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Jane Austen's Letters 
  by Jane Austen 
                    
                    	
                    Paperback : 112 pages
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Jane Austen famously labeled her literary ambit a "little bit (two inches wide) of ivory." Luckily, her personal travels and those of her family were slightly more extensive, otherwise we should be without her letters. Not only should ...
Introduction
(Excellent compilation of Jane Austen's letters.
Jane Austen famously labeled her literary ambit a "little  bit (two inches wide) of ivory." Luckily, her personal travels  and those of her family were slightly more extensive, otherwise we  should be without her letters. Not only should every Janeite possess  them, but also every connoisseur of correspondence. Austen's wit is  ubiquitous--even though some protest it edges into waspishness. E. M.  Forster, for example, described the letters between Austen and her  beloved sister, Cassandra, as "the whinnying of harpies."
  On September 18, 1796, she tells Cassandra, "What dreadful Hot  weather we have!--It keeps one in a continual state of Inelegance.--If  Miss Pearson should return with me, pray be careful not to expect too  much Beauty..." The dashes and capitalization alone make one long  for the days before stylistic rules had so cemented. As for the  sentiments! Austen paces her monologues to perfection, making the  comic and ironic most out of the smallest incidents. Still, her  frustration does occasionally emerge. "I am forced to be  abusive," she implodes to Cassandra, "for want of a subject,  having nothing really to say." Jane Austen has more than enough  to say for lovers of literature and the cultural pinprick.
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