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Jane’s novels portray middle and upper-class society, where the characters, in the main, occupy fine houses, walk about in fine clothes and stroll leisurely through idyllic gardens and parks. Her characters – even the bad ones – almost invariably live happily ever after, in an environment where poverty and sickness figure only peripherally.

How can it be that Jane, all too often, sees misfortune and even death as an opportunity for humour? This, undoubtedly, was for her a coping mechanism; one which enabled her to avoid facing up to the more unpleasant side of life. And yet, in her novels, she demonstrates her concern for the wronged and underprivileged on countless occasions: in
Mansfield Park
, where Fanny Price is denied a fire in her bedroom; in
Emma
, where Emma Woodhouse insults Miss Bates; in
Sense and Sensibility
, where Sir John Middleton takes pity on the Dashwood family after they find themselves homeless. Neither should it be
forgotten that Jane looked after her mother – a chronically sick woman – for many years without complaint, and devotedly nursed her brother Henry when he too became ill.

‘I consider everybody as having the right to marry once in their Lives for Love, if they can …’
1
These words were written by Jane to her sister Cassandra in 1808. They undoubtedly reflect a tremendous regret on her part, that during the years in which she might reasonably have expected to find conjugal happiness, she did not do so. However, in a letter which Jane subsequently wrote to her niece Fanny Knight, she affirmed that being on one’s own is preferable to being with the wrong person:

Nothing can be compared to the misery of being bound without Love, bound to one, & preferring another. That is a Punishment which you do not deserve.
2

Jane subsequently advised Fanny:

Do not be in a hurry; depend upon it, the right Man will come at last; you will, in the course of the next two or three years, meet with somebody more generally unexceptionable than anyone you have yet known, who will love you as warmly as ever He [Mr James Wildman] did, & who will so completely attach you, that you will feel you never really loved before.
3

What if Jane had married and had children of her own? Would she have made a good mother, and enjoyed the experience? This may be deduced from the comments which her nieces and others made about her, and also by what she said about them. Caroline Austen, for example, was the daughter of Jane’s eldest brother James by his second wife Mary Lloyd. She was only 12 years old when her Aunt Jane died and therefore ‘knew
her only with a child’s knowledge’. About Jane, Caroline had this to say:

Her charm to children was great sweetness of manner – she seemed to love you, and you loved her naturally in return – this as well I can now recollect and analyse, was what I felt in my earliest days, before I was old enough to be amused by her cleverness – But soon came the delight of her playful talk – every-thing she could make amusing to a child – Then, as I got older, and when cousins came to share the entertainment, she would tell us the most delightful stories chiefly of fairyland …

I had taken early to writing verses and stories, and I am sorry to think how I troubled her with reading them. She was very kind about it and always had some praise to bestow.
4

On another occasion Caroline, whose visits to Chawton were frequent, compared Jane’s sister Cassandra with Jane herself – Jane being the one whom she considered to be a warmer and more engaging personality:

Aunt Jane was a great charm … I did not dislike Aunt Cassandra – but if my visit had at any time chanced to fall out [occur] during her absence, I don’t think I should have missed her – whereas, not to have found Aunt Jane at Chawton, would have been a blank indeed.
5

James E. Austen-Leigh, Caroline’s brother, remarked upon Jane’s relationship with her brother (James’s uncle) Edward and his children: Though Jane and Edward had been ‘a good deal separated’ from his family in childhood, ‘they were much together in after life, and Jane gave a large share of her affections to him [Edward] and his children’.
6

Jane was clearly enamoured with her nieces, as this poem which she wrote about Anna Austen typically illustrates:

In measured verse I’ll now rehearse

The charms of lovely Anna:

And, first, her mind is unconfined

Like any vast savannah.

And the poem ends:

Another world must be unfurled,

Another language known,

’Ere tongue or sound can publish round

Her charms of flesh and bone.

We are grateful to Jane for leaving us her wonderful portraits of life in a bygone age, albeit for a relatively small and privileged portion of society. Some might view the reading of such works, or the watching of their dramatised re-enactments, as a form of escapism. But what is the harm in that? After all, there are many features of the modern world from which it is a positive relief to escape.

Jane’s novels are timeless because they are concerned with human relationships. They demonstrate to us that even today, just as in her day, we have a choice as to what paths we follow, and a duty to differentiate between what is good and what is not – ‘goodness’ being one of Jane’s favourite descriptive words. We rejoice in Jane’s gaiety and her wit. We smile at her gentle teasing and dry sarcasm. We salute her courage, and we feel immensely sad that she died so young and that the love – of which she had so much to give to a prospective partner – remained unrequited.

Notes

1.­
Letter from Jane Austen to Cassandra, 27/28 December 1808.

2.­
Letter from Jane Austen to Fanny Knight, 30 November 1814.

3.­
Letter from Jane Austen to Fanny Knight, 13 March 1817.

4.­
Caroline Austen,
My Aunt Jane Austen
, pp. 2, 5, 10.

5.­
Ibid
., p. 6.

6.­
James E. Austen-Leigh,
A Memoir of Jane Austen
, p. 16.

STEVENTON RECTORY

Sadly, Steventon Rectory, Jane Austen’s birthplace, no longer exists. In 1826–27 Edward Knight built – for the occupation of his son William (Rector of Steventon from 1823–73) – a new rectory on the hillside opposite, overlooking the glebe land’s ‘Hanging Meadow’. This having been done, he demolished the old one together with its farm buildings and the cottage in the lane. Today, the site of the rectory is indicated by an area where snowdrops grow in springtime, and by the remains of the well from which the Austens obtained their water.

THE CHURCH OF ST NICHOLAS, STEVENTON

It was during William Knight’s incumbency that a new spire was added to the church.

In 1936, Jane’s great-grandniece Emma Austen-Leigh placed a memorial to Jane on the left-hand side of the nave. In 1952 the fragment of Steventon’s Saxon cross was donated to Steventon church by Captain and Mrs Hutton Croft, the then owners of the Steventon Estate. It is now on display inside the church.

Repairs and renovations to the church have been carried out through the generosity of the Jane Austen Societies of
Great Britain and North America. This includes the restoration of the roof and spire (1984), the redecoration of the interior (1988), and the renovation and re-hanging of the church’s three medieval bells (1995). In 1975, to mark the bicentenary of Jane’s birth, the east window, which suffered from extensive corrosion, was almost entirely replaced. Also, with the help of the Parochial Church Council and Basingstoke and Deane Borough Council, the wrought iron railings surrounding the churchyard were replaced. In 2000, to mark the millennium, a new cover for the font was donated to the church.

STEVENTON MANOR HOUSE

In
c
.1880 Henry Harris, the then owner of the Steventon Estate, built a new manor house which overlooked the original Tudor manor house. Unfortunately, in 1932 this Victorian building, together with an adjacent farm, was destroyed by fire, whereupon the owners, a Mr and Mrs Onslow Fane, decided to extend the Tudor manor house which, sadly, was demolished in 1970.

CHAWTON COTTAGE

Jane’s home for the last eight years of her life is now the Jane Austen’s House Museum, which has been owned by the Jane Austen Memorial Trust since 1947.

Adams, Oscar Fay,
The Story of Jane Austen’s Life
, USA: Chicago, 1891

Austen, Caroline,
My Aunt Jane Austen: A Memoir
, The Jane Austen Society, 1999

Austen, Jane,
Emma
, London: Penguin Books, 2003

–––––,
Persuasion
, London: Penguin Books, 2003

–––––,
Pride and Prejudice
, London: Penguin Books, 2003

–––––,
Mansfield Park
, London: Penguin Books, 2003

–––––,
Northanger Abbey
, London: Penguin Books, 2003

–––––,
Sense and Sensibility
, London: Penguin Books, 1969

–––––,
Love & Freindship and Other Writings
, London: Phoenix, 1998

–––––,
Lady Susan, The Watsons and Sanditon
, London: Penguin Books, 2003

Austen-Leigh, Emma,
Jane Austen and Lyme Regis
, London: Spottiswoode, Bal antyne and Co., 1946

Austen-Leigh, James E.,
A Memoir of Jane Austen
, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002

Austen-Leigh, Mary Augusta,
Personal Aspects of Jane Austen
, Philadelphia: Pavilion Press, 2003

Austen-Leigh, William,
Jane Austen: Her Life and Letters – A Family
Record
, London: Smith, Elder & Co., 1913

Brabourne, Lord Edward,
Letters of Jane Austen
, London: Richard Bentley & Son, 1884

Cecil, David,
A Portrait of Jane Austen
, London: Penguin Books, 1980

Chapman, R. W.,
Jane Austen: Facts and Problems
, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1948

––––– (ed),
Jane Austen’s Letters to her sister Cassandra and Others
, London: Oxford University Press, 1964

Evans, J. M.,
Jane Austen: Northanger Abbey
, London: James Brodie

Henshaw, Henry (Agent to the Steventon Estate),
Steventon, Hampshire:
Historical Notes and Anecdotes
, 1949

Hill, Constance,
Jane Austen: Her Homes and Her Friends
, London: John Lane, 1904

Le Faye, Deirdre,
Fanny Knight’s Diaries
, The Jane Austen Society. 2000

–––––,
Jane Austen’s ‘Outlandish Cousin’
, London: The British Library, 2002

––––– (collector and editor),
Jane Austen’s Letters
, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997

–––––,
Jane Austen’s Steventon
, Winchester: Sarsen Press, 2007

–––––,
Reminiscences of Jane Austen’s Niece Caroline Austen
, The Jane Austen Society, 2004

Lefroy, Helen and Gavin Turner (eds),
The Letters of Mrs Lefroy
, Winchester: Sarsen Press, 2007

Matthew, H.C.G. and Harrison, Brian (eds),
Oxford Dictionary of
National Biography
, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004

Nokes, David,
Jane Austen: A Life
, New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1997

Russell, P.M.G.,
A History of the Exeter Hospitals, 1170–1948
, Exeter: Exeter Post-Graduate Medical Institute, 1976

Selwyn, David (ed),
The Complete Poems of James Austen
by James Austen, The Jane Austen Society, 2003

–––––,
Jane Austen: Collected Poems and Verse of the Austen Family
, Manchester: Carcarnet Press, 1996

Smith, Dr Tony,
Complete Family Health Encyclopaedia
, British Medical Association, London: Dorling Kindersley, 1990

First published 2009

The History Press
The Mill, Brimscombe Port
Stroud, Gloucestershire,
GL
5 2
QG
www.­thehistorypress.­co.­uk

This ebook edition first published in 2010

All rights reserved
© Andrew Norman, 2009, 2010

The right of Andrew Norman to be identified as the Author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyrights, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights, and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.

ISBN
978 0 7524 6248 6

BOOK: Jane Austen
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