Jane Austen, Her Life and Letters

Richard Arthur Austen-Leigh

Jane Austen, Her Life and Letters, by William

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Title: Jane Austen, Her Life and Letters A Family Record
Author: William Austen-Leigh and Richard Arthur Austen-Leigh

Release Date: September 7, 2007 [eBook #22536]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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Transcriber's note:
Obvious punctuation errors have been corrected.
The title page lists the authors as Austen-Leigh. The text omits the hyphen. This was retained.
Text that was superscripted in the original is enclosed within curly brackets preceded by a carat character. Example: Ser^{t,}
In the interests of maintaining the integrity of the Austen letters, archaic or unusual spellings were retained as was inconsistent capitalization. For example: expence, acknowlegement; d'Arblay, D'Arblay.
Readers who print this text should be warned that it contains family trees up to 209 characters in width.
More detailed notes, including a list of corrections, will be found at the end of the text.

JANE AUSTEN
HER LIFE AND LETTERS
A Family Record
by
WILLIAM AUSTEN-LEIGH
and
RICHARD ARTHUR AUSTEN-LEIGH
With a Portrait

London Smith, Elder & Co., 15 Waterloo Place 1913 [All rights reserved]
[Illustration: J. Zoffany R. A. pinxit Emery Walker Ph. sc.
Jane Austen
see p. 62]

PREFACE
Since 1870-1, when J. E. Austen Leigh[1] published his Memoir of Jane Austen, considerable additions have been made to the stock of information available for her biographers. Of these fresh sources of knowledge the set of letters from Jane to Cassandra, edited by Lord Brabourne, has been by far the most important. These letters are invaluable as m��moires pour servir; although they cover only the comparatively rare periods when the two sisters were separated, and although Cassandra purposely destroyed many of the letters likely to prove the most interesting, from a distaste for publicity.
Some further correspondence, and many incidents in the careers of two of her brothers, may be read in Jane Austen's Sailor Brothers, by J. H. Hubback and Edith C. Hubback; while Miss Constance Hill has been able to add several family traditions to the interesting topographical information embodied in her Jane Austen: Her Homes and Her Friends. Nor ought we to forget the careful research shown in other biographies of the author, especially that by Mr. Oscar Fay Adams.
During the last few years, we have been fortunate enough to be able to add to this store; and every existing MS. or tradition preserved by the family, of which we have any knowledge, has been placed at our disposal.
It seemed, therefore, to us that the time had come when a more complete chronological account of the novelist's life might be laid before the public, whose interest in Jane Austen (as we readily acknowledge) has shown no signs of diminishing, either in England or in America.
The Memoir must always remain the one firsthand account of her, resting on the authority of a nephew who knew her intimately and that of his two sisters. We could not compete with its vivid personal recollections; and the last thing we should wish to do, even were it possible, would be to supersede it. We believe, however, that it needs to be supplemented, not only because so much additional material has been brought to light since its publication, but also because the account given of their aunt by her nephew and nieces could be given only from their own point of view, while the incidents and characters fall into a somewhat different perspective if the whole is seen from a greater distance. Their knowledge of their aunt was during the last portion of her life, and they knew her best of all in her last year, when her health was failing and she was living in much seclusion; and they were not likely to be the recipients of her inmost confidences on the events and sentiments of her youth.
Hence the emotional and romantic side of her nature--a very real one--has not been dwelt upon. No doubt the Austens were, as a family, unwilling to show their deeper feelings, and the sad end of Jane's one romance would naturally tend to intensify this dislike of expression; but the feeling was there, and it finally found utterance in her latest work, when, through Anne Elliot, she claimed for women the right of 'loving longest when existence or when hope is gone.'
Then, again, her nephew and nieces hardly knew how much she
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