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Lady Susan, Jane Austen’s manuscript

Lady Susan : the only complete surviving manuscript of Jane Austen’s fiction, reproduced in a graphically restored version for the first time.

Aged 18 or 19, when most young women of the Georgian period would have been thinking about engagement and marriage, Jane Austen was preoccupied with getting the fruits of her already fertile imagination down on paper. Though encouraged by family to pursue her literary interests, she could not have anticipated her eventual fame as one of the world’s most beloved authors, whose works would be widely adapted for film and theatre.

The precocious Jane most likely started writing Lady Susan in the early 1790s while staying at Steventon rectory, her childhood home in Hampshire. She wrote out this fair copy in Bath no earlier than 1805—the date of watermarks found on the paper stock used for this manuscript. Written and paginated in her hand, this 158-page manuscript is dedicated to Lady Knatchbull, Austen’s niece and considered by her as a ‘sister’.

The novel first appeared posthumously in 1871, when Lady Knatchbull authorised the writer’s nephew, James Edward Austen-Leigh, to publish it in the second edition of his Memoir of Jane Austen. This Lady Susan was printed from a non-authorial copy, as the manuscript only emerged after Lady Knatchbull’s death in 1882. First inherited by her son, it passed through the hands of several buyers until the mid-20th century. When sold at the Rosebery sale in 1933, it was described as “THE FINEST LITERARY MS. OF JANE AUSTEN extant”. In 1947, it was purchased for $6750 by Belle da Costa Green, Director of the Morgan Library in New York, where the manuscript is now housed.

This edition was produced in collaboration with the prestigious Morgan Library & Museum of New York, allowing readers to discover the pages once handwritten by Jane Austen in a graphically-restored version of the original.

Jane Austen Manuscript

Lady Susan, an epistolary novel

Probably influenced by fashionable epistolary novels by Samuel Richardson and Dangerous Liaisons (Les Liaisons dangereuses) by Pierre Choderlos de Laclos, Austen’s scathing novella tells the story of a seductive widow whose morals leave much to be desired. The character of Lady Susan was probably inspired by la Marquise de Merteuil, as Jane Austen’s cousin, Eliza de Feuillide, lived in France between 1779 and 1790.

When the novel was first published, it was officially titled with the name of its main character though the manuscript itself remains untitled. However, it might have already been known under this title within Austen's family.

The manuscript contains such memorable quotes as:

‘There is exquisite pleasure in subduing an insolent spirit, in making a person predetermined to dislike acknowledge one's superiority’ (Letter 7)

...epitomising the ambience of seduction and manipulation which is deployed throughout the 41 letters composing the novel.

Lady Susan remains Jane Austen’s only epistolary novel. She drafted four epistolary novels in the 1790’s, including Lady Susan and a first draft of what would become her first published novel, Sense and Sensibility. However, except for Lady Susan, she rewrote all three of them into narratives – each one including letters, but rejecting the pure epistolary structure she had begun with (see Susan Pepper Robins’ work). Thereafter, Austen didn’t pursue the epistolary form, but nevertheless, according to Austen specialists Christine Alexander and David Owen, the “particular use she makes of the letter form in Lady Susan” might even have “heightened her understanding of the letter’s value as a vital narrative element in her maturing fiction”.

Jane Austen's Handwritting

A manuscript to be treasured

This 158-page document remains Jane Austen’s only complete manuscript novel, the other surviving drafts being those of her unfinished works, The Watsons and Sanditon. There are no complete manuscripts for her two best-known novels, Sense and Sensibility and Pride and Prejudice – or, at least, they have never come to light. According to Austen scholar Kathryn Sutherland, these drafts were probably “routinely destroyed” after they were published in book form. This, as well as the care she took with Lady Susan’s fair copy, establishes this manuscript as “a literary object to be treasured”.

Lady Susan manuscript facsimile

Jane Austen, a self-assured and modern novelist

As a document it reveals much about Jane’s early self-assurance as a novelist, her fluency of thought and her unexpectedly modern use of punctuation—much favouring the use of dashes. Though it was later rebound into a different format, the manuscript originally took the form of a bound quarto notebook, which, according to Kathryn Sutherland, was “made in the same manner as those used for the three volumes of [Austen’s] teenage writings”. The way she wrote the manuscript, from top to bottom of the page leaving almost no margins and very little interlinear space, suggests she was trying to economise her paper usage. There are very few corrections in the manuscript of Lady Susan but when she does indeed make edits, she cautiously “squeezes in the corrections in the very small interlinear space”.

Lady Susan Manuscript book Cover

Posterity

Pride and Prejudice, Sense and Sensibility, Emma, Northanger Abbey… which other writer, especially a woman of the Georgian era, can boast about having made such an impression, in just a few years of writing, upon her era, the history of literature, and generations of readers?

Jane Austen became a published writer with Sense and Sensibility in 1811, a work which was soon followed by Pride and Prejudice in 1813, Mansfield Park in 1814 and Emma in 1816. The four novels met great success during her lifetime but the anonymity maintained by her publisher prevented her from achieving fame. However, her novels were read as far as the court of the future king George IV and praised by Sir Walter Scott. Her two other well-known novels, Northanger Abbey and Persuasion, were published after her death at the age of 41, in 1817.

In 1870, the publication of A Memoir of Jane Austen written by her nephew James Edward Austen-Leigh reassessed her life and works. In 1833, the publication of the complete set of her novels in six volumes by Richard Bentley contributed to her posthumous success, and since that time the writer inspired countless essays, works and adaptations in multiple forms. Today, Austen’s eager readers can visit The Jane Austen Centre, which is located on the same street the writer last lived in Bath, where she wrote this manuscript.

Lady Susan was adapted into a film in 2016 by American director Whit Whitney Stillman (Metropolitan). Entitled Love and Friendship, it is an acerbic romantic comedy in which Lady Susan is played by British actress Kate Beckinsale.

Lady Susan Book by Jane Austen

 

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