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  • Essay / Biography of Jane Austen - 826

    As a prose classic par excellence, Jane Austen has earned a permanent place in English literature. Austen's first novel was not published until she was thirty-five, but she wrote three juvenile volumes before she was eighteen (Jane Austen). "His career is generally divided into an early and a late period, the former encompassing the youth, as well as Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice (1813) and Northanger Abbey (1818), the latter including Emma (1816), Mansfield Park (1814) and Persuasion (1818). They are separated by an eight-year gap. (Jane Austen). There is an unusual viscosity in the works of the early and later periods; pronounced by a certain calming of the tone in his later works. Although Austen's literary artistry is remarkable, the facts of her biography, at first glance, are not. Foil captivated readers and scholars, and interest in his life today is almost as attractive as interest in his works. "Dating back to her time, when Austen's first four novels were published anonymously, sources of information about her life still exist - some of her letters (those which her sister Cassandra did not destroy after her death ) and A Memoir of Jane Austen, written by her nephew JE Austen-Leigh in 1869." (PBS) These sources reveal that Jane Austen's portrayal of the reserved life of an unmarried clergyman's daughter found primary reinforcement. of her art within her family circle and a basis for her novels in her personal and family history Jane Austen based her character's relationships with their siblings on her own ligature with her sister Casandra, with whom she is like. thieves. When Jane and her sister were separated, Jane wrote to him often; this is reflected throughout the middle of the paper...... inheritance since Mr. Collins would be the next man in the line to inherit M's fortune. . Bennet. If the girls did not marry, they would only have one piece left and they would be condemned to the life of spinsters. In the late 1700s and early 1800s, it would have been frowned upon for a woman not to marry. A marriage between one of the daughters and Mr. Collins would have been beneficial to the Bennet sisters since the family fortune would have passed to the immediate family. However, Elizabeth did not return his loving feelings to Mr. Collins. Austen had very strong morals when it came to marrying for love, as shown in Pride and Prejudice. Elizabeth refusing to marry Mr. Collins is similar to Emma's refusal of the pastor, Mr. Elton, resembling the lack of belief in the church on Austen's side and the fact that a marriage between her and a pastor would not suit her. would not have liked..