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This implies that the furniture had been hand-made to order.

Notes

1.­
William Austen-Leigh,
Jane Austen: Her Life and Letters
, p. 16.

2.­
James E. Austen-Leigh,
A Memoir of Jane Austen
, p. 15.

3.­
Mary Augusta Austen-Leigh,
Personal Aspects of Jane Austen
(Philadelphia: Pavilion Press, 2003), p. 15.

4.­
William Austen-Leigh,
Jane Austen: Her Life and Letters
, p. 12.

5.­
R.W. Chapman,
Jane Austen
:
Facts and Problems
, p. 21.

6.­
Ibid
.

7.­
From an eighteenth-century Terrier, compiled by John Church, Rector of Steventon, 1727–33, and quoted by Deirdre Le Faye in
Jane Austen’s Steventon
.

8.­
Maggie Lane,
We left Bath for Clifton, in Collected Reports of the Jane
Austen Society
, Report for 1987.

9.­
Caroline Austen,
My Aunt Jane Austen
, p. 46.

10.­
Letter from Jane Austen to Cassandra Austen, 1/2 December 1798.

11.­
Letter from Jane Austen to Cassandra Austen, 8/9 November 1800.

Jane was born on 16 December 1775 at Steventon Rectory, which would be her home for the next twenty-four years. Her father, the Revd George Austen, expressed his delight at the new arrival and he wrote to his sister Philadelphia to say: ‘We now have another girl, a present plaything for her sister Cassy [Cassandra], and a future companion’.
1
Undoubtedly Jane’s mother, Mrs Cassandra Austen, was equally delighted.

According to Jane’s nephew, James E. Austen-Leigh, Mrs Austen

followed a custom, not unusual in those days … of putting out her babies to be nursed in a cottage in the village. The infant was daily visited by one or both of its parents, and frequently brought to them at the parsonage, but the cottage was its home, and must have remained so till it was old enough to run about and talk.
2

Of her daughter Cassandra, Mrs Austen said:

I suckled my little girl thro’ the first quarter; she has been weaned and settled at a good woman’s at Deane just eight weeks; she is very healthy and lively, and puts on her short petticoats today.
3

In the case of Jane (and probably Cassandra also), Deirdre Le Faye believes that the foster parents referred to were John and Elizabeth Littleworth of nearby Deane.

Anna Lefroy recalled that in a room on the first floor of the rectory, the youthful Jane and her sister made a dressing room [used for dressing and for the storage of clothes] ‘as they were pleased to call it’. This ‘communicated with one of a smaller size’ where Jane and Cassandra slept:

I remember the common-looking carpet with its chocolate ground that covered the floor and some portions of the furniture. A painted press [wardrobe], with shelves above for books, that stood with its back to the wall next [to] the Bedroom, & opposite the fireplace; my Aunt Jane’s Pianoforte – & above all, on a table between the windows, above which hung a looking-glass, 2 Tonbridge-ware workboxes of oval shape [made at Tunbridge Wells and at Tonbridge in Kent], fitted up with ivory barrels containing reels for silk, yard measures, etc…. But the charm of the room with its scanty furniture and cheaply painted walls must have been, for those old enough to understand it, the flow of native homebred wit, with all the fun & nonsense of a large and clever family.
4

Jane learnt her letters and words using ivory tablets, on which was written a letter of the alphabet. A sampler – worked in various stitches as an indication of proficiency and intended to be framed and hung on the wall – embroidered by Jane, measured 10in by 11.5in. It portrayed a compilation of various phrases from
The Book of Common Prayer
, with her name and the date:

Praise the Lord oh my Soul and all that is within me

Praise his Holy Name as long as I live will I praise

The Lord I will give thanks unto God while I have

My Being sing unto the Lord oh ye Kingdoms of the

Earth sing praise unto the Lord Give the Lord the

Honour due unto his name worship the Lord with holy

Worship in the Time of trouble I will call upon the

Lord and he will hear me Turn thy Face from my

Sins and put out all my Misdeeds.

Jane Austen, 1797

Beneath the text are several trees, one of which has a bird sitting atop it, and the whole is surrounded by a patterned motif.
5
She also made herself clothes and hats, including a cap decorated with lace for indoor use which was worn with ribbons, the colours of which were chosen according to the occasion.

Jane was visited at the rectory by her music master George William Chard, assistant organist at Winchester Cathedral, who rode the 14 miles from that city to Steventon in order to teach her and, presumably, other pupils in the area. Jane said, ‘I practice [
sic
] every day as much as I can – I wish it were more for his sake’.
6
She practised the pianoforte each morning before breakfast, and entertained visitors with her playing whenever the occasion demanded it. She also spent time collecting songs and musical scores which she copied into her music book. She enjoyed singing, and a favourite song of hers which she loved to sing was by Scottish poet and songwriter Robert Burns entitled
Their Groves O’ Sweet Myrtle
:

Their groves o’ sweet myrtle let foreign lands reckon

Where bright-beaming summers exalt the perfume

Far dearer to me yon glen o’ green breckan

Wi’ the burn stealing under the lang yellow broom.

When Cassandra was sent at the age of 8 to a small, private school in Oxford, Jane, despite her tender age, insisted on joining her there. The school subsequently moved to Southampton where Jane and Cassandra were both taken ill with sore throats
(possibly caused by diphtheria), whereupon their mother took them back to Steventon to be nursed back to health. They were then sent to a boarding school in Reading where Jane remained until she was 11. After this they were taught at home, availing themselves of their father George’s his extensive library – with his permission.

Jane was taught French by Mrs Sarah Latournelle (
nèe
Hackitt), an Englishwoman who despite being married to a Frenchman could herself speak not a word of that language!
7
Mrs Latournelle ran a school in the Forbury, formerly the outer courtyard of Reading Abbey.

George Austen encouraged his children, Jane included, to appreciate poetry and literature. For example, in the evenings it was his habit to read to them works by the English poet William Cowper (whom Jane, when she became a novelist, often quoted in her novels). As James E. Austen-Leigh said of the Revd Austen:

Being not only a profound scholar, but possessing a most exquisite taste in every species of literature, it is not wonderful [surprising] that his daughter Jane should, at a very early age, have become sensible to the charms of style and enthusiastic in the cultivation of her own language.
8

And William Austen-Leigh, in his book
Jane Austen: Her Life
and Letters
, declared:

Jane Austen inherited from her father her serenity of mind, the refinement of her intellect, and her delicate appreciation of style.
9

Jane’s brother Henry also encouraged her in reading and, according to him, her ‘favourite moral writers were Samuel
Johnson in prose, and William Cowper in verse’.
10
This was not to say that Jane did not read the occasional raunchy novel, such as Henry Fielding’s
The History of Tom Jones
,
A Foundling
, or even works showing the darker side of life such as Mathew Lewis’s Gothic novel
The Monk
, featuring rape, incest and poisoning.

Jane’s talent for writing manifested itself in the plays which she wrote as a child and dedicated to various members of her family, including her father George and her brother Edward, and also to friends. But being a playwright was not enough. She also took part, with her siblings, in amateur theatricals which were normally performed in the large barn, except at Christmas time when they were held in the rectory dining room. A play was chosen – for instance,
The Sultan
by Anglo-Irish playwright Isaac Bickerstaffe (whose real name was Jonathan Swift), which was enacted at Steventon in 1790 – for which eldest brother James would normally compose a prologue and an epilogue. Other plays which were performed included Mrs Susannah Centlivre’s farcical comedy
The
Wonder: A Woman Keeps a Secret
; Henry Fielding’s
Tom Thumb
(a burlesque of the popular playwrights of the day), and the Revd James Townley’s farce
High Life Below Stairs
.

Jane and her siblings helped their mother at the glebe farm where Mrs Austen’s cattle were looked after by John Bond (born
c
.1738), the Revd Austen’s bailiff. ‘John Bond begins to find himself grow[ing] old’, Jane told her sister Cassandra, adding playfully that this was something ‘which John Bond ought not to do’. So it was thereafter decided that John was to confine himself to the less arduous duty of looking after the sheep.

Jane and Cassandra were in the habit of visiting and assisting those of their father’s parishioners who happened to be poor and needy. One Christmas time, for example, Jane purchased
for them items such as a shift (dress), a shawl and some pairs of worsted stockings with money provided by Steventon’s squire, Edward Knight of Godmersham Park, Kent.

Life was not all work and no play – which is not to suggest that Jane regarded her writing as anything other than a pleasure. Favourite games which she enjoyed were cup-and-ball, at which Jane was reputedly an expert; the New Game of Emulation, played with dice where the object was to reach the final square on which an angel was depicted, and spillikins, where turns were taken with an ivory stick with a hook on its end to pick up other sticks from a pile, without disturbing them. Charades were also popular and were intended ‘to enliven the long evenings … by merry verses and happy, careless inventions of the moment, such as flowed without difficulty from the lively minds of those amongst whom she lived’.
11

Not only Jane, but also her mother and father, and brothers James, Henry, and Francis, invented brain-teasing conundrums. The following is a somewhat macabre one, composed by Jane, where the reader is invited to guess to what the author is referring:

When my first is a task to a young girl of spirit

And my second confines her to finish the piece,

How hard is her fate! But how great is her merit

If by taking the whole she effect her release!

And the answer to the conundrum is ‘Hemlock’!

Jane and Cassandra enjoyed walking to Deane to visit their friends Mary and Martha Lloyd – a journey which Jane particularly relished when the ‘hard, black frosts lay on the ground’.
12
Anna Lefroy remembered how, on the walks through the lanes, Jane and Cassandra wore ‘pattens’ (shoes with raised soles intended to protect the dress when the wearer walked outdoors
on muddy ground), which were ‘usually worn at that time, even by Gentlewomen. I remember too their bonnets [which were] precisely alike in colour, shape & material’.
13

Jane also enjoyed visiting nearby Overton where she made purchases from a ‘Scotchman’ (a person, not necessarily Scottish by nationality, who was a doorstep seller of fabric and drapery goods):

The Overton Scotchman has been kind enough to rid me of some of my money, in exchange for six shifts and four pairs of stockings. The Irish [linen] is not so fine as I should like; but as I gave as much money for it as I intended, I have no reason to complain. It cost me 3
s
6
d
per yard.
14

Balls were held in the Town Hall at Basingstoke, where the Master of Ceremonies introduced the guests and initiated the proceedings by leading one of the young ladies out onto the floor. Minuets, quadrilles and ‘Roger de Coverley’ were favourite dances of the day. The most favourite dance, however, was the polka, and this was undoubtedly on account of its having been forbidden at Court – ladies not being expected to reveal as much of their legs as the dance required. Jane responded to this injunction by transcribing as many polkas as she could lay her hands on into her music book, and playing them on the pianoforte at every conceivable opportunity!

Jane had the good fortune to have a friend, Mrs Anne Lefroy (whose son Benjamin would marry Jane’s niece Anna Austen), who was generous by nature and arranged many social gatherings at her home, which was not far from Steventon. Jane always felt at a certain disadvantage; she and her sister being obliged each to survive on a mere
£
20 a year allowance, given to them by their father for their personal expenses. This was until she earned money of her own through the sales of her books.

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