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  • Jane Austen is loved mainly as a guide to fashionable life in the Regency period,

  • but her own vision of her task was radically different.

  • She was an ambitious and stern moralist.

  • She was acutely conscious of human failings and wanted, through her novels,

  • to make people less selfish and more reasonable.

  • More dignified, and sensitive to the needs of others.

  • Born in 1775, Austen grew up in a small village in Hampshire, where her father was the Anglican rector.

  • They had high social status, but were not well off.

  • She did much of her writing at a tiny octagonal table.

  • She never married, though on a couple of occasions she was tempted.

  • Mostly, she lived in the country with her sister, Cassandra.

  • The novel was her chosen weapon in the struggle to reform humanity.

  • She completed six: Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice, Mansfield Park, Emma, Northanger Abbey, and Persuasion.

  • Some of the main things she wants to teach you are.

  • 1. Let your lover educate you.

  • In Pride and Prejudice, Mr. Darcy and Elizabeth Bennet start off heartily disliking each other and then gradually realize they're in love.

  • They make one of the great romantic couples.

  • But why actually are they right for one another?

  • Austen is very clear: it's for a reason we tend not to think of very much today.

  • Each can educate and improve the other.

  • Darcy starts of feeling superior, because he has more money and higher status.

  • Then, at a key moment, Elizabeth condemns his arrogance and pride to his face.

  • It sounds offensive, but later he admits:

  • Your reproof so well applied, I shall never forget.

  • You taught me a lesson, hard indeed at first, but most advantageous.

  • By you, I was properly humbled.

  • They suit each other because by her ease and liveliness, his mind might have been softened, his manners improved.

  • And from his judgment, information and knowledge of the world, she must have received benefit of greater importance.

  • In other words, they balance each other out.

  • We tend to think of love as liking someone for who they are already - total acceptance.

  • But Austen is saying that the right person has got to be able to help us overcome our failings.

  • And become more mature, honest, and kind; and we need to do something similar for them.

  • Darcy and Elizabeth improve one another, and then the novelist lets them get engaged.

  • The story rewards them because they have developed well.

  • That's why the novel feels so beautifully constructed, and it illustrates a basic truth:

  • marriage depends on maturity and education.

  • 2. We shouldn't stop judging people ; but we have to judge more carefully.

  • Mansfield Park starts when quiet, shy Fanny Price goes to live with her much richer cousins, the Bertrams.

  • In social terms, the Bertrams are stars, and Fanny is a very minor character indeed.

  • But Austen judges by a completely different standard.

  • She exchanges the normal lens through which people are viewed in society, a lens which magnifies wealth and power, for a moral lens, which magnifies qualities of character.

  • Certainly, Fanny has no elegant dresses or money and can't speak French.

  • But by the end of Mansfield Park, she is revealed as the noble one.

  • While the Bertrams, despite their titles and accomplishments, have fallen into moral confusion.

  • 3. Take money seriously.

  • Austen is quite frank about money.

  • In Pride and Prejudice, she explains that Mr. Bingley has an income of 4000 pounds a year - that's rather a lot - while Darcy has more than twice that.

  • Rather than feeling it's impolite to discuss money, Austen thinks it's an eminently suitable topic for highbrow literature.

  • Because how we handle our finances has a huge effect on our lives.

  • She takes aim at two big mistakes people make around money.

  • The first is to get over impressed by it. In Mansfield Park, Julia Bertram gets married to Mr. Rushworth, the richest character in all of Austen's novels.

  • But they are miserable together, and their marriage rapidly falls apart.

  • But equally, Austen is convinced that it's a serious error to get married without enough money.

  • At one point in Sense and Sensibility, it looks like Elinor Dashwood and Edward Ferrars - who are otherwise well suited - won't be able to get married.

  • She writes, "They were neither of them quite enough in love to think that 350 pounds a year would supply them with the comforts of life."

  • Elinor takes the view that wealth has much to do with happiness.

  • Though, by wealth, she doesn't mean great luxury, just enough to live carefully in moderate comfort.

  • And Austen agrees.

  • Marriage without a reasonable economic basis is just a folly.

  • Austen is showing us an elusive but crucial attitude.

  • Money is in some ways extremely important, and in other ways unimportant. We can't just be for it or against it.

  • 4. Don't be snobbish.

  • In Emma, the heroine - Emma herself - takes Harriett Smith - a pretty girl from the village - under her wing.

  • She wants to make her an impressive match with a smart vicar.

  • Swept away by Emma's excessive praise, Harriet turns down an offer of marriage from a farmer because she thinks now that he's not good enough.

  • Though in fact, he is good-hearted and quietly prosperous.

  • Then the vicar turns out to be horrified at Emma's idea and Harriet has her heart broken.

  • The underlying point is serious, Emma is unwittingly but cruelly snobbish.

  • She's devoted to the wrong kind of hierarchy.

  • The farmer is essentially a better person than the vicar,

  • but social conventions and manners make it easy to ignore this.

  • Jane Austen is careful to give this fault to Emma, who is in many ways an enchanting character.

  • In other words, Jane Austen doesn't mock snobbery as the behavior of ghastly and contemptible people.

  • Instead, she regards the snob with pity, as someone who's in need of instruction, guidance, and reform.

  • As we all are, in our own way.

  • Austen might have written sermons; she wrote novels instead.

  • She doesn't tell us why her sense of priorities is important, instead, she shows us in a story

  • which will also make us laugh, which can grip us enough that we want to finish supper early to read on.

  • Upon finishing one of the novels, we're invited to go back into the world and respond to others as she has taught us.

  • To pick up on, and recoil from greed, arrogance, and pride, and to be drawn to goodness within ourselves and others.

  • Sadly, the moral ambition of the novel has largely disappeared in the modern world.

  • Yet it's really the best thing that any novel can do.

  • The satisfaction we feel when reading Jane Austen is really because she wants the world to be a certain way and we find that immensely appealing.

  • It's the secret, largely unrecognized reason why she is such a loved writer.

Jane Austen is loved mainly as a guide to fashionable life in the Regency period,

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