On the day of the anniversary of his birth, I could not dedicate my book to Jane Austen.
daughter of an Anglican priest was born December 16, 1775 at Steventon, in Hampshire, a small village in south-east England, where he lived for twenty-five years. In 1783 Jane and her sister, Cassandra attending a school in Oxford, then moved to Southampton, which, following the outbreak of an epidemic of diphtheria, are forced to leave. From 1785 to 1786 the Austen sisters attending the Abbey School in Reading. Jane never left his family and remain a bachelor until the end of his days, after the death her sister Cassandra, and then the brothers and their descendants, destroyed most of the letters and private papers which had belonged. In 1798 also ended Austen Sense and Sensibility, published in 1811 and then Northanger Abbey, Austen sold by a publisher, published only in 1818, after the family of the writer he had regained. In 1801 the family decided to leave Steventon Austen moved to Bath, and during their stay in the city I wrote Jane Watson, left incomplete, and worked a number of changes of "Lady Susan". Here his father died suddenly in 1805, so his family moved to Southampton, his brother Frank, and later, in 1809, Chawtown in a small village a few miles from her place of origin, where his brother Edward placed at the disposal of his mother and sisters of a cottage he owned. Here she saw and prepared for publication in the already written three novels (Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice and Northanger Abbey), wrote his last three novels (Mansfield Park, Emma and Persuasion) and began Sanditon, remained unfinished. Austen lived for three years and then to Southampton, from 1809 to Chawton, Hampshire. To this period belong Mansfield Park, completed in 1814, Emma, \u200b\u200bPersuasion and concluded in 1816 published posthumously in 1818 with Northanger Abbey. When Persuasion was published, together with the author's name was revealed, until then remained strictly anonymous. In 1816, the health conditions worsened by Jane suffers from Addison's disease, incurable at that time, her sister Cassandra in 1817 led her to Winchester, in search of adequate treatment, but Austen died in that city. In recent months he had begun drafting Sanditon, the work that was supposed to be the result of persuasion and in which the dominant theme was the satire on the progress and its consequences on the characters of people.
Citations:
daughter of an Anglican priest was born December 16, 1775 at Steventon, in Hampshire, a small village in south-east England, where he lived for twenty-five years. In 1783 Jane and her sister, Cassandra attending a school in Oxford, then moved to Southampton, which, following the outbreak of an epidemic of diphtheria, are forced to leave. From 1785 to 1786 the Austen sisters attending the Abbey School in Reading. Jane never left his family and remain a bachelor until the end of his days, after the death her sister Cassandra, and then the brothers and their descendants, destroyed most of the letters and private papers which had belonged. In 1798 also ended Austen Sense and Sensibility, published in 1811 and then Northanger Abbey, Austen sold by a publisher, published only in 1818, after the family of the writer he had regained. In 1801 the family decided to leave Steventon Austen moved to Bath, and during their stay in the city I wrote Jane Watson, left incomplete, and worked a number of changes of "Lady Susan". Here his father died suddenly in 1805, so his family moved to Southampton, his brother Frank, and later, in 1809, Chawtown in a small village a few miles from her place of origin, where his brother Edward placed at the disposal of his mother and sisters of a cottage he owned. Here she saw and prepared for publication in the already written three novels (Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice and Northanger Abbey), wrote his last three novels (Mansfield Park, Emma and Persuasion) and began Sanditon, remained unfinished. Austen lived for three years and then to Southampton, from 1809 to Chawton, Hampshire. To this period belong Mansfield Park, completed in 1814, Emma, \u200b\u200bPersuasion and concluded in 1816 published posthumously in 1818 with Northanger Abbey. When Persuasion was published, together with the author's name was revealed, until then remained strictly anonymous. In 1816, the health conditions worsened by Jane suffers from Addison's disease, incurable at that time, her sister Cassandra in 1817 led her to Winchester, in search of adequate treatment, but Austen died in that city. In recent months he had begun drafting Sanditon, the work that was supposed to be the result of persuasion and in which the dominant theme was the satire on the progress and its consequences on the characters of people.
Citations:
- I do not want people to be agreeable, as it saves me the trouble of like her a lot.
- When a review is general is mostly correct.
- Friendship is certainly the best balm for the wounds of unrequited love.
- One half of the world can not understand the pleasures of the other half.
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