JANE AUSTEN BIOGRAPHY
While the literary art of Jane Austen is remarkable, the facts of her
biography, at first glance, are not. The contrast has long intrigued Austen
readers and scholars, and interest in her life is today almost as keen as
interest in her works. Dating back to her own time, when Austen's first four
novels were published anonymously, sources of information about her life still
exist — some of her letters (those her sister Cassandra did not destroy after
her death), and A Memoir of Jane Austen, written
by her nephew J.E. Austen-Leigh in 1869. These sources reveal that Austen did
lead the quiet life of an unmarried clergyman's daughter. She found early
encouragement for her art within her family circle, and a starting point for
her novels in her personal and family history.
Born in 1775 to George and Cassandra
Austen in the English village of Steventon, Jane Austen grew up in a highly
literate family. Austen's father was an Oxford-educated clergyman and her
mother was a humorous, aristocratic woman. Educated only briefly outside of her
home, Austen read freely in her father's library of 500 books, which left her
better educated than most young girls of the time. While her family never
anticipated she would be a published writer (not considered an appropriate
profession for a young lady of her background), within the walls of their
household she was encouraged to write. In this lively intellectual household
the 15-year-old Austen began writing her own novels; and by age 23 she had
completed the original versions of Northanger Abbey, Sense
and Sensibility, and Pride and Prejudice. Her own
delight in reading and her ironic mocking of its impact on young girls comes
alive in Northanger Abbey.
After Austen's father died in 1805,
Jane, her mother, and sister Cassandra lived in a small house provided by her
then-wealthy brother Edward in the village of Chawton. When Jane received a
proposal from the wealthy brother of a close friend, for whom she felt no
affection, she initially accepted him, only to turn him down the next day. This
was a painful decision for her, as she understood deeply that marriage was the
sole option women had for social mobility. She further understood the
vulnerability of single women without family estates who depend on wealthy
relatives for a home. This subject is at the heart of Sense
and Sensibility.
Austen keenly observed the shifting of
social class during her day. Two of her brothers were in the Royal British
Navy, and she saw first-hand the rise of naval officers in class-conscious
British society. Those who returned from the Napoleonic wars with both wealth
and notoriety were able to break through class barriers that were previously
impenetrable. She wrote elegantly about this sea change in her last novel, Persuasion.
Jane Austen died on July 18, 1817, at age 41. She never wrote a memoir,
sat for an interview, or recorded whether she had herself felt the joys and
disappointments of love. The biographical facts may never adequately explain
the quick wit, the sharp insight, and the deep emotional intelligence she
brought to her novels. Perhaps that is impossible; it is likely that the novels
will continue to transcend our understanding of where they came from.
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