Jane Austen the Reader pp 30-52 | Cite as
What’s Not in Austen?: Critical Quixotry in ‘Love and Freindship’ and Northanger Abbey
Abstract
The World is so taken up of late with Novels and Romances, that it will be hard for a private History to be taken for Genuine, where the Names and other Circumstances of the Person are concealed, and on this Account we must be content to leave the Reader to pass his own Opinion upon the ensuing Sheets, and take it just as he pleases.
The Author is here suppos’d to be writing her own History … It is true, that the original of this Story is put into new Words, and the Stile of the famous Lady we here speak of is a little alter’d, particularly she is made to tell her own Tale in modester Words … The Pen employ’d in finishing her Story, and making it what you now see it to be, has had no little difficulty to put it into a Dress fit to be seen, and to make it speak Language fit to be read.6
Keywords
Rheumatic Fever Late Eighteenth Century Bank Note Revolutionary Period Novelistic RealismPreview
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Notes
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