet life, according to our
ideas, but they were great readers, and besides the housekeeping our aunts
occupied themselves in working with the poor and in teaching some girl or boy
to read or write."
Published author
Like many women authors at the time, Austen published her
books anonymously. At the time, the ideal roles for a woman were as wife and
mother, and writing for women was regarded at best as a secondary form of
activity; a woman who wished to be a full-time writer was felt to be degrading
her femininity, so books by women were usually published anonymously in order
to maintain the conceit that the female writer was only publishing as a sort of
part-time job, and was not seeking to become a "literary lioness" (i.e. a celebrity).
During her time at Chawton, Austen published four generally
well-received novels. Through her brother Henry, the publisher Thomas Egerton
agreed to publish Sense and Sensibility, which, like all of Austen's novels
except Pride and Prejudice, was published "on commission", that is,
at the author's financial risk. When publishing on commission, publishers would
advance the costs of publication, repay themselves as books were sold and then
charge a 10% commission for each book sold, paying the rest to the author. If a
novel did not recover its costs through sales, the author was responsible for
them. The alternative to selling via commission was by selling the copyright,
where an author received a one-time payment from the publisher for the
manuscript, which occurred with Pride and Prejudice. Austen's experience with
Susan (the manuscript that became Northanger Abbey) where she sold the
copyright to the publisher Crosby & Sons for £10, who did not publish the
book, forcing her to buy back the copyright in order to get her work published,
left Austen leery of this method of publishing. The final alternative, of
selling by subscription, where a group of people would agree to buy a book in
advance, was not an option for Austen as only authors who were well known or
had an influential aristocratic patron who would recommend an up-coming book to
their friends, could sell by subscription. Sense and Sensibility appeared in
October 1811, and was described as being written "By a Lady". As it was sold on commission, Egerton used
expensive paper and set the price at 15 shillings (equivalent to £58 in 2021).
Reviews were favourable and the novel became fashionable
among young aristocratic opinion-makers; the edition sold out by mid-1813.
Austen's novels were published in larger editions than was normal for this
period. The small size of the novel-reading public and the large costs
associated with hand production (particularly the cost of handmade paper) meant
that most novels were published in editions of 500 copies or fewer to reduce
the risks to the publisher and the novelist. Even some of the most successful
titles during this period were issued in editions of not more than 750 or 800
copies and later reprinted if demand continued. Austen's novels were published
in larger editions, ranging from about 750 copies of Sense and Sensibility to
about 2,000 copies of Emma. It is not clear whether the decision to print more
copies than usual of Austen's novels was driven by the publishers or the
author. Since all but one of Austen's books were originally published "on commission", the risks of
overproduction were largely hers (or Cassandra's after her death) and
publishers may have been more willing to produce larger editions than was
normal practice when their own funds were at risk. Editions of popular works of
non-fiction were often much larger.
Austen made £140 (equivalent to £10,800 in 2021) from Sense
and Sensibility, which provided her with some financial and psychological
independence.[ After the success of Sense and Sensibility, all of Austen's
subsequent books were billed as written "By
the author of Sense and Sensibility" and Austen's name never appeared
on her books during her lifetime. Egerton then published Pride and Prejudice, a
revision of First Impressions, in January 1813. Austen sold the copyright to
Pride and Prejudice to Egerton for £110 (equivalent to £7,600 in 2021). To maximize
profits, he used cheap paper and set the price at 18 shillings (equivalent to
£62 in 2021). He advertised the book widely and it was an immediate success,
garnering three favorable reviews and selling well. Had Austen sold Pride and
Prejudice on commission, she would have made a profit of £475, or twice her
father's annual income. By October 1813, Egerton was able to begin selling a
second edition. Mansfield Park was published by Egerton in May 1814. While
Mansfield Park was ignored by reviewers, it was very popular with readers. All
copies were sold within six months, and Austen's earnings on this novel were
larger than for any of her other novels.
Without Austen's knowledge or approval, her novels were
translated into French and published in cheaply produced, pirated editions in
France. The literary critic Noel King commented in 1953 that, given the
prevailing rage in France at the time for lush romantic fantasies, it was
remarkable that her novels with the emphasis on everyday English life had any
sort of a market in France. King cautioned that Austen's chief translator in
France, Madame Isabelle de Montolieu, had only the most rudimentary knowledge
of English, and her translations were more of "imitations" than translations proper, as Montolieu
depended upon assistants to provide a summary, which she then translated into
an embellished French that often radically altered Austen's plots and
characters. The first of the Austen novels to be published that credited her as
the author was in France, when Persuasion was published in 1821 as La Famille
Elliot ou L'Ancienne Inclination.
Austen learned that the Prince Regent admired her novels and
kept a set at each of his residences. In November 1815, the Prince Regent's
librarian James Stanier Clarke invited Austen to visit the Prince's London
residence and hinted Austen should dedicate the forthcoming Emma to the Prince.
Though Austen disapproved of the Prince Regent, she could scarcely refuse the
request. Austen disapproved of the Prince Regent on the account of his womanizing,
gambling, drinking, spendthrift ways and generally disreputable behavior. She
later wrote Plan of a Novel, according to Hints from Various Quarters, a
satiric outline of the "perfect
novel" based on the librarian's many suggestions for a future Austen
novel. Austen was greatly annoyed by Clarke's often pompous literary advice,
and the Plan of a Novel parodying Clarke was intended as her revenge for all of
the unwanted letters she had received from the royal librarian.
In mid-1815 Austen moved her work from Egerton to John
Murray, a better known London publisher, who published Emma in December 1815
and a second edition of Mansfield Park in February 1816. Emma sold well, but
the new edition of Mansfield Park did poorly, and this failure offset most of
the income from Emma. These were the last of Austen's novels to be published
during her lifetime.
While Murray prepared Emma for publication, Austen began The
Elliots, later published as Persuasion. She completed her first draft in July
1816. In addition, shortly after the publication of Emma, Henry Austen
repurchased the copyright for Susan from Crosby. Austen was forced to postpone
publishing either of these completed novels by family financial troubles. Henry
Austen's bank failed in March 1816, depriving him of all of his assets, leaving
him deeply in debt and costing Edward, James, and Frank Austen large sums.
Henry and Frank could no longer afford the contributions they had made to
support their mother and sisters.
Illness and death
Austen was feeling unwell by early 1816, but ignored the
warning signs. By the middle of that year, her decline was unmistakable, and
she began a slow, irregular deterioration. The majority of biographers rely on
Zachary Cope's 1964 retrospective diagnosis and list her cause of death as
Addison's disease, although her final illness has also been described as
resulting from Hodgkin's lymphoma. When her uncle died and left his entire
fortune to his wife, effectively disinheriting his relatives, she suffered a
relapse, writing: "I am ashamed to
say that the shock of my Uncle's Will brought on a relapse ... but a weak Body
must excuse weak Nerves."
Austen continued to work in spite of her illness.
Dissatisfied with the ending of The Elliots, she rewrote the final two chapters,
which she finished on 6 August 1816. In January 1817, Austen began The Brothers
(titled Sanditon when published in 1925), completing twelve chapters before
stopping work in mid-March 1817, probably due to illness. Todd describes
Sanditon's heroine, Diana Parker, as an "energetic
invalid". In the novel Austen mocked hypochondriacs, and although she
describes the heroine as "bilious",
five days after abandoning the novel she wrote of herself that she was turning "every wrong color" and living
"chiefly on the sofa". She
put down her pen on 18 March 1817, making a note of it.
Austen made light of her condition, describing it as "bile" and rheumatism. As her
illness progressed, she experienced difficulty walking and lacked energy; by
mid-April she was confined to bed. In May, Cassandra and Henry brought her to
Winchester for treatment, by which time she suffered agonizing pain and welcomed
death. Austen died in Winchester on 18 July 1817 at the age of 41. Henry,
through his clerical connections, arranged for his sister to be buried in the
north aisle of the nave of Winchester Cathedral. The epitaph composed by her
brother James praises Austen's personal qualities, expresses hope for her
salvation and mentions the "extraordinary
endowments of her mind", but does not explicitly mention her
achievements as a writer.
Posthumous
publication
In the months after Austen's death in July 1817, Cassandra,
Henry Austen and Murray arranged for the publication of Persuasion and
Northanger Abbey as a set. Henry Austen contributed a Biographical Note dated
December 1817, which for the first time identified his sister as the author of
the novels. Tomalin describes it as "a
loving and polished eulogy". Sales were good for a year—only 321
copies remained unsold at the end of 1818.
Although Austen's six novels were out of print in England in
the 1820s, they were still being read through copies housed in private
libraries and circulating libraries. Austen had early admirers. The first piece
of fiction using her as a character (what might now be called real person
fiction) appeared in 1823 in a letter to the editor in The Lady's Magazine. It
refers to Austen's genius and suggests that aspiring authors were envious of
her powers.
In 1832, Richard Bentley purchased the remaining copyrights
to all of her novels, and over the following winter published five illustrated
volumes as part of his Standard Novels series. In October 1833, Bentley
released the first collected edition of her works. Since then, Austen's novels
have been continuously in print.
Genre and style
Austen's works implicitly critique the sentimental novels of
the second half of the 18th century and are part of the transition to 19th-century
literary realism. The earliest English novelists, Richardson, Henry Fielding
and Tobias Smollett, were followed by the school of sentimentalists and
romantics such as Walter Scott, Horace Walpole, Clara Reeve, Ann Radcliffe, and
Oliver Goldsmith, whose style and genre Austen repudiated, returning the novel
on a "slender thread" to
the tradition of Richardson and Fielding for a "realistic study of manners". In the mid-20th century,
literary critics F. R. Leavis and Ian Watt placed her in the tradition of
Richardson and Fielding; both believe that she used their tradition of "irony, realism and satire to form an
author superior to both".
Walter Scott noted Austen's "resistance to the trashy sensationalism of much of modern
fiction—'the ephemeral productions which supply the regular demand of watering
places and circulating libraries'". Yet her relationship with these
genres is complex, as evidenced by Northanger Abbey and Emma. Similar to
William Wordsworth, who excoriated the modern frantic novel in the "Preface" to his Lyrical
Ballads (1800), Austen distances herself from escapist novels; the discipline
and innovation she demonstrates is similar to his, and she shows "that rhetorically less is artistically
more." She eschewed popular Gothic fiction, stories of terror in which
a heroine typically was stranded in a remote location, a castle or abbey (32
novels between 1784 and 1818 contain the word "abbey" in their title). Yet in Northanger Abbey she
alludes to the trope, with the heroine, Catherine, anticipating a move to a
remote locale. Rather than full-scale rejection or parody, Austen transforms
the genre, juxtaposing reality, with descriptions of elegant rooms and modern
comforts, against the heroine's "novel-fueled"
desires. Nor does she completely denigrate Gothic fiction: instead she
transforms settings and situations, such that the heroine is still imprisoned,
yet her imprisonment is mundane and real—regulated manners and the strict rules
of the ballroom. In Sense and Sensibility Austen presents characters who are
more complex than in staple sentimental fiction, according to critic Keymer,
who notes that although it is a parody of popular sentimental fiction, "Marianne in her sentimental histrionics
responds to the calculating world ... with a quite justifiable scream of female
distress."
The hair was curled,
and the maid sent away, and Emma sat down to think and be miserable. It was a
wretched business, indeed! Such an overthrow of everything she had been wishing
for! Such a development of everything most unwelcome!— example of free indirect speech, Jane Austen, Emma
Richardson's Pamela, the prototype for the sentimental
novel, is a didactic love story with a happy ending, written at a time women
were beginning to have the right to choose husbands and yet were restricted by
social conventions. Austen attempted Richardson's epistolary style, but found
the flexibility of narrative more conducive to her realism, a realism in which
each conversation and gesture carries a weight of significance. The narrative
style utilizes free indirect speech—she was the first English novelist to do so
extensively—through which she had the ability to present a character's thoughts
directly to the reader and yet still retain narrative control. The style allows
an author to vary discourse between the narrator's voice and values and those
of the characters.
Austen had a natural ear for speech and dialogue, according
to scholar Mary Lascelles: "Few
novelists can be more scrupulous than Jane Austen as to the phrasing and thoughts
of their characters." Techniques such as fragmentary speech suggest a
character's traits and their tone; "syntax
and phrasing rather than vocabulary" is utilized to indicate social
variants. Dialogue reveals a character's mood—frustration, anger,
happiness—each treated differently and often through varying patterns of
sentence structures. When Elizabeth Bennet rejects Darcy, her stilted speech
and the convoluted sentence structure reveals that he has wounded her:
From the very
beginning, from the first moment I may almost say, of my acquaintance with you,
your manners impressing me with the fullest belief of your arrogance, your
conceit, and your selfish disdain of the feelings of others, were such as to
form that the groundwork of disapprobation, on which succeeding events have
built so immovable a dislike. And I had not known you a month before I felt
that you were the last man in the world whom I could ever be prevailed on to
marry.
Austen's plots highlight women's traditional dependence on
marriage to secure social standing and economic security. As an art form, the
18th-century novel lacked the seriousness of its equivalents from the 19th century,
when novels were treated as "the
natural vehicle for discussion and ventilation of what mattered in life". Rather
than delving too deeply into the psyche of her characters, Austen enjoys them
and imbues them with humor, according to critic John Bayley. He believes that
the well-spring of her wit and irony is her own attitude that comedy "is the saving grace of life".
Part of Austen's fame rests on the historical and literary significance that
she was the first woman to write great comic novels. Samuel Johnson's influence
is evident, in that she follows his advice to write "a representation of life as may excite mirth".
Her humor comes from her modesty and lack of superiority,
allowing her most successful characters, such as Elizabeth Bennet, to transcend
the trivialities of life, which the more foolish characters are overly absorbed
in. Austen used comedy to explore the individualism of women's lives and gender
relations, and she appears to have used it to find the goodness in life, often
fusing it with "ethical
sensibility", creating artistic tension. Critic Robert Polhemus
writes, "To appreciate the drama and
achievement of Austen, we need to realize how deep was her passion for both
reverence and ridicule ... and her comic imagination reveals both the harmonies
and the telling contradictions of her mind and vision as she tries to reconcile
her satirical bias with her sense of the good."
Reception
Contemporaneous
responses
In 1816 the editors of The New Monthly Magazine noted Emma's
publication, but chose not to review it.
As Austen's works were published anonymously, they brought
her little personal renown. They were fashionable among opinion-makers, but
were rarely reviewed. Most of the reviews were short and on balance favourable,
although superficial and cautious, most often focused on the moral lessons of
the novels.
Sir Walter Scott, a leading novelist of the day, anonymously
wrote a review of Emma in 1815, using it to defend the then-disreputable genre
of the novel and praising Austen's realism, "the
art of copying from nature as she really exists in the common walks of life,
and presenting to the reader, instead of the splendid scenes from an imaginary
world, a correct and striking representation of that which is daily taking
place around him". The other important early review was attributed to
Richard Whately in 1821.
However, Whately denied having authored the review, which
drew favourable comparisons between Austen and such acknowledged greats as
Homer and Shakespeare, and praised the dramatic qualities of her narrative.
Scott and Whately set the tone for almost all subsequent 19th-century Austen criticism.
19th century
One of the first two published illustrations of Pride and
Prejudice, from the Richard Bentley edition. Caption reads: "She then told him [Mr Bennett] what Mr
Darcy had voluntarily done for Lydia. He heard her with astonishment."
Because Austen's novels did not conform to Romantic and
Victorian expectations that "powerful
emotion [be] authenticated by an egregious display of sound and colour in the
writing", 19th-century critics and audiences preferred the works of
Charles Dickens and George Eliot. Notwithstanding Walter Scott's positivity,
Austen's work did not match the prevailing aesthetic values of the Romantic
zeitgeist. Her novels were republished in Britain from the 1830s and sold
steadily, but they were not best-sellers.
The first French critic who paid notice to Austen was
Philarète Chasles in an 1842 essay, dismissing her in two sentences as a
boring, imitative writer with no substance. Austen was almost completely ignored
in France until 1878, when the French critic Léon Boucher published the essay
Le Roman Classique en Angleterre, in which he called Austen a "genius", the first French
author to do so. The first accurate translation of Austen into French occurred
in 1899 when Félix Fénéon translated Northanger Abbey as Catherine Moreland.
In Britain, Austen gradually grew in the estimation of the
literati. Philosopher and literary critic George Henry Lewes published a series
of enthusiastic articles in the 1840s and 1850s. Later in the century, novelist
Henry James referred to Austen several times with approval, and on one occasion
ranked her with Shakespeare, Cervantes, and Henry Fielding as among "the fine painters of life".
The publication of James Edward Austen-Leigh's A Memoir of
Jane Austen in 1869 introduced Austen to a wider public as "dear Aunt Jane", the respectable maiden aunt.
Publication of the Memoir spurred the reissue of Austen's novels—the first
popular editions were released in 1883 and fancy illustrated editions and
collectors' sets quickly followed. Author and critic Leslie Stephen described
the popular mania that started to develop for Austen in the 1880s as "Austenolatry". Around the start of
the 20th century, an intellectual clique of Janeites reacted against the popularization
of Austen, distinguishing their deeper appreciation from the vulgar enthusiasm
of the masses.
In response, Henry James decried "a beguiled infatuation" with Austen, a rising tide of
public interest that exceeded Austen's "intrinsic
merit and interest". The American literary critic A. Walton Litz noted
that the "anti-Janites" in
the 19th and 20th centuries comprised a formidable literary squad of Mark
Twain, Henry James, Charlotte Brontë, D. H. Lawrence and Kingsley Amis, but in "every case the adverse judgement
merely reveals the special limitations or eccentricities of the critic, leaving
Jane Austen relatively untouched".
Modern
Depiction of Austen from A Memoir of Jane Austen (1871)
written by her nephew James Edward Austen-Leigh, and based on the sketch by
Cassandra. All subsequent portraits of Austen are generally based on this,
including on the reverse of the Bank of England £10 note introduced in
September 2017.
Austen's works have attracted legions of scholars. The first
dissertation on Austen was published in 1883, by George Pellew, a student at
Harvard University. Another early academic analysis came from a 1911 essay by
Oxford Shakespearean scholar A. C. Bradley, who grouped Austen's novels into "early" and "late" works, a distinction still
used by scholars today. The first academic book devoted to Austen in France was
Jane Austen by Paul and Kate Rague (1914), who set out to explain why French
critics and readers should take Austen seriously. The same year, Léonie Villard
published Jane Austen, Sa Vie et Ses Oeuvres, originally her PhD thesis, the
first serious academic study of Austen in France. In 1923, R.W. Chapman
published the first scholarly edition of Austen's collected works, which was
also the first scholarly edition of any English novelist. The Chapman text has
remained the basis for all subsequent published editions of Austen's works.
With the publication in 1939 of Mary Lascelles' Jane Austen
and Her Art, the academic study of Austen took hold. Lascelles analyzed the
books Austen read and their influence on her work, and closely examined
Austen's style and "narrative
art". Concern arose that academics were obscuring the appreciation of
Austen with increasingly esoteric theories, a debate that has continued since.
The period since World War II has seen a diversity of
critical approaches to Austen, including feminist theory, and perhaps most
controversially, postcolonial theory. The divide has widened between the
popular appreciation of Austen, particularly by modern Janeites, and academic
judgements. In 1994, literary critic Harold Bloom placed Austen among the
greatest Western writers of all time.
In the People's Republic of China after 1949, writings of
Austen were regarded as too frivolous, and thus during the Chinese Cultural
Revolution of 1966–69, Austen was banned as a "British bourgeois imperialist". In the late 1970s, when
Austen's works was re-published in China, her popularity with readers confounded
the authorities who had trouble understanding that people generally read books
for enjoyment, not political edification.
In a typical modern debate, the conservative American
professor Gene Koppel, to the indignation of his liberal literature students,
mentioned that Austen and her family were "Tories
of the deepest dye", i.e. Conservatives in opposition to the liberal
Whigs. Although several feminist authors such as Claudia Johnson and Mollie
Sandock claimed Austen for their own cause, Koppel argued that different people
react to a work of literature in different subjective ways, as explained by the
philosopher Hans-Georg Gadamer. Thus competing interpretations of Austen's work
can be equally valid, provided they are grounded in textual and historical
analysis: it is equally possible to see Austen as a feminist critiquing
Regency-era society and as a conservative upholding its values.
Adaptations
Austen's novels have resulted in sequels, prequels and
adaptations of almost every type, from soft-core pornography to fantasy. From
the 19th century, her family members published conclusions to her incomplete
novels, and by 2000 there were over 100 printed adaptations. The first dramatic
adaptation of Austen was published in 1895, Rosina Filippi's Duologues and
Scenes from the Novels of Jane Austen: Arranged and Adapted for Drawing-Room
Performance, and Filippi was also responsible for the first professional stage
adaptation, The Bennets (1901). The first film adaptation was the 1940 MGM
production of Pride and Prejudice starring Laurence Olivier and Greer Garson.
BBC television dramatizations since the 1970s have attempted to adhere meticulously
to Austen's plots, characterizations and settings. The British critic Robert
Irvine noted that in American film adaptations of Austen's novels, starting
with the 1940 version of Pride and Prejudice, class is subtly downplayed, and
the society of Regency England depicted by Austen that is grounded in a
hierarchy based upon the ownership of land and the antiquity of the family name
is one that Americans cannot embrace in its entirety.
From 1995, many Austen adaptations appeared, with Ang Lee's
film of Sense and Sensibility, for which screenwriter and star Emma Thompson
won an Academy Award, and the BBC's immensely popular TV mini-series Pride and
Prejudice, starring Jennifer Ehle and Colin Firth. A 2005 British production of
Pride and Prejudice, directed by Joe Wright and starring Keira Knightley and
Matthew Macfadyen, was followed in 2007 by ITV's Mansfield Park, Northanger Abbey
and Persuasion, and in 2016 by Love & Friendship starring Kate Beckinsale
as Lady Susan, a film version of Lady Susan, that borrowed the title of
Austen's Love and Friendship.
Honors
In 2013, Austen's works featured on a series of UK postage
stamps issued by the Royal Mail to mark the bicentenary of the publication of
Pride and Prejudice. Austen is on the £10 note issued by the Bank of England
which was introduced in 2017, replacing Charles Darwin. In July 2017, a statue
of Jane Austen was erected in Basingstoke, Hampshire on the 200th anniversary
of her death.
List of works
Novels
Sense and Sensibility (1811)
Pride and Prejudice (1813)
Mansfield Park (1814)
Emma (1816)
Northanger Abbey (1818, posthumous)
Persuasion (1818, posthumous)
Lady Susan (1871, posthumous)
Unfinished fiction
The Watsons (1804)
Sanditon (1817)
Other works
Sir Charles Grandison (adapted play) (1793, 1800)
Plan of a Novel (1815)
Poems (1796–1817)
Prayers (1796–1817)
Letters (1796–1817)
Juvenilia—Volume the First (1787–1793)
Frederic & Elfrida
Jack & Alice
Edgar & Emma
Henry and Eliza
The Adventures of Mr. Harley
Sir William Mountague
Memoirs of Mr. Clifford
The Beautifull Cassandra
Amelia Webster
The Visit
The Mystery
The Three Sisters
A Fragment
A beautiful description
The generous Curate
Ode to Pity
Juvenilia—Volume the Second (1787–1793)
Love and Friendship
Lesley Castle
The History of England
A Collection of Letters
The female philosopher
The first Act of a Comedy
A Letter from a Young Lady
A Tour through Wales
A Tale
Juvenilia—Volume the Third (1787–1793)
Evelyn
Catharine or the Bower
Notes
The original is
unsigned but was believed by the family to have been made by Austen's sister
Cassandra and remained in the family until 1920 with a signed sketch by
Cassandra. The original sketch, according to relatives who knew Jane Austen well,
was not a good likeness.
Oliver MacDonagh says
that Sense and Sensibility "may well
be the first English realistic novel" based on its detailed and
accurate portrayal of what he calls "getting and spending" in an
English gentry family.
Irene Collins
estimates that when George Austen took up his duties as rector in 1764,
Steventon comprised no more than about thirty families.
Philadelphia had
returned from India in 1765 and taken up residence in London; when her husband
returned to India to replenish their income, she stayed in England. He died in
India in 1775, with Philadelphia unaware until the news reached her a year
later, fortuitously as George and Cassandra were visiting. See Le Faye, 29–36
For social
conventions among the gentry generally, see Collins (1994), 105
Doody agrees with
Tomalin; see Doody, "Jane Austen,
that disconcerting child", in Alexander and McMaster 2005, 105.
Elinor Dashwood's
original quote from chapter 29, page 159, of Sense and Sensibility is: "the worst and most irremediable of all
evils, a connection, for life, with an unprincipled man."
Austen's observations
of early Worthing probably helped inspire her final, but unfinished novel,
Sanditon, the story of an up-and-coming seaside resort in Sussex.
Chawton had a
population of 417 at the census of 1811.
The Prince Regent's
admiration was by no means reciprocated. In a letter of 16 February 1813 to her
friend Martha Lloyd, Austen says (referring to the Prince's wife, whom he
treated notoriously badly) "I hate
her Husband".
John Murray also
published the work of Walter Scott and Lord Byron. In a letter to Cassandra
dated 17/18 October 1816, Austen comments that "Mr. Murray's Letter is come; he is a Rogue of course, but a civil
one."
Claire Tomalin prefers
a diagnosis of a lymphoma such as Hodgkin's disease.
The manuscript of the
revised final chapters of Persuasion is the only surviving manuscript for any
of her published novels in her own handwriting. Cassandra and Henry Austen
chose the final titles and the title page is dated 1818.
Honan points to "the odd fact that most of [Austen's]
reviewers sound like Mr. Collins" as evidence that contemporary
critics felt that works oriented toward the interests and concerns of women
were intrinsically less important and less worthy of critical notice than works
(mostly non-fiction) oriented towards men.
Oliver MacDonagh says
that Sense and Sensibility "may well
be the first English realistic novel" based on its detailed and
accurate portrayal of what he calls "getting and spending" in an
English gentry family.
The full title of
this short play is Sir Charles Grandison or The happy Man, a Comedy in 6 acts.
For more information see Southam (1986), 187–189.
This list of the
juvenilia is taken from The Works of Jane Austen. Vol VI. 1954. Ed. R.W.
Chapman and B.C. Southam. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1988, as
supplemented by additional research reflected in Margaret Anne Doody and
Douglas Murray, eds. Catharine and Other Writings. Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 1993.
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