Jane Austen lived the last few years of her too-short life in tranquil Chawton, Hampshire, with her mother, her cherished sister Cassandra, and and a family friend. The women were in a precarious financial state after the death of Jane’s father. Like most single women of their time, they had to depend on the kindness of relatives for a roof over their heads.
It was their good fortune that Jane’s brother Edward Knight was able to come to the rescue. Why was his name Edward Knight, not Edward Austen? He had been formally adopted by a childless cousin of Jane’s father, Thomas Knight. Thomas and his wife Catherine were wealthy and childless. They made Edward their heir. He inherited several estates, among them a grand house at Chawton. The house came with a sizable but cozy cottage, which Edward made available to his mother and sisters for their lifetimes.
At last, in her thirties, Jane had a stable home. She had begun writing as a teenager but had more or less given it up during the years that she had no settled home. In Chawton, she established a routine of writing every morning at a little round table in front of the dining room window. Her sister Cassandra took over morning household chores, giving Jane the freedom to write. In the afternoons, they took long walks in the countryside–just like Jane’s heroines. They also spent a lot of time visiting friends and relatives, including the wealthy connections Edward Knight was able to give them.
On this humble little table, Jane wrote the classics we know and love: Persuasion, Pride and Prejudice, Sense and Sensibility, Northanger Abbey, Mansfield Park, and Emma. Some of them she had begun earlier and had put away. Family lore had it that a squeaky door was purposely never oiled, so that Jane always had warning of visitors. She would hastily hide her manuscript until the visitors had left.
Jane’s books dealt gently and humorously with the serious problems of women dependent on men for economic security. As she knew all too well from her own life, an unmarried woman without a fortune of her own had very few options for survival.
I was deep in a discussion about Austen family history with a man stationed in the house, when I noticed that his name tag said, “Mr. Knight.” Could it be? Yes! My Mr. Knight was a living, breathing, direct descendant of Jane’s brother! I think he looks just like his ancestor.
In England, it always seems to me that history comes to life!
This was a nice history lesson. I have only read Pride and Prejudice and have not followed much of Jane Austen, although I plan to read more. Thanks for creating an interest in me!
Thank you! You’re in for a treat when you read more of Jane Austen. Also watch some of the best films made from her novels, like “Sense and Sensibility,” written by and starring Emma Thompson. And of course the BBC miniseries “Pride and Prejudice,” starring Colin Firth as the best-ever Mr. Darcy. And my personal favorite. “Persuasion,” with Amanda Root as Anne Elliot and the very manly and handsome Ciaran Hinds as her almost-lost love, Captain Wentworth.