(1775-1817)
A British Author

One of the world's most famous authors, Jane Austen, spent most of her life in the historic & beautiful county of Hampshire in the south of England. A model of a writer, Jane Austen, wrote novels that captured the social lives of the middle to upper class in her era. Her apparent sheltered life did nothing to reduce the stature and drama of her fiction.

Her first novel (Northanger Abbey), pokes fun at the Gothic novels written by Ann Radcliffe. However, Austen is most famous for her later works, which took the form of socially conscious "comedy of errors". These are often cited for their perfection of form (especially Emma). Modern critics continue to find new perspectives on Austen's keen commentary on the predicaments of young, unmarried, upper-class English women in the early 1800s. Sir Walter Scott, in particular, praised her work. She is considered one of the greatest English novelists.


The order in which she began and completed her novels is different from that of publication.

Emma
Emma is beautiful, intelligent, and cunning -- an unlikely heroine, who Austen describes with brilliance. Emma deals with a young woman's maturation into adulthood and the trouble she gets herself into along the way.

Juvenilia I (1787-1890) - Juvenilia II, (1790-1792) - Juvenilia III (1792-1793)
Jane Austen wrote throughout her teens, mostly for the entertainment of her family. These pieces are generally unrestrained, and often absolutely hilarious, poking fun at established literary and social conventions. Her work was found in three handwritten notebooks.

Mansfield Park
The third novel written by Jane Austin was written between February, 1811 and the summer of 1813. It first appeared on May 4, 1814. This is a satirical novel about England, which was considered "free" even though women did not fully have rights.

Northanger Abbey
This is one of the novels that was published after Austen's death. The heroine is a naive woman with a head full of the novels she reads.

Persuasion
Written between 1815-1816, while Jane Austen was suffering from her fatal illness. She died in July 1817, at age 42. Persuasion is a novel of second chances, expectations of society, and the constancy of love. She was still working on some revisions at the time of her death in 1817. The novel was published
posthumously by her brother, Henry Austen.
Also read the preface which Henry wrote telling the world of his sister's authorship, life, and untimely death

Pride and Prejudice
Originally entitled First Impressions, was first written in the late 1700's and rewritten in 1811-1812. Pride and Prejudice is probably Austen's best-known work. It deals with the misjudgments that often occur at the beginning of an acquaintance, and how those misjudgments can change as individuals learn more about each other (a family of sisters work towards marrying for economic stability and security).

Sense and Sensibility
The first of Austen's novels to be published, Sense and Sensibility revolves around the lives of two sisters who must marry well in order to advance in the world.

Complete Novels of Jane Austen
Free download and online reading
  1. Emma
  2. Mansfield Park
  3. Northanger Abbey
  4. Persuasion
  5. Pride and Prejudice
  6. Sense and Sensibility
Other Works by Jane Austen
  • Juvenilia I, II & III
  • Lady Susan
  • Sanditon
  • The Three Sisters
  • The Watsons


Excerpt from the
Preface to Persuasion and Northanger Abbey
By Henry Austen
Jane Austen
From the 1870
Memoir by her Nephew

Jane Austen was born on the 16th of December, 1775, at Steventon, in the county of Hants. Her father was Rector of that parish upwards of forty years. There he resided, in the conscientious and unassisted discharge of ministerial duties, until he was turned of seventy years. Then he retired with his wife, our authoress, and her sister, to Bath, for the remainder of his life, a period of about four years. Being not only a profound scholar, but possessing a most exquisite taste in every species of literature, it is not wonderful that his daughter Jane should, at a very early age, have become sensible to the charms of style, and enthusiastic in the cultivation of her own language. On the death of her father she removed, with her mother and sister, for a short time, to Southampton, and finally, in 1809, to the pleasant village of Chawton, in the same county. From this place she sent into the world those novels, which by many have been placed on the same shelf as the works of a D'Arblay and an Edgeworth. Some of these novels had been the gradual performances of her previous life. For though in composition she was equally rapid and correct, yet an invincible distrust of her own judgement induced her to withhold her works from the public, till time and many perusals had satisfied her that the charm of recent composition was dissolved. The natural constitution, the regular habits, the quiet and happy occupations of our authoress, seemed to promise a long succession of amusement to the public, and a gradual increase of reputation to herself. But the symptoms of a decay, deep and incurable, began to shew themselves in the commencement of 1816. Her decline was at first deceitfully slow; and until the spring of this present year, those who knew their happiness to be involved in her existence could not endure to despair. But in the month of May, 1817, it was found advisable that she should be removed to Winchester for the benefit of constant medical aid, which none even then dared to hope would be permanently beneficial. She supported, during two months, all the varying pain, irksomeness, and tedium, attendant on decaying nature, with more than resignation, with a truly elastic cheerfulness. She retained her faculties, her memory, her fancy, her temper, and her affections, warm, clear, and unimpaired, to the last. Neither her love of God, nor of her fellow creatures flagged for a moment. She made a point of receiving the sacrament before excessive bodily weakness might have rendered her perception unequal to her wishes. She wrote whilst she could hold a pen, and with a pencil when a pen was become too laborious. The day preceding her death she composed some stanzas replete with fancy and vigour. Her last voluntary speech conveyed thanks to her medical attendant; and to the final question asked of her, purporting to know her wants, she replied, "I want nothing but death."

She expired shortly after, on Friday the 18th of July, 1817, in the arms of her sister, who, as well as the relater of these events, feels too surely that they shall never look upon her like again.

Jane Austen was buried on the 24th of July, 1817, in the cathedral church of Winchester, which, in the whole catalogue of its mighty dead, does not contain the ashes of a brighter genius or a sincerer Christian.

Of personal attractions she possessed a considerable share. Her stature was that of true elegance. It could not have been increased without exceeding the middle height. Her carriage and deportment were quiet, yet graceful. Her features were separately good. Their assemblage produced an unrivalled expression of that cheerfulness, sensibility, and benevolence, which were her real characteristics. Her complexion was of the finest texture. It might with truth be said, that her eloquent blood spoke through her modest cheek. Her voice was extremely sweet. She delivered herself with fluency and precision. Indeed she was formed for elegant and rational society, excelling in conversation as much as in composition. In the present age it is hazardous to mention accomplishments. Our authoress would, probably, have been inferior to few in such acquirements, had she not been so superior to most in higher things. She had not only an excellent taste for drawing, but, in her earlier days, evinced great power of hand in the management of the pencil. Her own musical attainments she held very cheap. Twenty years ago they would have been thought more of, and twenty years hence many a parent will expect their daughters to be applauded for meaner performances. She was fond of dancing, and excelled in it. It remains now to add a few observations on that which her friends deemed more important, on those endowments, which sweetened every hour of their lives.

If there be an opinion current in the world, that perfect placidity of temper is not reconcilable to the most lively imagination, and the keenest relish for wit, such an opinion will be rejected for ever by those who have had the happiness of knowing the authoress of the following works. Though the frailties, foibles, and follies of others could not escape her immediate detection, yet even on their vices did she never trust herself to comment with unkindness. The affectation of candour is not uncommon; but she had no affectation. Faultless herself, as nearly as human nature can be, she always sought, in the faults of others, something to excuse, to forgive or forget. Where extenuation was impossible, she had a sure refuge in silence. She never uttered either a hasty, a silly, or a severe expression. In short, her temper was as polished as her wit. Nor were her manners inferior to her temper. They were of the happiest kind. No one could be often in her company without feeling a strong desire of obtaining her friendship, and cherishing a hope of having obtained it. She was tranquil without reserve or stiffness; and communicative without intrusion or self-sufficiency. She became an authoress entirely from taste and inclination. Neither the hope of fame nor profit mixed with her early motives. Most of her works, as before observed, were composed many years previous to their publication. It was with extreme difficulty that her friends, whose partiality she suspected whilst she honoured their judgement, could prevail on her to publish her first work. Nay, so persuaded was she that its sale would not repay the expense of publication, that she actually made a reserve from her very moderate income to meet the expected loss. She could scarcely believe what she termed her great good fortune when "Sense and Sensibility" produced a clear profit of about £150. Few so gifted were so truly unpretending. She regarded the above sum as a prodigious recompense for that which had cost her nothing. Her readers, perhaps, will wonder that such a work produced so little at a time when some authors have received more guineas than they have written lines. The works of our authoress, however, may live as long as those, which have burst on the world with more éclat. But the public has not been unjust; and our authoress was far from thinking it so. Most gratifying to her was the applause, which from time to time reached her ears from those who were competent to discriminate. Still, in spite of such applause, so much did she shrink from notoriety, that no accumulation of fame would have induced her, had she lived, to affix her name to any productions of her pen. In the bosom of her own family she talked of them freely, thankful for praise, open to remark, and submissive to criticism. But in public she turned away from any allusion to the character of an authoress. She read aloud with very great taste and effect. Her own works, probably, were never heard to so much advantage as from her own mouth; for she partook largely in all the best gifts of the comic muse. She was a warm and judicious admirer of landscape, both in nature and on canvass. At a very early age she was enamoured of Gilpin on the Picturesque; and she seldom changed her opinions either on books or men.

Her reading was very extensive in history and belles letters; and her memory extremely tenacious. Her favourite moral writers were Johnson in prose, and Cowper in verse. It is difficult to say at what age she was not intimately acquainted with the merits and defects of the best essays and novels in the English language. Richardson's power of creating, and preserving the consistency of his characters, as particularly exemplified in "Sir Charles Grandison," gratified the natural discrimination of her mind, whilst her taste secured her from the errors of his prolix style and tedious narrative. She did not rank any work of Fielding quite so high. Without the slightest affectation she recoiled from every thing gross. Neither nature, wit, nor humour, could make her amends for so very low a scale of morals.

Her power of inventing characters seems to have been intuitive, and almost unlimited. She drew from nature; but, whatever may have been surmised to the contrary, never from individuals.

The style of her familiar correspondence was in all respects the same as that of her novels. Every thing came finished from her pen; for on all subjects she had ideas as clear as her expressions were well chosen. It is not hazarding too much to say that she never dispatched a note or letter unworthy of publication.

One trait only remains to be touched on. It makes all others unimportant. She was thoroughly religious and devout; fearful of giving offence to God, and incapable of feeling it towards any fellow creature. On serious subjects she was well-instructed, both by reading and meditation, and her opinions accorded strictly with those of our Established Church.

London, 13 Dec. 1817

 

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posthumously - (After his death)

Main Entry: post·hu·mous
Pronunciation: 'päs-ch&-m&s also -t&-, -ty&-, -th&-; päst-'hyü-m&s, 'pOst-, -'yü-
Function: adjective
Etymology: Latin posthumus, alteration of postumus late-born, posthumous, from superlative of posterus coming after —more at POSTERIOR
Date: 1619
1 : born after the death of the father
2 : published after the death of the author
3 : following or occurring after death <posthumous fame>
- post·hu·mous·ly adverb
- post·hu·mous·ness noun