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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:04,600 --> 00:00:09,920 This programme contains some strong language 2 00:00:22,400 --> 00:00:27,200 Jane Austen is Britain's most celebrated female novelist. 3 00:00:28,391 --> 00:00:32,239 She left behind timeless masterpieces 4 00:00:32,240 --> 00:00:35,119 including Pride and Prejudice, 5 00:00:35,120 --> 00:00:36,799 Sense and Sensibility 6 00:00:36,800 --> 00:00:38,959 and Emma. 7 00:00:38,960 --> 00:00:41,199 Revealing the inner lives of men and women 8 00:00:41,200 --> 00:00:44,320 in a way that still speaks to us today. 9 00:00:46,600 --> 00:00:49,720 But getting into her own mind isn't easy. 10 00:00:53,200 --> 00:00:56,599 In her lifetime, Austen wrote thousands of letters 11 00:00:56,600 --> 00:00:59,359 to her beloved sister, Cassandra, 12 00:00:59,360 --> 00:01:01,440 sharing her innermost thoughts. 13 00:01:03,040 --> 00:01:08,079 But after Jane's death, at the age of just 41, 14 00:01:08,080 --> 00:01:09,440 her sister burned them. 15 00:01:10,560 --> 00:01:12,599 We have to ask ourselves why? 16 00:01:12,600 --> 00:01:14,080 What was at risk there? 17 00:01:15,120 --> 00:01:18,679 In the letters she could be so funny 18 00:01:18,680 --> 00:01:20,840 and wicked and outrageous. 19 00:01:22,040 --> 00:01:24,079 But some of them are so offensive. 20 00:01:24,080 --> 00:01:27,600 Cassandra knew they would cause a lot of upset. 21 00:01:30,000 --> 00:01:33,080 But a handful of letters survive. 22 00:01:34,640 --> 00:01:37,519 Now, with the help of writers, 23 00:01:37,520 --> 00:01:39,359 experts 24 00:01:39,360 --> 00:01:42,039 and actors, 25 00:01:42,040 --> 00:01:45,640 we can piece her extraordinary life back together. 26 00:01:48,000 --> 00:01:50,280 NOISY STREET DIN 27 00:01:54,880 --> 00:01:59,039 Jane Austen was a writer teeming with new ideas 28 00:01:59,040 --> 00:02:03,079 who revealed profound truths about the world she lived in. 29 00:02:03,080 --> 00:02:05,359 There is writing before Austen 30 00:02:05,360 --> 00:02:07,559 and there is writing after Austen. 31 00:02:07,560 --> 00:02:10,680 That achievement is enormous. 32 00:02:11,880 --> 00:02:17,280 Jane Austen is the greatest comic novelist we have ever produced. 33 00:02:18,440 --> 00:02:19,679 GUNSHOT 34 00:02:19,680 --> 00:02:23,359 At a time when women were supposed to know their place, 35 00:02:23,360 --> 00:02:25,799 Jane ripped up the rule book. 36 00:02:25,800 --> 00:02:28,479 She's not just writing about romance. 37 00:02:28,480 --> 00:02:30,959 We should see her as a political novelist. 38 00:02:30,960 --> 00:02:34,399 She's telling young women, I see you and I hear you, 39 00:02:34,400 --> 00:02:37,080 which I think is such a modern thing. 40 00:02:38,680 --> 00:02:41,399 Austen's life is a tale of ambition, 41 00:02:41,400 --> 00:02:44,319 struggle and tragedy. 42 00:02:44,320 --> 00:02:47,199 A genius cut down in her prime. 43 00:02:47,200 --> 00:02:49,799 She's really good at the light, the ironic, 44 00:02:49,800 --> 00:02:51,159 the beautifully observed, 45 00:02:51,160 --> 00:02:54,160 and then life drives a truck into that. 46 00:02:55,240 --> 00:02:58,439 This is the story of how a self-taught country girl 47 00:02:58,440 --> 00:03:02,319 from a Hampshire village defied the conventions of her day 48 00:03:02,320 --> 00:03:05,760 to become one of the greatest novelists who ever lived. 49 00:03:07,800 --> 00:03:11,679 Her voice is so strong and funny and perceptive. 50 00:03:11,680 --> 00:03:15,600 And her work's still being copied and stolen by people like me. 51 00:03:17,400 --> 00:03:18,999 She did what she wanted to do. 52 00:03:19,000 --> 00:03:21,770 And it makes me feel like I can always do what I want to do. 53 00:03:40,880 --> 00:03:43,199 1793. 54 00:03:43,200 --> 00:03:46,439 King George III is on the throne. 55 00:03:46,440 --> 00:03:50,679 It's an age of trade, slavery and Empire 56 00:03:50,680 --> 00:03:53,440 where vast fortunes are being made. 57 00:03:53,441 --> 00:03:57,119 It's also a time of danger with the risk of destitution 58 00:03:57,120 --> 00:03:59,560 and the poorhouse... 59 00:04:00,760 --> 00:04:04,800 ..where your position at birth dictates the shape of your life. 60 00:04:06,920 --> 00:04:09,640 But that world is starting to change. 61 00:04:11,040 --> 00:04:13,759 Ideas of progress and equality 62 00:04:13,760 --> 00:04:16,080 are breaking down old assumptions. 63 00:04:17,760 --> 00:04:20,199 And for those who take the risk, 64 00:04:20,200 --> 00:04:22,520 opportunities are there to be had. 65 00:04:37,520 --> 00:04:39,960 Jane Austen is 17 years old. 66 00:04:42,520 --> 00:04:46,239 She's grown up in the village of Steventon in Hampshire, 67 00:04:46,240 --> 00:04:50,360 with six brothers and one older sister, Cassandra. 68 00:04:54,280 --> 00:04:57,439 Jane is in a sort of perfect petri dish for a writer 69 00:04:57,440 --> 00:05:00,359 in that she's got a lot of siblings, 70 00:05:00,360 --> 00:05:01,560 a lot of brothers. 71 00:05:02,800 --> 00:05:05,720 So there's a huge amount of stimulation and fun. 72 00:05:07,160 --> 00:05:10,079 Lots of things to talk about, things to see, 73 00:05:10,080 --> 00:05:12,279 things to watch going on. 74 00:05:12,280 --> 00:05:15,439 And her siblings will become 75 00:05:15,440 --> 00:05:18,680 her first fully realised characters. 76 00:05:22,240 --> 00:05:25,280 Her father George is the clergyman of the village. 77 00:05:26,400 --> 00:05:28,159 The job doesn't pay well 78 00:05:28,160 --> 00:05:30,240 but it does come with a home. 79 00:05:32,640 --> 00:05:34,799 They don't own the place they live in. 80 00:05:34,800 --> 00:05:36,559 Nonetheless, as a rector, 81 00:05:36,560 --> 00:05:37,799 he has social status, 82 00:05:37,800 --> 00:05:39,300 doesn't have any money though. 83 00:05:40,640 --> 00:05:44,560 And he is using multiple jobs to try to make ends meet. 84 00:05:46,040 --> 00:05:47,919 They had just enough money 85 00:05:47,920 --> 00:05:51,360 but there's always the risk that they could sink downwards. 86 00:05:52,840 --> 00:05:54,839 This is the worry that hangs over 87 00:05:54,840 --> 00:05:56,320 the heads of the Austens. 88 00:05:58,040 --> 00:06:00,959 The Austen family may not be rich 89 00:06:00,960 --> 00:06:03,640 but they do have something of value. 90 00:06:04,720 --> 00:06:06,479 It's a modest home, 91 00:06:06,480 --> 00:06:09,880 but most importantly, it's got a library. 92 00:06:12,240 --> 00:06:14,840 It contains some 500 books. 93 00:06:15,840 --> 00:06:17,159 This is unusual. 94 00:06:17,160 --> 00:06:19,399 It's remarkable for a family with limited finances 95 00:06:19,400 --> 00:06:20,760 to have this many books. 96 00:06:22,480 --> 00:06:25,639 And the library is full of these ideas. 97 00:06:25,640 --> 00:06:30,039 You've got the great classics of the time, history, 98 00:06:30,040 --> 00:06:32,599 this world of literature, this world of politics. 99 00:06:32,600 --> 00:06:34,120 It's at her fingertips. 100 00:06:35,400 --> 00:06:40,079 And there's an inspiring new kind of book on her father's shelves - 101 00:06:40,080 --> 00:06:43,559 the novel - a form of writing which takes the reader 102 00:06:43,560 --> 00:06:46,440 into the worlds of vivid fictional characters. 103 00:06:48,880 --> 00:06:53,200 Of course, all of this is fuel for her future genius. 104 00:06:54,440 --> 00:06:56,840 This is where she's made, in this library. 105 00:06:59,680 --> 00:07:02,479 From childhood, Jane's love of reading 106 00:07:02,480 --> 00:07:06,000 fuels an obsession with writing stories of her own. 107 00:07:07,480 --> 00:07:09,599 We know that from a very young age, 108 00:07:09,600 --> 00:07:11,799 Jane is writing these exuberant, 109 00:07:11,800 --> 00:07:15,039 energetic, satirical little skits. 110 00:07:15,040 --> 00:07:17,120 CHILDREN LAUGH 111 00:07:18,640 --> 00:07:20,720 She's very funny, she's very witty. 112 00:07:21,920 --> 00:07:25,680 They're full of people falling down dead drunk, especially women. 113 00:07:27,200 --> 00:07:30,400 They're just about what women should get up to or not get up to. 114 00:07:32,040 --> 00:07:35,359 One of Austen's earliest known stories is titled 115 00:07:35,360 --> 00:07:37,999 The Beautiful Cassandra. 116 00:07:38,000 --> 00:07:40,399 Jane hero worships her sister. 117 00:07:40,400 --> 00:07:43,319 Famously her mother said if Cassandra was going to have 118 00:07:43,320 --> 00:07:45,679 her head cut off, Jane would have her head cut off too. 119 00:07:45,680 --> 00:07:47,519 She's obsessed with Cassandra. 120 00:07:47,520 --> 00:07:50,439 The heroine is a mischievous adventurer 121 00:07:50,440 --> 00:07:53,280 who storms around London causing trouble. 122 00:07:53,281 --> 00:07:56,879 "When Cassandra had attained her 16th year, 123 00:07:56,880 --> 00:07:58,840 "she was lovely and amiable." 124 00:07:59,840 --> 00:08:03,639 "She then proceeded to a pastry cook's where she devoured six ices, 125 00:08:03,640 --> 00:08:06,319 "refused to pay for them, knocked down the pastry cook 126 00:08:06,320 --> 00:08:07,799 "and walked away." 127 00:08:07,800 --> 00:08:10,399 CHILDREN CHEER AND GIGGLE 128 00:08:10,400 --> 00:08:13,639 For Jane to have girls punching pastry chefs 129 00:08:13,640 --> 00:08:17,079 and watching people falling over drunk, 130 00:08:17,080 --> 00:08:20,719 you can see that she is being playful but also it's that 131 00:08:20,720 --> 00:08:23,190 rebellious streak running through Jane Austen. 132 00:08:24,840 --> 00:08:27,839 What distinguishes her teenage writing 133 00:08:27,840 --> 00:08:31,119 is its mastery of form 134 00:08:31,120 --> 00:08:33,119 and its mastery of parody. 135 00:08:33,120 --> 00:08:36,199 I think if you've got five older brothers and an older sister, 136 00:08:36,200 --> 00:08:38,359 you do quite a lot of listening, don't you? 137 00:08:38,360 --> 00:08:40,599 She's obviously got a great ear 138 00:08:40,600 --> 00:08:42,470 and that's a great thing for a writer. 139 00:08:45,040 --> 00:08:47,199 By the age of 17, 140 00:08:47,200 --> 00:08:51,919 her stories have only been read and enjoyed by family and friends. 141 00:08:51,920 --> 00:08:53,720 Jane Austen wants more. 142 00:08:55,480 --> 00:08:58,719 We know from the letters that she is ambitious. 143 00:08:58,720 --> 00:09:02,440 She knows herself, she wants to be a writer. 144 00:09:04,160 --> 00:09:07,119 But as a young woman in Georgian Britain, 145 00:09:07,120 --> 00:09:09,479 Austen's options are limited. 146 00:09:09,480 --> 00:09:13,239 Women in the 1790s have no rights. 147 00:09:13,240 --> 00:09:15,199 What little education is afforded them 148 00:09:15,200 --> 00:09:17,320 is really just training for being a wife. 149 00:09:19,040 --> 00:09:23,079 Girls are expected to live a life of domestic obedience 150 00:09:23,080 --> 00:09:25,559 as wives and mothers. 151 00:09:25,560 --> 00:09:27,799 And so Jane finds herself 152 00:09:27,800 --> 00:09:30,319 a chess piece to be moved around the board to support 153 00:09:30,320 --> 00:09:31,999 other family members, 154 00:09:32,000 --> 00:09:34,999 to help with births, marriages and deaths, 155 00:09:35,000 --> 00:09:38,319 as is convenient to the family. 156 00:09:38,320 --> 00:09:41,280 SEAGULL CRIES 157 00:09:44,720 --> 00:09:48,159 16th of December 1793, 158 00:09:48,160 --> 00:09:51,119 Jane has been sent to Southampton. 159 00:09:51,120 --> 00:09:54,039 Southampton is a very busy port. 160 00:09:54,040 --> 00:09:56,720 It has that kind of rough and ready vibe. 161 00:09:56,721 --> 00:10:00,279 You're seeing all sorts of different nationalities, 162 00:10:00,280 --> 00:10:01,960 people of colour, men and women. 163 00:10:03,000 --> 00:10:05,440 Sailors, soldiers, mercenaries. 164 00:10:07,720 --> 00:10:11,639 All different classes mingling in these hustling, bustling spaces. 165 00:10:11,640 --> 00:10:16,199 As a young woman and as a writer, this is incredibly exciting 166 00:10:16,200 --> 00:10:18,519 and she's storing up these experiences, 167 00:10:18,520 --> 00:10:20,360 like any creative person. 168 00:10:21,800 --> 00:10:24,439 It's Jane's 18th birthday, 169 00:10:24,440 --> 00:10:27,199 but she is not here to celebrate. 170 00:10:27,200 --> 00:10:31,200 She is here to help her cousin, Elizabeth, who is going into labour. 171 00:10:33,520 --> 00:10:37,399 To be dispatched to support the birth of a family member, 172 00:10:37,400 --> 00:10:40,479 with no experience, no real understanding of what's going on. 173 00:10:40,480 --> 00:10:43,159 ECHOING SCREAMS 174 00:10:43,160 --> 00:10:45,840 I mean, talk about being chucked into the deep end. 175 00:10:48,160 --> 00:10:51,839 The reality of giving birth in Georgian England 176 00:10:51,840 --> 00:10:55,199 is messy, it's bloody, it's dangerous. 177 00:10:55,200 --> 00:10:57,800 A woman can die and the baby can die. 178 00:10:59,400 --> 00:11:03,200 Four of Jane's relatives die in childbirth. 179 00:11:04,880 --> 00:11:08,439 To see that at 18 must have been mind-blowing. 180 00:11:08,440 --> 00:11:10,799 ECHOING SCREAM 181 00:11:10,800 --> 00:11:12,799 She would not have discounted the fact 182 00:11:12,800 --> 00:11:14,960 that this was going to be her fate too. 183 00:11:14,961 --> 00:11:18,399 Jane Austen is probably looking at this woman 184 00:11:18,400 --> 00:11:21,199 and thinking about her own life, 185 00:11:21,200 --> 00:11:22,820 thinking, "Is this what I want?" 186 00:11:23,840 --> 00:11:26,799 We know that Jane Austen can be very, very savage, 187 00:11:26,800 --> 00:11:28,719 very, very brutal. 188 00:11:28,720 --> 00:11:32,519 There's an excruciating moment in one of the letters 189 00:11:32,520 --> 00:11:35,199 where there's a searingly cruel comment about a woman 190 00:11:35,200 --> 00:11:36,519 who has a miscarriage. 191 00:11:36,520 --> 00:11:38,679 Jane Austen commented that the woman miscarried 192 00:11:38,680 --> 00:11:40,119 because her husband was so ugly. 193 00:11:40,120 --> 00:11:42,159 She took one look at him and aborted. 194 00:11:42,160 --> 00:11:43,959 I mean, that's horrible. 195 00:11:43,960 --> 00:11:46,719 You know, these are the kind of awful things that sisters 196 00:11:46,720 --> 00:11:48,920 would say to each other in confidence. 197 00:11:56,840 --> 00:12:00,920 Jane wants to be more than just marriage and childbirth material. 198 00:12:04,600 --> 00:12:06,440 Then in 1794... 199 00:12:08,160 --> 00:12:10,640 ..she encounters a new kind of role model. 200 00:12:12,560 --> 00:12:16,520 The arrival of Cousin Eliza is big news. 201 00:12:17,600 --> 00:12:23,119 She's just this fabulous creature that swans into Steventon, 202 00:12:23,120 --> 00:12:26,239 bringing with her a whole hinterland of exotic, 203 00:12:26,240 --> 00:12:28,839 mysterious, fabulous 204 00:12:28,840 --> 00:12:30,960 and foreign excitement. 205 00:12:33,560 --> 00:12:35,880 Eliza had been married to a nobleman. 206 00:12:37,160 --> 00:12:41,480 During the French Revolution, he'd been arrested and thrown into jail. 207 00:12:43,480 --> 00:12:45,320 But worse followed. 208 00:12:49,480 --> 00:12:51,840 Her husband has been guillotined. 209 00:12:57,400 --> 00:13:00,559 And she relates this to Jane Austen. 210 00:13:00,560 --> 00:13:03,359 It's one thing to know that the French Revolution's taken place 211 00:13:03,360 --> 00:13:05,439 and that it's tipped over into bloodshed and chaos, 212 00:13:05,440 --> 00:13:08,119 it's quite another to have that presence, 213 00:13:08,120 --> 00:13:12,560 that bloodshed walk right through your door and tell it to your face. 214 00:13:14,880 --> 00:13:16,880 Your cousin's husband is beheaded. 215 00:13:19,160 --> 00:13:21,959 This is not reading about it in the newspaper. 216 00:13:21,960 --> 00:13:25,720 Can you imagine being told this news while Eliza's there? 217 00:13:30,640 --> 00:13:34,400 This causes her so much fear it sort of seeps into her subconscious. 218 00:13:35,720 --> 00:13:37,520 DISTANT SCREAMS 219 00:13:42,080 --> 00:13:44,519 As well as these tales of horror, 220 00:13:44,520 --> 00:13:47,160 Eliza brings radical new ideas. 221 00:13:49,120 --> 00:13:51,319 Eliza gives Jane Austen books. 222 00:13:51,320 --> 00:13:54,080 She said, "Women will not be put down any longer." 223 00:13:54,081 --> 00:13:57,799 Statements that would have been such a huge influence 224 00:13:57,800 --> 00:14:00,960 on how Jane Austen perceived women's rights. 225 00:14:03,200 --> 00:14:05,680 And this is catnip for Jane Austen. 226 00:14:06,880 --> 00:14:10,919 I mean, like any teenage girl, when a cooler, slightly older woman 227 00:14:10,920 --> 00:14:13,680 walks into the room, that's kind of electrifying. 228 00:14:15,240 --> 00:14:17,359 The unfortunate death of her husband 229 00:14:17,360 --> 00:14:20,440 leads to some interesting possibilities. 230 00:14:21,520 --> 00:14:23,919 Jane sees a widow 231 00:14:23,920 --> 00:14:26,719 as someone with a certain amount of freedom. 232 00:14:26,720 --> 00:14:28,279 You are your own woman 233 00:14:28,280 --> 00:14:30,599 with your own means and resources, 234 00:14:30,600 --> 00:14:32,119 and you are able to do what you 235 00:14:32,120 --> 00:14:33,639 would like to do with those. 236 00:14:33,640 --> 00:14:37,319 And if that means you want to sleep with other men, you do it. 237 00:14:37,320 --> 00:14:40,639 It gives women of the time a certain amount of freedom that maybe Jane 238 00:14:40,640 --> 00:14:43,360 had never witnessed before or never thought existed. 239 00:14:45,720 --> 00:14:49,239 I think we can't underestimate the excitement to her fizzing, 240 00:14:49,240 --> 00:14:52,959 curious mind of this astonishing figure that's travelled around, 241 00:14:52,960 --> 00:14:54,439 that's been in a revolution. 242 00:14:54,440 --> 00:14:56,400 She's had sex, she's got money. 243 00:14:56,401 --> 00:15:00,879 You know, could this be the beginnings of a character 244 00:15:00,880 --> 00:15:02,480 that she might want to explore? 245 00:15:10,440 --> 00:15:13,679 Inspired by the presence of Cousin Eliza, 246 00:15:13,680 --> 00:15:16,960 Jane Austen writes her first longform work. 247 00:15:18,120 --> 00:15:22,399 Lady Susan tells the story of a recently widowed seductress 248 00:15:22,400 --> 00:15:24,840 who is looking for a new husband. 249 00:15:26,720 --> 00:15:28,839 Lady Susan is beautiful. 250 00:15:28,840 --> 00:15:31,919 She's clever, she's manipulative 251 00:15:31,920 --> 00:15:34,959 and she knows how to get what she wants. 252 00:15:34,960 --> 00:15:37,159 She's a force of nature 253 00:15:37,160 --> 00:15:40,559 and she is just doing what she needs to do to survive. 254 00:15:40,560 --> 00:15:42,199 Lady Susan? 255 00:15:42,200 --> 00:15:43,719 Lady Susan Vernon? 256 00:15:43,720 --> 00:15:45,639 How dare you address me, sir? 257 00:15:45,640 --> 00:15:48,640 But Lady Susan... Be gone, sir, or I will have you whipped. 258 00:15:50,120 --> 00:15:52,519 Outrageous. Have you never met him? 259 00:15:52,520 --> 00:15:55,679 No, I know him well. I would never speak to a stranger like that. 260 00:15:55,680 --> 00:15:57,119 Susan, I've... 261 00:15:57,120 --> 00:15:59,359 Lady Susan has a problem - 262 00:15:59,360 --> 00:16:02,360 a teenage daughter who she needs to marry off. 263 00:16:03,360 --> 00:16:06,999 She arranges for a wealthy but dim suitor to visit them 264 00:16:07,000 --> 00:16:08,639 at Churchill Manor. 265 00:16:08,640 --> 00:16:09,800 Churchill. 266 00:16:10,960 --> 00:16:12,280 That's how you say it? 267 00:16:13,600 --> 00:16:15,440 Altogether like that - Churchill. 268 00:16:16,680 --> 00:16:18,799 Ah, well, that explains a lot. 269 00:16:18,800 --> 00:16:22,879 You see, I'd heard church and hill but couldn't find either. 270 00:16:22,880 --> 00:16:25,079 All I could see was this big house. 271 00:16:25,080 --> 00:16:26,599 HIGH PITCHED CHUCKLE 272 00:16:26,600 --> 00:16:28,320 I played Sir James Martin. 273 00:16:29,520 --> 00:16:30,919 He's a fucking idiot, 274 00:16:30,920 --> 00:16:33,159 but he's a likeable fucking idiot. 275 00:16:33,160 --> 00:16:35,679 He walks through life with his gold shoes on going, 276 00:16:35,680 --> 00:16:37,760 "Isn't this marvellous?" 277 00:16:39,160 --> 00:16:41,279 How jolly! HE LAUGHS 278 00:16:41,280 --> 00:16:42,840 Tiny green balls. 279 00:16:44,320 --> 00:16:46,479 Mm, yes. 280 00:16:46,480 --> 00:16:48,199 Good tasting. 281 00:16:48,200 --> 00:16:49,679 Quite sweet. 282 00:16:49,680 --> 00:16:51,199 What are they called? 283 00:16:51,200 --> 00:16:52,799 Peas. 284 00:16:52,800 --> 00:16:54,799 Oh, yes, no, I knew that. 285 00:16:54,800 --> 00:16:56,719 To honour means, among other things, 286 00:16:56,720 --> 00:16:59,359 to listen with respect to a parent's sincere counsel. 287 00:16:59,360 --> 00:17:02,519 When her daughter tries to reject Sir James, 288 00:17:02,520 --> 00:17:05,639 Lady Susan callously ignores her feelings 289 00:17:05,640 --> 00:17:08,039 and piles on the pressure. 290 00:17:08,040 --> 00:17:12,119 An offer as splendid as Sir James's is not likely to come around again. 291 00:17:12,120 --> 00:17:15,439 He has offered you the one thing he has of value to give - 292 00:17:15,440 --> 00:17:16,839 his income. 293 00:17:16,840 --> 00:17:20,399 It's very funny because her attitude to her daughter is just so awful 294 00:17:20,400 --> 00:17:22,959 and she is the world's worst mother. 295 00:17:22,960 --> 00:17:25,519 Destitute. Is that what you want? 296 00:17:25,520 --> 00:17:26,570 No. 297 00:17:28,080 --> 00:17:30,359 I can see Sir James is a kind man 298 00:17:30,360 --> 00:17:33,550 and if it weren't a matter of marriage, I'm sure I could like him. 299 00:17:34,560 --> 00:17:36,639 But marriage is for one's whole life. 300 00:17:36,640 --> 00:17:39,319 Not in my experience. Meanwhile... 301 00:17:39,320 --> 00:17:41,479 Lady Susan is the hand grenade 302 00:17:41,480 --> 00:17:45,600 that Jane Austen is lobbing into Georgian society. 303 00:17:46,760 --> 00:17:50,119 Women are meant to present in a certain way. 304 00:17:50,120 --> 00:17:55,079 And she did away with all of that and she created complex, 305 00:17:55,080 --> 00:17:57,999 three dimensional characters 306 00:17:58,000 --> 00:18:00,559 who had massive flaws, 307 00:18:00,560 --> 00:18:02,919 massive contradictions. 308 00:18:02,920 --> 00:18:06,160 And this was written by a teenage girl. 309 00:18:07,800 --> 00:18:09,520 It's unfathomable. 310 00:18:10,720 --> 00:18:12,999 Lady Susan's plan fails 311 00:18:13,000 --> 00:18:17,919 and she shows her true nature as she rails against her own daughter. 312 00:18:17,920 --> 00:18:20,839 If my daughter were not the greatest simpleton on earth, 313 00:18:20,840 --> 00:18:22,519 she'd be engaged to him now. What? 314 00:18:22,520 --> 00:18:24,279 She refused him. 315 00:18:24,280 --> 00:18:27,639 A baronet with 10,000 a year. It's all so... 316 00:18:27,640 --> 00:18:29,359 This is your daughter. 317 00:18:29,360 --> 00:18:32,079 It's one of the moments where we go, 318 00:18:32,080 --> 00:18:33,479 "Oh, no, she isn't... 319 00:18:33,480 --> 00:18:36,560 "No, she is a nasty piece of work actually, isn't she?" 320 00:18:38,960 --> 00:18:42,319 In the end, Lady Susan marries her daughter off happily 321 00:18:42,320 --> 00:18:44,039 to another aristocrat... 322 00:18:44,040 --> 00:18:45,239 God bless you all! 323 00:18:45,240 --> 00:18:48,640 ..and she takes the rich fool for herself. 324 00:18:52,200 --> 00:18:56,159 What is truly remarkable is that a young girl 325 00:18:56,160 --> 00:18:59,719 could understand the ways of the world so intricately 326 00:18:59,720 --> 00:19:04,879 to create a monster, a creature like Lady Susan. 327 00:19:04,880 --> 00:19:09,240 You know, precocious talent is not the word for it. 328 00:19:12,440 --> 00:19:15,360 She is a rebellious modern spirit. 329 00:19:17,560 --> 00:19:21,159 She's just standing up for women as human beings 330 00:19:21,160 --> 00:19:23,359 and refusing to bow 331 00:19:23,360 --> 00:19:25,200 to the oppressive stereotypes. 332 00:19:32,680 --> 00:19:36,560 It will be years before Lady Susan reaches a reading public. 333 00:19:38,600 --> 00:19:42,320 For now, Jane's only audience is her family. 334 00:19:44,800 --> 00:19:47,720 Girls like her aren't expected to have careers. 335 00:19:49,960 --> 00:19:51,840 Unlike her brothers. 336 00:19:53,400 --> 00:19:57,519 War brings opportunities for the Austen boys. 337 00:19:57,520 --> 00:19:59,759 Henry joins the militia, 338 00:19:59,760 --> 00:20:03,879 while Frank and Charles serve in the Navy. 339 00:20:03,880 --> 00:20:05,439 The Navy of course supported you 340 00:20:05,440 --> 00:20:06,959 and made all your provisions. 341 00:20:06,960 --> 00:20:10,199 The other great joy of the Navy was it opens people's horizons. 342 00:20:10,200 --> 00:20:12,199 SOUNDS OF BATTLE 343 00:20:12,200 --> 00:20:14,640 And as a young officer, you were part of it. 344 00:20:15,680 --> 00:20:18,270 The Royal Navy at that stage was charting the world. 345 00:20:19,400 --> 00:20:21,520 We were leading the scientific research. 346 00:20:22,960 --> 00:20:26,919 But even better than that, if you were lucky and competent, 347 00:20:26,920 --> 00:20:29,959 you could make an immense amount of money. 348 00:20:29,960 --> 00:20:33,559 Jane Austen of course was privy to all of this life at sea 349 00:20:33,560 --> 00:20:35,679 because of the letters from her brothers. 350 00:20:35,680 --> 00:20:38,399 This was like a window, a ray of light 351 00:20:38,400 --> 00:20:40,599 showing her what was going on in all these places. 352 00:20:40,600 --> 00:20:42,759 And being as bright as she was, 353 00:20:42,760 --> 00:20:45,719 she absorbed this and understood it and learned about it. 354 00:20:45,720 --> 00:20:48,559 And I think she used it in what she wrote. 355 00:20:48,560 --> 00:20:51,839 But it must have been quite frustrating sometimes 356 00:20:51,840 --> 00:20:53,000 for Jane Austen. 357 00:20:54,080 --> 00:20:59,679 The opportunities available for a genteel middle class woman 358 00:20:59,680 --> 00:21:01,360 were about zero. 359 00:21:03,960 --> 00:21:07,759 But Jane has one person who believes in her - 360 00:21:07,760 --> 00:21:08,920 her father. 361 00:21:10,560 --> 00:21:14,559 I do think that George Austen recognised that his daughter 362 00:21:14,560 --> 00:21:17,199 was something special. 363 00:21:17,200 --> 00:21:19,599 She is writing in a different way, 364 00:21:19,600 --> 00:21:22,250 she is thinking in a different way to everybody else. 365 00:21:23,320 --> 00:21:26,399 He clearly valued her for who she was 366 00:21:26,400 --> 00:21:28,160 and for her intelligence. 367 00:21:29,160 --> 00:21:32,600 There is that total acceptance and support for her. 368 00:21:35,440 --> 00:21:39,239 To encourage his daughter, on Jane's 19th birthday, 369 00:21:39,240 --> 00:21:41,919 he buys her a special gift. 370 00:21:41,920 --> 00:21:45,399 He gives her a portable writing desk 371 00:21:45,400 --> 00:21:48,479 that he's bought from a cabinet maker in Basingstoke. 372 00:21:48,480 --> 00:21:53,360 An investment in her talent for writing. 373 00:21:54,760 --> 00:21:56,520 I mean she's only 19. 374 00:21:57,840 --> 00:22:01,270 It's almost impossible to imagine what this would have meant to her. 375 00:22:02,200 --> 00:22:04,679 It gives her permission to be an author. 376 00:22:04,680 --> 00:22:06,360 That's what he gives her. 377 00:22:12,320 --> 00:22:14,479 Despite her father's approval, 378 00:22:14,480 --> 00:22:17,159 with no family money to fall back on, 379 00:22:17,160 --> 00:22:20,759 Jane is still expected to find a husband to support her. 380 00:22:20,760 --> 00:22:24,720 And the traditional place for meeting a man is the ballroom. 381 00:22:27,760 --> 00:22:31,919 The Georgian marriage market is a very ruthless place. 382 00:22:31,920 --> 00:22:35,039 It was important for people to like one another in a marriage, 383 00:22:35,040 --> 00:22:37,680 but more important was their social standing. 384 00:22:39,080 --> 00:22:43,919 And courtship will be watched eagle-eyed by both families. 385 00:22:43,920 --> 00:22:45,720 I think the pressure was enormous. 386 00:22:46,960 --> 00:22:49,999 Balls aren't just for husband hunting, 387 00:22:50,000 --> 00:22:53,400 they are also an opportunity for young people to let loose. 388 00:22:56,240 --> 00:22:59,080 The party goes on until the candles burn out. 389 00:23:00,280 --> 00:23:02,280 Sometimes until 6am. 390 00:23:05,200 --> 00:23:09,840 The dancing can be so relentless guests bleed through their shoes. 391 00:23:11,720 --> 00:23:14,559 Ladies use their fans as cheat sheets, 392 00:23:14,560 --> 00:23:17,000 concealing the latest dance moves. 393 00:23:19,560 --> 00:23:24,200 To get ready for one of these balls is a real deal. 394 00:23:28,680 --> 00:23:31,199 You've got to wear corsets, 395 00:23:31,200 --> 00:23:33,999 you've got to have your hair done in a certain way. 396 00:23:34,000 --> 00:23:35,440 You are there to be seen. 397 00:23:37,800 --> 00:23:39,719 If you even look at their dresses, 398 00:23:39,720 --> 00:23:42,359 they're really low cut with heaving bosoms. 399 00:23:42,360 --> 00:23:43,959 And the dances were, 400 00:23:43,960 --> 00:23:47,079 I mean obviously no-one was grinding or twerking, 401 00:23:47,080 --> 00:23:48,680 but they were very sexual. 402 00:23:50,320 --> 00:23:53,039 Jane wants to be a writer, 403 00:23:53,040 --> 00:23:56,399 but she also loves going to balls, 404 00:23:56,400 --> 00:23:58,599 and she's a wonderful dancer. 405 00:23:58,600 --> 00:24:00,839 Men want to dance with her. 406 00:24:00,840 --> 00:24:03,519 She's just excited and happy, 407 00:24:03,520 --> 00:24:05,640 so she's having the time of her life. 408 00:24:08,920 --> 00:24:11,119 In December 1795, 409 00:24:11,120 --> 00:24:13,959 at the Hampshire County Christmas ball, 410 00:24:13,960 --> 00:24:16,840 Jane locks eyes with a handsome Irishman. 411 00:24:18,320 --> 00:24:20,879 His name is Tom Lefroy. 412 00:24:20,880 --> 00:24:23,559 He's connected to one of her best friends, Madam Lefroy. 413 00:24:23,560 --> 00:24:26,559 So, he's not a stranger completely, 414 00:24:26,560 --> 00:24:28,999 but he's strange enough 415 00:24:29,000 --> 00:24:32,320 for her to be excited and thrilled. 416 00:24:34,080 --> 00:24:37,559 And I think she really genuinely has a big crush on him. 417 00:24:37,560 --> 00:24:39,400 And he has a crush on her. 418 00:24:41,320 --> 00:24:44,879 Austen writes about her feelings to her sister, Cassandra, 419 00:24:44,880 --> 00:24:47,799 in her earliest surviving letter. 420 00:24:47,800 --> 00:24:50,879 This is a really exciting moment. 421 00:24:50,880 --> 00:24:52,999 We hear her voice, 422 00:24:53,000 --> 00:24:55,920 we're inside her head for the first time. 423 00:24:57,200 --> 00:24:59,760 It's such an intimate conversation she's having. 424 00:25:02,320 --> 00:25:04,559 "My dear Cassandra, 425 00:25:04,560 --> 00:25:08,719 "I'm almost afraid to tell you how I behaved. 426 00:25:08,720 --> 00:25:11,639 "Imagine to yourself everything most profligate and shocking 427 00:25:11,640 --> 00:25:14,199 "in the way of dancing and sitting down together. 428 00:25:14,200 --> 00:25:17,880 "He is a very gentlemanlike, good looking, pleasant young man." 429 00:25:19,320 --> 00:25:22,199 I think Jane's being very naughty here. 430 00:25:22,200 --> 00:25:24,879 Sitting with someone for a long time was one thing, 431 00:25:24,880 --> 00:25:27,199 sitting too close with them, holding their hands, 432 00:25:27,200 --> 00:25:28,839 touching wasn't done at all. 433 00:25:28,840 --> 00:25:31,760 So, it sounds like it's getting all a little bit heady. 434 00:25:33,960 --> 00:25:35,760 She definitely fancies him. 435 00:25:38,800 --> 00:25:40,520 There's just one problem... 436 00:25:42,480 --> 00:25:46,279 The Lefroy family don't think Jane's family come up to scratch. 437 00:25:46,280 --> 00:25:47,879 They don't have enough money. 438 00:25:47,880 --> 00:25:49,759 They're not going to make a good match 439 00:25:49,760 --> 00:25:51,720 and therefore they're forced to part. 440 00:25:55,880 --> 00:25:59,800 When Tom's family decided this was not a good idea... 441 00:26:02,120 --> 00:26:04,560 ..she feels that she's perhaps not good enough. 442 00:26:05,600 --> 00:26:08,359 She's not even been able to say, "I reject you." 443 00:26:08,360 --> 00:26:10,280 The choice is taken away from her. 444 00:26:11,440 --> 00:26:13,799 And she has a strong sense of pride, 445 00:26:13,800 --> 00:26:16,799 she feels the fact that she doesn't have a lot of money, 446 00:26:16,800 --> 00:26:18,280 she feels it deeply. 447 00:26:18,281 --> 00:26:22,719 All sorts of emotions would have been running around her 448 00:26:22,720 --> 00:26:24,480 at this particular moment. 449 00:26:26,280 --> 00:26:29,280 Feeling a lack of voice, a lack of autonomy. 450 00:26:32,120 --> 00:26:34,760 That she's powerless in this situation. 451 00:26:48,400 --> 00:26:51,640 She writes this really beautiful letter to Cassandra. 452 00:26:54,920 --> 00:26:59,920 The first thing we see is her amazing sense of tragic irony. 453 00:27:03,000 --> 00:27:06,639 "At length, the day is come on which I am to flirt my last 454 00:27:06,640 --> 00:27:08,239 "with Tom Lefroy. 455 00:27:08,240 --> 00:27:10,920 "And when you receive this, it will be over. 456 00:27:12,000 --> 00:27:14,960 "My tears flow as I write at the melancholy idea." 457 00:27:16,280 --> 00:27:18,800 "My tears flow at the melancholy idea." 458 00:27:21,000 --> 00:27:23,559 I love the fact that she's so dry and ironic 459 00:27:23,560 --> 00:27:26,040 in the way she describes her own reactions. 460 00:27:27,600 --> 00:27:29,439 This is typical Jane Austen - 461 00:27:29,440 --> 00:27:33,279 sort of expressing something and then putting it in perspective 462 00:27:33,280 --> 00:27:35,040 and slightly laughing at herself. 463 00:27:37,000 --> 00:27:41,439 So, we see her here aping the sentimental heroine 464 00:27:41,440 --> 00:27:43,319 who's been let down. 465 00:27:43,320 --> 00:27:46,199 She's mocking herself. 466 00:27:46,200 --> 00:27:48,999 But I really do believe that, behind that, 467 00:27:49,000 --> 00:27:53,360 there is a genuine sense of hurt and disappointment. 468 00:28:00,680 --> 00:28:03,639 Bruised by the Tom Lefroy affair, 469 00:28:03,640 --> 00:28:06,999 Austen channels her frustration into a new novel 470 00:28:07,000 --> 00:28:09,440 that she calls First Impressions. 471 00:28:10,440 --> 00:28:13,920 She finishes a draft at the age of just 21. 472 00:28:16,000 --> 00:28:19,359 Her father, George, is captivated. 473 00:28:19,360 --> 00:28:22,040 He decides it's time to approach a publisher. 474 00:28:23,240 --> 00:28:27,679 George Austen is making a great vote of faith 475 00:28:27,680 --> 00:28:29,400 in the abilities of his daughter. 476 00:28:30,800 --> 00:28:32,400 He's very ambitious for her. 477 00:28:33,800 --> 00:28:37,159 He realises that this is a publishable novel. 478 00:28:37,160 --> 00:28:39,640 He realises that it could be a success. 479 00:28:40,840 --> 00:28:42,719 That must have been a huge boost. 480 00:28:42,720 --> 00:28:45,359 Because up until that point, she has read to her family, 481 00:28:45,360 --> 00:28:48,679 they've all listened to these first novels. 482 00:28:48,680 --> 00:28:51,159 But he is the person who actually thinks 483 00:28:51,160 --> 00:28:53,920 this is something that is professional. 484 00:28:55,880 --> 00:28:59,319 George Austen writes a letter offering Jane's work 485 00:28:59,320 --> 00:29:01,040 to a top publishing house. 486 00:29:04,160 --> 00:29:06,279 The letter is sent for the consideration 487 00:29:06,280 --> 00:29:07,999 of Thomas Cadell, 488 00:29:08,000 --> 00:29:12,360 London publisher of some of the most famous writers in the country. 489 00:29:17,240 --> 00:29:21,639 In the capital, the publishing industry is taking off. 490 00:29:21,640 --> 00:29:24,999 New printing techniques and rising literacy rates 491 00:29:25,000 --> 00:29:27,480 mean business is booming. 492 00:29:31,000 --> 00:29:34,639 To drive profits, books are sold in multiple volumes, 493 00:29:34,640 --> 00:29:38,040 so readers have to pay to read each new instalment. 494 00:29:41,000 --> 00:29:44,280 And publishers are on the lookout for the next big hit. 495 00:29:56,840 --> 00:29:58,799 Rejection. 496 00:29:58,800 --> 00:30:01,999 All writers keep their rejection slips, 497 00:30:02,000 --> 00:30:04,000 those first knockbacks. 498 00:30:05,360 --> 00:30:09,679 It's despicable to be rejected. 499 00:30:09,680 --> 00:30:12,239 The publisher has sent George Austen's letter 500 00:30:12,240 --> 00:30:14,799 back with a line saying: 501 00:30:14,800 --> 00:30:17,999 "Declined by return of post." 502 00:30:18,000 --> 00:30:19,519 They haven't even read it. 503 00:30:19,520 --> 00:30:20,999 I think that that's... 504 00:30:21,000 --> 00:30:22,880 That's going to be the thing. 505 00:30:24,560 --> 00:30:27,320 She feels angry because she knows she's good. 506 00:30:27,321 --> 00:30:30,759 There is something about knowing that you're good 507 00:30:30,760 --> 00:30:33,200 and the world around you not understanding yet. 508 00:30:34,720 --> 00:30:36,080 That is going to drive her. 509 00:30:37,240 --> 00:30:40,319 And I think it's critical that they are outsiders. 510 00:30:40,320 --> 00:30:44,999 They're outsiders to the publishing and cultural elites 511 00:30:45,000 --> 00:30:47,320 and the power that's held by London. 512 00:30:52,320 --> 00:30:54,679 Although stung by the rejection, 513 00:30:54,680 --> 00:30:58,720 Jane has the unfailing support of her sister, Cassandra. 514 00:31:00,800 --> 00:31:02,639 Deemed the pretty sister, 515 00:31:02,640 --> 00:31:05,840 Cassandra had been engaged to marry a young chaplain. 516 00:31:07,520 --> 00:31:10,079 But in early 1797, 517 00:31:10,080 --> 00:31:12,360 more bad news arrives. 518 00:31:14,200 --> 00:31:16,519 Cassandra knows that very well 519 00:31:16,520 --> 00:31:20,999 when she sees the black seal on the letter, 520 00:31:21,000 --> 00:31:22,999 on the notice of death. 521 00:31:23,000 --> 00:31:24,760 She knows what that represents. 522 00:31:26,000 --> 00:31:30,999 Cassandra's fiance has died on a voyage to the West Indies, 523 00:31:31,000 --> 00:31:33,360 his body buried at sea. 524 00:31:35,000 --> 00:31:37,479 Jane Austen is heartbroken for her sister. 525 00:31:37,480 --> 00:31:40,600 She sees the pain her sister is going through. 526 00:31:44,920 --> 00:31:46,679 And Jane says, 527 00:31:46,680 --> 00:31:50,039 "I've never seen anybody behave 528 00:31:50,040 --> 00:31:53,999 "with such grace and such fortitude and such courage 529 00:31:54,000 --> 00:31:59,840 "in the light of this absolutely heartbreaking news." 530 00:32:01,440 --> 00:32:03,719 Cassandra resolves, from this point on, 531 00:32:03,720 --> 00:32:05,999 she's not going to find another love, 532 00:32:06,000 --> 00:32:08,160 and that's it for her. 533 00:32:11,440 --> 00:32:14,759 Cassandra's vow to remain unmarried 534 00:32:14,760 --> 00:32:19,119 will have a profound impact on the lives of both women. 535 00:32:19,120 --> 00:32:23,479 I think there is a part of her that also feels a sense of relief. 536 00:32:23,480 --> 00:32:24,999 "She's not going to be parted from me, 537 00:32:25,000 --> 00:32:26,159 "we can be together. 538 00:32:26,160 --> 00:32:27,399 "We can stay together." 539 00:32:27,400 --> 00:32:33,479 It's an absolutely pivotal moment in the life of Jane Austen. 540 00:32:33,480 --> 00:32:35,999 It opens the doorway for Jane Austen to 541 00:32:36,000 --> 00:32:39,040 think about a life in which she may not get married. 542 00:32:40,840 --> 00:32:44,439 It's almost as if, you know, they're in it together now. 543 00:32:44,440 --> 00:32:46,599 So she must now be thinking: 544 00:32:46,600 --> 00:32:48,479 "Writing. 545 00:32:48,480 --> 00:32:53,119 "How can I be secure and independent through my writing?" 546 00:32:53,120 --> 00:32:54,640 That's her project. 547 00:32:57,120 --> 00:33:00,040 And every project needs a great idea. 548 00:33:02,760 --> 00:33:04,639 From her own extensive reading, 549 00:33:04,640 --> 00:33:07,639 Jane knows what makes a bestseller. 550 00:33:07,640 --> 00:33:10,399 There was a real fashion for Gothic novels at the time. 551 00:33:10,400 --> 00:33:12,679 The racy Gothic novels with the shivering, 552 00:33:12,680 --> 00:33:14,320 shuddering, swooning heroine. 553 00:33:16,000 --> 00:33:19,279 Gothic fiction features beautiful heroines, 554 00:33:19,280 --> 00:33:21,679 often trapped in mysterious settings 555 00:33:21,680 --> 00:33:24,040 and facing terrifying dangers. 556 00:33:25,400 --> 00:33:30,479 For some, these racy page-turners are a cause for concern. 557 00:33:30,480 --> 00:33:34,279 There's lots of quite stiff writers in the 18th century - 558 00:33:34,280 --> 00:33:35,879 male writers, usually - 559 00:33:35,880 --> 00:33:38,639 who are very worried about the influence 560 00:33:38,640 --> 00:33:40,999 that these terrible, trashy things 561 00:33:41,000 --> 00:33:43,999 are going to have on women's imagination. 562 00:33:44,000 --> 00:33:46,359 The idea that a young woman might read this 563 00:33:46,360 --> 00:33:49,760 and think that all these things are going to happen to her. 564 00:33:53,000 --> 00:33:55,999 Austen comes up with a masterstroke. 565 00:33:56,000 --> 00:33:58,999 She takes the idea of the novel as a bad influence 566 00:33:59,000 --> 00:34:00,560 and runs with it. 567 00:34:08,000 --> 00:34:12,479 In Northanger Abbey, Austen creates a teenage heroine, 568 00:34:12,480 --> 00:34:16,360 Catherine Morland, who is obsessed with reading Gothic horror. 569 00:34:16,361 --> 00:34:20,559 Both Jane and the character of Catherine Morland's father 570 00:34:20,560 --> 00:34:25,199 were rectors, and you could really see that Jane is putting 571 00:34:25,200 --> 00:34:27,070 a lot of herself into this character. 572 00:34:27,071 --> 00:34:30,999 She's plain. She comes from a large, undistinguished family. 573 00:34:31,000 --> 00:34:32,999 Her father's not rich. 574 00:34:33,000 --> 00:34:36,199 Her mother's sensible but not particularly anything else. 575 00:34:36,200 --> 00:34:40,799 And yet she's the one we're going to follow, and proudly. 576 00:34:40,800 --> 00:34:42,959 Jane is holding a standard for her and says, 577 00:34:42,960 --> 00:34:46,559 "Come with me. This person's worth watching." 578 00:34:46,560 --> 00:34:49,319 Austen is subverting the idea of what a heroine is 579 00:34:49,320 --> 00:34:50,559 or should be. 580 00:34:50,560 --> 00:34:52,760 "For when a young lady is to be a heroine... # 581 00:34:54,880 --> 00:34:57,599 Swept up in her Gothic novel obsession, 582 00:34:57,600 --> 00:35:00,999 Catherine is prone to dramatic daydreams. 583 00:35:01,000 --> 00:35:03,639 "Tumultive emotions stirred in the bosom of Adeline 584 00:35:03,640 --> 00:35:05,159 "and fear gripped her heart 585 00:35:05,160 --> 00:35:07,599 "that at any moment ruffians would fly upon the carriage 586 00:35:07,600 --> 00:35:10,520 "and return her to the ignominy of her captive state." 587 00:35:21,200 --> 00:35:22,680 My God, Mrs Allen! 588 00:35:25,600 --> 00:35:27,000 Oh! 589 00:35:29,000 --> 00:35:30,639 Back in the real world, 590 00:35:30,640 --> 00:35:33,999 Catherine is invited to the family home of her suitor, 591 00:35:34,000 --> 00:35:35,999 Henry Tilney. 592 00:35:36,000 --> 00:35:37,999 Arriving at Northanger Abbey, 593 00:35:38,000 --> 00:35:39,999 a looming Gothic pile, 594 00:35:40,000 --> 00:35:42,560 Catherine's imagination runs riot. 595 00:35:42,561 --> 00:35:46,479 Catherine is always looking for the Gothic horror. 596 00:35:46,480 --> 00:35:48,599 She's looking in the cupboards, in the drawers. 597 00:35:48,600 --> 00:35:54,639 You know, she wants all the horror of the typical abbey. 598 00:35:54,640 --> 00:35:55,999 SAMUEL WEST: "The night was dark, 599 00:35:56,000 --> 00:35:59,279 "and the rain still beat violently against the windows. 600 00:35:59,280 --> 00:36:00,679 "Catherine's heart beat quick 601 00:36:00,680 --> 00:36:02,999 "but her courage did not fail her. 602 00:36:03,000 --> 00:36:04,559 "With a cheek flushed by hope 603 00:36:04,560 --> 00:36:07,439 "and an eye straining with curiosity, 604 00:36:07,440 --> 00:36:11,999 "her fingers grasped the handle of a drawer and drew it forth. 605 00:36:12,000 --> 00:36:13,200 "It was entirely empty." 606 00:36:14,240 --> 00:36:17,319 Stylistically, this is the high Gothic style. 607 00:36:17,320 --> 00:36:19,839 I think what makes me laugh 608 00:36:19,840 --> 00:36:23,479 about this is the sort of main character energy. 609 00:36:23,480 --> 00:36:26,999 That Catherine stars in the film of her own life. 610 00:36:27,000 --> 00:36:28,919 You know, everything she does has significance. 611 00:36:28,920 --> 00:36:30,519 You can hear the soundtrack. 612 00:36:30,520 --> 00:36:31,999 And then when the drawer's empty, 613 00:36:32,000 --> 00:36:34,999 is that meaningful or is that a disappointment? 614 00:36:35,000 --> 00:36:37,360 It's dramatic. Whatever it is, it's dramatic. 615 00:36:41,080 --> 00:36:42,999 To marry Henry Tilney, 616 00:36:43,000 --> 00:36:46,679 Catherine must win the approval of his sinister father, 617 00:36:46,680 --> 00:36:48,719 General Tilney. 618 00:36:48,720 --> 00:36:51,040 Miss Morland, welcome to Northanger Abbey. 619 00:36:53,000 --> 00:36:55,839 When she finds out the General's wife died, 620 00:36:55,840 --> 00:36:58,040 she concludes he murdered her. 621 00:37:00,000 --> 00:37:03,319 Catherine's imagination is running absolutely wild here. 622 00:37:03,320 --> 00:37:05,599 She says to Henry Tilney, 623 00:37:05,600 --> 00:37:06,999 "He is a murderer. 624 00:37:07,000 --> 00:37:08,519 "I cannot help believing it." 625 00:37:08,520 --> 00:37:11,399 There's always this monstrous barren figure 626 00:37:11,400 --> 00:37:13,719 in these romances, 627 00:37:13,720 --> 00:37:16,800 and she thinks that General Tilney has murdered his wife... 628 00:37:18,000 --> 00:37:20,279 ..and there'll be corpses hanging up 629 00:37:20,280 --> 00:37:21,399 in his bedroom. 630 00:37:21,400 --> 00:37:24,679 But actually, what he does is much more monstrous. 631 00:37:24,680 --> 00:37:27,200 My father insists on your leaving immediately. 632 00:37:28,400 --> 00:37:30,330 As soon as you can make yourself ready. 633 00:37:31,600 --> 00:37:34,490 The carriage will take you to meet the public stagecoach. 634 00:37:35,840 --> 00:37:37,720 No servant will accompany you. 635 00:37:40,520 --> 00:37:42,399 I'm to travel all night? 636 00:37:42,400 --> 00:37:43,600 Alone? 637 00:37:44,920 --> 00:37:48,639 General Tilney had believed Catherine was rich. 638 00:37:48,640 --> 00:37:51,839 When he learns she's a penniless clergyman's daughter, 639 00:37:51,840 --> 00:37:55,279 he ruthlessly casts her out of the Abbey. 640 00:37:55,280 --> 00:37:57,559 That's it. She's out. 641 00:37:57,560 --> 00:38:00,479 She has no money. She has no means of getting home. 642 00:38:00,480 --> 00:38:04,479 She's completely betrayed by what should've been his duty of care. 643 00:38:04,480 --> 00:38:06,999 So it turns out it IS a book full of monsters. 644 00:38:07,000 --> 00:38:09,320 But actually, you know, they live amongst us. 645 00:38:11,560 --> 00:38:16,119 In Northanger Abbey, Austen uses the Gothic fantasy to expose 646 00:38:16,120 --> 00:38:19,719 an uncomfortable truth about society. 647 00:38:19,720 --> 00:38:22,799 She's played with a very, very popular literary movement, 648 00:38:22,800 --> 00:38:28,239 and she's looked behind the spooky velvet curtain 649 00:38:28,240 --> 00:38:29,999 of shivery horrors 650 00:38:30,000 --> 00:38:31,679 and she's shown us a real monster, 651 00:38:31,680 --> 00:38:34,600 which is the kind of man that would treat women that way. 652 00:38:36,640 --> 00:38:40,199 Austen gives her heroine a fairy tale ending. 653 00:38:40,200 --> 00:38:45,040 Catherine and Henry Tilney marry and live happily ever after. 654 00:38:49,160 --> 00:38:52,200 But her own future is far from settled. 655 00:38:54,280 --> 00:38:56,519 And in the winter of 1800, 656 00:38:56,520 --> 00:38:59,040 her world is turned upside down. 657 00:39:01,680 --> 00:39:04,839 Jane's father is growing old. 658 00:39:04,840 --> 00:39:06,999 He has decided to give up his position 659 00:39:07,000 --> 00:39:09,199 as the village clergyman. 660 00:39:09,200 --> 00:39:11,239 She comes back from staying with a friend. 661 00:39:11,240 --> 00:39:16,479 And she walks into her home and her mother blurts out 662 00:39:16,480 --> 00:39:18,440 that they're going to leave. 663 00:39:20,000 --> 00:39:23,359 She's turfed out of the family home, 664 00:39:23,360 --> 00:39:27,280 and it's such an overpowering shock. 665 00:39:28,800 --> 00:39:31,399 Her father passes the living at Steventon 666 00:39:31,400 --> 00:39:35,279 to his eldest son, James. 667 00:39:35,280 --> 00:39:38,319 The rectory will now be his home. 668 00:39:38,320 --> 00:39:39,879 She's being uprooted, 669 00:39:39,880 --> 00:39:43,720 and Jane cannot conceal her resentment about this. 670 00:39:45,160 --> 00:39:46,479 She writes, 671 00:39:46,480 --> 00:39:49,999 "The whole world is a conspiracy to enrich one part of our family 672 00:39:50,000 --> 00:39:51,560 "at the expense of another." 673 00:39:53,400 --> 00:39:56,999 This is about the unfairness of male inheritance, 674 00:39:57,000 --> 00:39:59,439 that her elder brother James gets the house. 675 00:39:59,440 --> 00:40:05,879 It's just this wonderfully succinct, angry comment. 676 00:40:05,880 --> 00:40:09,680 She feels at this moment that sense of powerlessness. 677 00:40:11,680 --> 00:40:14,319 "Does nobody ever consult my feelings? 678 00:40:14,320 --> 00:40:18,040 "Am I important or am I just dispensable?" 679 00:40:19,480 --> 00:40:20,999 It's a move by the family 680 00:40:21,000 --> 00:40:24,319 that really doesn't consider her needs at all. 681 00:40:24,320 --> 00:40:26,880 And it screws her up. 682 00:40:29,200 --> 00:40:34,239 Worse, to pay for the move and help fund her father's retirement, 683 00:40:34,240 --> 00:40:36,160 the library is sold. 684 00:40:37,240 --> 00:40:41,599 I just can't begin to imagine what that represented for her. 685 00:40:41,600 --> 00:40:44,639 The pain of not being able to have those books around you, 686 00:40:44,640 --> 00:40:47,879 not being able to find that refuge that she's always had. 687 00:40:47,880 --> 00:40:50,080 It's like it's one body blow after another. 688 00:40:51,240 --> 00:40:53,640 And she has to pack up and move on. 689 00:41:01,720 --> 00:41:05,159 Jane and her sister are forced to move with their parents 690 00:41:05,160 --> 00:41:06,999 to Bath. 691 00:41:07,000 --> 00:41:10,720 It is hoped here the two girls will find husbands. 692 00:41:12,000 --> 00:41:14,919 At this point, she's 25, which seems very young to us. 693 00:41:14,920 --> 00:41:18,999 But at that time, she's getting to the end of marriageable age. 694 00:41:19,000 --> 00:41:23,239 It's sort of a bit like the 30s panic in Bridget Jones. 695 00:41:23,240 --> 00:41:25,679 That's not an easy time for her. 696 00:41:25,680 --> 00:41:27,680 It's potentially humiliating. 697 00:41:31,200 --> 00:41:34,239 It's a daily occurrence in Bath, 698 00:41:34,240 --> 00:41:36,279 going to a visitation, 699 00:41:36,280 --> 00:41:38,399 attending things in public 700 00:41:38,400 --> 00:41:42,760 with a very strong sense of urgency about finding a marriage match. 701 00:41:42,761 --> 00:41:45,999 Jane writes about the social engagements 702 00:41:46,000 --> 00:41:47,799 she's made to attend. 703 00:41:47,800 --> 00:41:50,319 "Another stupid party last night. 704 00:41:50,320 --> 00:41:53,599 "Perhaps, if larger, they might be less intolerable. 705 00:41:53,600 --> 00:41:56,880 "I cannot anyhow continue to find people agreeable." 706 00:41:58,200 --> 00:42:01,159 She's starting to have difficulty in crowds in general. 707 00:42:01,160 --> 00:42:02,520 This is too much. 708 00:42:07,280 --> 00:42:09,759 She's shy, she's introverted. 709 00:42:09,760 --> 00:42:11,919 Having to make conversation with a few people 710 00:42:11,920 --> 00:42:14,759 in intense ways really tires her out, 711 00:42:14,760 --> 00:42:17,360 and her situation becomes intolerable. 712 00:42:17,361 --> 00:42:20,239 We associate Jane Austen with Bath, 713 00:42:20,240 --> 00:42:21,800 but the fact is she hates it. 714 00:42:26,240 --> 00:42:28,479 In the summer of 1801, 715 00:42:28,480 --> 00:42:31,639 Jane manages to escape to the seaside. 716 00:42:31,640 --> 00:42:33,999 Invited by family friends, 717 00:42:34,000 --> 00:42:36,999 she spends several weeks in Sidmouth. 718 00:42:37,000 --> 00:42:42,959 Sidmouth is this beautiful, genteel Georgian beach town. 719 00:42:42,960 --> 00:42:46,279 It's just gorgeous. It was known as the English Riviera. 720 00:42:46,280 --> 00:42:50,359 So it's a great place to go and she's really happy to be there. 721 00:42:50,360 --> 00:42:52,440 And she meets a man... 722 00:42:53,600 --> 00:42:55,400 ..and she falls in love. 723 00:42:57,560 --> 00:42:59,520 We know he was a clergyman. 724 00:43:01,720 --> 00:43:05,519 It's pretty serious and he makes his intentions pretty clear. 725 00:43:05,520 --> 00:43:07,799 What's infuriating for us 726 00:43:07,800 --> 00:43:09,719 is we just don't know anything about him. 727 00:43:09,720 --> 00:43:11,999 We don't know what his name was. 728 00:43:12,000 --> 00:43:13,280 He's very shadowy. 729 00:43:14,520 --> 00:43:17,439 The only source of information about the romance 730 00:43:17,440 --> 00:43:20,639 is from Austen's sister, Cassandra. 731 00:43:20,640 --> 00:43:22,999 Cassandra tells us later 732 00:43:23,000 --> 00:43:25,040 this might've been the love of her life. 733 00:43:26,800 --> 00:43:29,079 She said, "He had the charm of person, 734 00:43:29,080 --> 00:43:32,999 "mind and manners" that made him worthy to possess 735 00:43:33,000 --> 00:43:34,360 her sister's love. 736 00:43:35,920 --> 00:43:39,040 "We think that this could lead to a proposal." 737 00:43:40,680 --> 00:43:45,599 To meet someone she falls for at that point in her life 738 00:43:45,600 --> 00:43:47,279 is huge. 739 00:43:47,280 --> 00:43:50,599 I imagine she would think "Yes," you know? 740 00:43:50,600 --> 00:43:52,710 "It's all going to be all right after all." 741 00:43:55,400 --> 00:43:58,199 The pair agree to meet again. 742 00:43:58,200 --> 00:44:01,040 In the meantime, Jane returns to Bath. 743 00:44:17,000 --> 00:44:19,040 Something awful has happened. 744 00:44:20,320 --> 00:44:23,440 The love of her life has died. 745 00:44:26,760 --> 00:44:32,599 It's probably making her think that she's lost all her chances now. 746 00:44:32,600 --> 00:44:34,400 This could've been the last one. 747 00:44:37,280 --> 00:44:39,280 It's clearly huge for her. 748 00:44:42,000 --> 00:44:45,719 But the sense of pain that she must feel, 749 00:44:45,720 --> 00:44:48,719 that's the sort of fuel that a writer needs. 750 00:44:48,720 --> 00:44:53,199 And it channels itself into one of the greatest novels 751 00:44:53,200 --> 00:44:54,520 ever written. 752 00:44:59,120 --> 00:45:01,519 So, the opening line of Pride and Prejudice 753 00:45:01,520 --> 00:45:05,999 is one of the most famous opening lines in literature. 754 00:45:06,000 --> 00:45:08,999 "It is a truth universally acknowledged 755 00:45:09,000 --> 00:45:10,999 "that a single man in possession of a good fortune 756 00:45:11,000 --> 00:45:12,839 "must be in want of a wife." 757 00:45:12,840 --> 00:45:14,439 That's already funny. 758 00:45:14,440 --> 00:45:17,799 It also is the painful truth behind the whole novel. 759 00:45:17,800 --> 00:45:21,999 That if your family doesn't have any money and you're a woman, 760 00:45:22,000 --> 00:45:24,999 you have to marry a rich man. 761 00:45:25,000 --> 00:45:27,799 When the wealthy and single Mr Bingley 762 00:45:27,800 --> 00:45:29,599 arrives in the neighbourhood, 763 00:45:29,600 --> 00:45:32,239 the five Bennet sisters are thrilled. 764 00:45:32,240 --> 00:45:33,399 Kitty! 765 00:45:33,400 --> 00:45:34,999 Kitty, what have I told you about listening at the door? 766 00:45:35,000 --> 00:45:36,279 Sh! Never mind that! 767 00:45:36,280 --> 00:45:38,519 There's a Mr Bingley arrived from the north! 768 00:45:38,520 --> 00:45:39,999 5,000 a year! 769 00:45:40,000 --> 00:45:41,999 Really? 770 00:45:42,000 --> 00:45:43,239 He's single! Who's single? 771 00:45:43,240 --> 00:45:45,040 A Mr Bingley, apparently. Sh! 772 00:45:46,680 --> 00:45:48,999 Mr Bennet owns an estate, 773 00:45:49,000 --> 00:45:52,520 but when he dies it will pass down the male line. 774 00:45:53,800 --> 00:45:55,999 With no inheritance in sight, 775 00:45:56,000 --> 00:46:00,559 the Bennet girls face poverty unless they marry well. 776 00:46:00,560 --> 00:46:03,239 When you die, Mr Bennet, which may in fact be very soon, 777 00:46:03,240 --> 00:46:05,519 our girls will be left without a roof over their head, 778 00:46:05,520 --> 00:46:06,999 nor a penny to their name. 779 00:46:07,000 --> 00:46:09,999 Oh, Mama, please. It's ten in the morning! 780 00:46:10,000 --> 00:46:12,559 Pride and Prejudice is full of an abundance of females 781 00:46:12,560 --> 00:46:15,519 that no-one knows what to do with! 782 00:46:15,520 --> 00:46:17,719 How on earth do you get shot of them all? 783 00:46:17,720 --> 00:46:20,599 I mean, it's almost like a send-up of her own life so far. 784 00:46:20,600 --> 00:46:22,220 "What do we do with these women?" 785 00:46:23,200 --> 00:46:25,639 The novel's heroine is the proud 786 00:46:25,640 --> 00:46:28,999 and fiercely independent Elizabeth Bennet, 787 00:46:29,000 --> 00:46:31,999 another young woman who loves reading. 788 00:46:32,000 --> 00:46:34,679 I always imagine Elizabeth is the closest 789 00:46:34,680 --> 00:46:38,279 to actual Jane of all of her heroines. 790 00:46:38,280 --> 00:46:40,999 She's funny, she's smart, she's kind. 791 00:46:41,000 --> 00:46:42,679 She's full of spirit. 792 00:46:42,680 --> 00:46:45,239 She's modern, she's independent. 793 00:46:45,240 --> 00:46:49,559 And so you're gunning for her from the start. 794 00:46:49,560 --> 00:46:50,999 Well, if every man in the room 795 00:46:51,000 --> 00:46:52,599 does not end the evening in love with you 796 00:46:52,600 --> 00:46:54,279 then I am no judge of beauty. 797 00:46:54,280 --> 00:46:55,879 Or men. LAUGHTER 798 00:46:55,880 --> 00:46:57,479 No, they are far too easy to judge. 799 00:46:57,480 --> 00:46:58,999 They're not all bad. 800 00:46:59,000 --> 00:47:01,719 Humourless poppycocks in my limited experience. 801 00:47:01,720 --> 00:47:04,119 One of these days, Lizzie, someone will catch your eye, 802 00:47:04,120 --> 00:47:06,240 and then you'll have to watch your tongue. 803 00:47:08,600 --> 00:47:10,999 In this particular scene, we see the dance 804 00:47:11,000 --> 00:47:12,879 from Elizabeth's perspective. 805 00:47:12,880 --> 00:47:16,359 Part of Austen's genius is she slowly brings you in. 806 00:47:16,360 --> 00:47:19,999 A very close study of what somebody sees, 807 00:47:20,000 --> 00:47:21,599 feels, 808 00:47:21,600 --> 00:47:22,879 hears, 809 00:47:22,880 --> 00:47:25,359 remembers, notices. 810 00:47:25,360 --> 00:47:27,999 That you, as the reader, will slowly be pulled in, 811 00:47:28,000 --> 00:47:29,999 in sort of an immersive way, 812 00:47:30,000 --> 00:47:32,719 into that person's consciousness. 813 00:47:32,720 --> 00:47:35,040 Now, that takes extraordinary skill. 814 00:47:37,000 --> 00:47:39,840 Lizzie is determined to marry for love. 815 00:47:41,360 --> 00:47:44,160 Enter the dangerous Mr Darcy. 816 00:47:51,000 --> 00:47:54,999 Darcy is one of her strange, silent types 817 00:47:55,000 --> 00:47:56,999 that come from your dreams. 818 00:47:57,000 --> 00:48:01,399 The sense that somehow or other there's no reason to speak 819 00:48:01,400 --> 00:48:04,359 because the aura that's been given off 820 00:48:04,360 --> 00:48:05,999 by this male figure 821 00:48:06,000 --> 00:48:10,239 is so filled with sort of pungent sexuality 822 00:48:10,240 --> 00:48:12,440 that it doesn't really matter what he says. 823 00:48:16,880 --> 00:48:21,599 With his sex appeal, fortune and sprawling ancestral mansion, 824 00:48:21,600 --> 00:48:24,519 Darcy seems to have everything. 825 00:48:24,520 --> 00:48:26,919 But he's far from perfect. 826 00:48:26,920 --> 00:48:28,679 He needs fixing, you know? 827 00:48:28,680 --> 00:48:30,639 He's rude, he's arrogant. 828 00:48:30,640 --> 00:48:33,239 And crucially, he's rude to her. 829 00:48:33,240 --> 00:48:35,479 But her sister, Elizabeth, is very agreeable. 830 00:48:35,480 --> 00:48:37,399 Perfectly tolerable, I dare say. 831 00:48:37,400 --> 00:48:39,879 But not handsome enough to tempt me. 832 00:48:39,880 --> 00:48:41,999 You'd better return to your partner and enjoy her smiles. 833 00:48:42,000 --> 00:48:43,999 You're wasting your time with me. 834 00:48:44,000 --> 00:48:46,919 And they both need to learn some things, 835 00:48:46,920 --> 00:48:51,839 so Jane Austen plots the dynamic between Darcy and Elizabeth 836 00:48:51,840 --> 00:48:53,399 really precisely, 837 00:48:53,400 --> 00:48:56,639 and that's the narrative drive of the book. 838 00:48:56,640 --> 00:48:59,839 The arrogant Mr Darcy and the proud Lizzie 839 00:48:59,840 --> 00:49:03,040 are in denial over their intense mutual attraction. 840 00:49:04,320 --> 00:49:07,360 While they smoulder, an obstacle arrives. 841 00:49:09,600 --> 00:49:11,999 Mr Collins at your service. 842 00:49:12,000 --> 00:49:16,199 Mr Collins is the male heir to the Bennet estate. 843 00:49:16,200 --> 00:49:17,999 He shows up at their home, 844 00:49:18,000 --> 00:49:22,479 hoping to choose a wife from one of the Bennet daughters. 845 00:49:22,480 --> 00:49:23,999 What a superbly featured room, 846 00:49:24,000 --> 00:49:26,240 and what excellent boiled potatoes. 847 00:49:27,400 --> 00:49:31,399 It's many years since I've had such an exemplary vegetable. 848 00:49:31,400 --> 00:49:33,319 To which of my fair cousins should I compliment 849 00:49:33,320 --> 00:49:35,879 the excellence of the cooking? 850 00:49:35,880 --> 00:49:40,559 Yeah, Mr Collins is another one of Austen's idiots. 851 00:49:40,560 --> 00:49:43,119 But he is not lovable. 852 00:49:43,120 --> 00:49:47,359 He is a proud, boastful, odious, 853 00:49:47,360 --> 00:49:49,880 charmless little toad of a man. 854 00:49:51,000 --> 00:49:54,999 After dinner, I thought I might read to you all for an hour or two. 855 00:49:55,000 --> 00:49:57,599 I have with me Fordyce's Sermons, 856 00:49:57,600 --> 00:50:00,360 which speak very eloquently on all matters moral. 857 00:50:00,361 --> 00:50:05,479 Are you familiar with Fordyce's Sermons, Miss Bennet? 858 00:50:05,480 --> 00:50:07,879 And you can see what he's trying to do. 859 00:50:07,880 --> 00:50:09,439 He believes, literally, 860 00:50:09,440 --> 00:50:12,999 it is his God-given right to go round to this house 861 00:50:13,000 --> 00:50:14,719 and pick a daughter. 862 00:50:14,720 --> 00:50:15,799 What a prick. 863 00:50:15,800 --> 00:50:21,639 Later on, of course, Mr Collins will ask Lizzie to marry him. 864 00:50:21,640 --> 00:50:24,999 And now nothing remains but for me to assure you 865 00:50:25,000 --> 00:50:27,999 in the most animated language of the violence of my affection... 866 00:50:28,000 --> 00:50:29,319 Mr Collins! 867 00:50:29,320 --> 00:50:30,679 ..and that no reproach on the subject 868 00:50:30,680 --> 00:50:32,719 of fortune will cross my lips once we're married. 869 00:50:32,720 --> 00:50:33,999 You are too hasty, Sir. 870 00:50:34,000 --> 00:50:35,799 You forget that I have given no answer. 871 00:50:35,800 --> 00:50:36,959 Please understand me. 872 00:50:36,960 --> 00:50:38,200 I cannot accept you. 873 00:50:41,000 --> 00:50:44,199 Lizzie is affronted by Mr Collins's proposal 874 00:50:44,200 --> 00:50:46,999 and abruptly turns him down. 875 00:50:47,000 --> 00:50:50,519 Then Darcy makes his move. 876 00:50:50,520 --> 00:50:52,750 Please do me the honour of accepting my hand. 877 00:50:53,880 --> 00:50:56,999 He is actually trying to propose to her at this point, 878 00:50:57,000 --> 00:50:59,279 and Darcy says... 879 00:50:59,280 --> 00:51:01,719 Could you expect me to rejoice in the inferiority 880 00:51:01,720 --> 00:51:02,839 of your circumstances? 881 00:51:02,840 --> 00:51:04,839 And those are the words of a gentleman? 882 00:51:04,840 --> 00:51:07,439 It's a bit of a cack-handed proposal. 883 00:51:07,440 --> 00:51:08,999 LAUGHTER 884 00:51:09,000 --> 00:51:13,999 He is very open about his awareness of her "inferiority", 885 00:51:14,000 --> 00:51:17,439 but Lizzie responds with usual fire 886 00:51:17,440 --> 00:51:21,919 and wit and defiance. 887 00:51:21,920 --> 00:51:24,199 From the first moment I met you, your arrogance and conceit, 888 00:51:24,200 --> 00:51:26,479 your selfish disdain for the feelings of others 889 00:51:26,480 --> 00:51:28,759 made me realise that you were the last man in the world 890 00:51:28,760 --> 00:51:30,760 I could ever be prevailed upon to marry. 891 00:51:32,280 --> 00:51:34,479 "You have money, you have class over me, 892 00:51:34,480 --> 00:51:38,439 "but you can still never be the person that I am." 893 00:51:38,440 --> 00:51:40,999 Lizzie will never, ever be told that she's not as good 894 00:51:41,000 --> 00:51:42,359 as anyone else. 895 00:51:42,360 --> 00:51:43,520 She's amazing. 896 00:51:43,521 --> 00:51:47,759 Jane Austen is doing something brilliantly subversive here 897 00:51:47,760 --> 00:51:51,999 because she's going against the hierarchical nature of society, 898 00:51:52,000 --> 00:51:53,880 of class, of class divide. 899 00:51:55,000 --> 00:51:58,519 Jane Austen's project was to make public 900 00:51:58,520 --> 00:52:02,719 the idea that women's imagination and that women's minds 901 00:52:02,720 --> 00:52:04,999 were not just subtle and graceful - 902 00:52:05,000 --> 00:52:09,359 but sharp with enormous integrity and seriousness. 903 00:52:09,360 --> 00:52:14,679 There were no other images available of how women thought and felt. 904 00:52:14,680 --> 00:52:17,639 It wasn't as though it was happening in opera. 905 00:52:17,640 --> 00:52:19,999 You know, it wasn't happening in poetry. 906 00:52:20,000 --> 00:52:23,359 But she managed to create an extraordinary sense, 907 00:52:23,360 --> 00:52:26,199 not only of life in the protagonists 908 00:52:26,200 --> 00:52:32,280 but also of sharp intelligence, tact, wit, knowledge. 909 00:52:34,840 --> 00:52:39,440 Despite her defiance, Lizzie seems truly devastated. 910 00:52:41,000 --> 00:52:43,719 As a writer, you always want your characters 911 00:52:43,720 --> 00:52:45,999 to be like Lizzie and Darcy - 912 00:52:46,000 --> 00:52:48,319 in a place where you think we're not coming back from this. 913 00:52:48,320 --> 00:52:49,559 There is no way. 914 00:52:49,560 --> 00:52:52,480 But we always need a journey to go on. 915 00:52:55,600 --> 00:53:00,679 In the end, Darcy proves himself worthy of Lizzie's love. 916 00:53:00,680 --> 00:53:03,520 They finally surrender to their feelings. 917 00:53:04,520 --> 00:53:06,839 I will have to tell you, 918 00:53:06,840 --> 00:53:08,999 you have bewitched me, body and soul. 919 00:53:09,000 --> 00:53:10,999 And I love... I love... 920 00:53:11,000 --> 00:53:12,759 I love you. 921 00:53:12,760 --> 00:53:15,240 I never wish to be parted from you from this day on. 922 00:53:27,000 --> 00:53:28,240 Well, then... 923 00:53:33,360 --> 00:53:35,040 Your hands are cold. 924 00:53:39,600 --> 00:53:41,360 It's a really beautiful ending. 925 00:53:43,000 --> 00:53:47,199 We all have to have someone who sees us and loves us. 926 00:53:47,200 --> 00:53:48,320 He... 927 00:53:49,480 --> 00:53:53,560 ..is probably the only person that sees Lizzie. 928 00:53:58,680 --> 00:54:00,999 Jane has written for us 929 00:54:01,000 --> 00:54:05,799 a character and a story that we need as readers. 930 00:54:05,800 --> 00:54:09,160 She's writing the happy ending that she needed. 931 00:54:32,640 --> 00:54:36,679 Jane Austen is about to turn 27. 932 00:54:36,680 --> 00:54:38,600 She's still living with her parents. 933 00:54:39,760 --> 00:54:42,479 One suitor's family rejected her, 934 00:54:42,480 --> 00:54:44,880 the man she loved has died... 935 00:54:46,000 --> 00:54:49,040 ..and nothing she's written has been published. 936 00:54:54,280 --> 00:54:56,999 Then, in December, 1802, 937 00:54:57,000 --> 00:54:59,239 Jane and her sister are invited to stay 938 00:54:59,240 --> 00:55:01,679 with some family friends. 939 00:55:01,680 --> 00:55:04,360 Wealthy members of a landed gentry. 940 00:55:05,480 --> 00:55:07,519 During Austen's stay, 941 00:55:07,520 --> 00:55:11,319 she does receive an offer of marriage 942 00:55:11,320 --> 00:55:14,999 from the improbably named Mr Bigg-Wither. 943 00:55:15,000 --> 00:55:16,159 LAUGHTER 944 00:55:16,160 --> 00:55:18,320 It's straight out of one of her novels. 945 00:55:20,840 --> 00:55:21,999 She doesn't love him, 946 00:55:22,000 --> 00:55:23,999 and he clearly doesn't love her. 947 00:55:24,000 --> 00:55:28,439 It's hard to have to marry someone you don't love 948 00:55:28,440 --> 00:55:32,160 because that's the only way you can survive financially. 949 00:55:36,080 --> 00:55:38,999 And she thinks, "I'll be rich." 950 00:55:39,000 --> 00:55:40,480 How tempting is that? 951 00:55:42,000 --> 00:55:46,240 Why shouldn't she have security and respectability and money? 952 00:55:49,680 --> 00:55:53,040 Jane accepts Bigg-Wither's proposal. 953 00:56:03,520 --> 00:56:07,079 And then, that night, she thinks about it. 954 00:56:07,080 --> 00:56:10,399 And she must've thought, you know, "What are the ups and downs? 955 00:56:10,400 --> 00:56:11,639 "Could I still write? 956 00:56:11,640 --> 00:56:13,260 "And what cost would it come at?" 957 00:56:15,680 --> 00:56:18,200 This is a real fork in the road for her. 958 00:56:21,800 --> 00:56:24,000 She speaks with her sister... 959 00:56:26,000 --> 00:56:29,920 ..and she decides, "I cannot go through with this." 960 00:56:31,000 --> 00:56:34,999 She just couldn't make herself marry someone 961 00:56:35,000 --> 00:56:36,999 that she did not - or could not - 962 00:56:37,000 --> 00:56:38,999 imagine herself loving. 963 00:56:39,000 --> 00:56:42,679 And that is the mantra in the novels. 964 00:56:42,680 --> 00:56:45,359 Her heroines say, "I will not marry without love." 965 00:56:45,360 --> 00:56:48,240 So she's actually living what she's preaching. 966 00:56:50,440 --> 00:56:55,040 And she's pretty brave to say, "Yes," to him and then say, "No." 967 00:56:56,760 --> 00:56:59,040 That's a real independent spirit. 968 00:57:10,000 --> 00:57:11,999 This is a defining moment 969 00:57:12,000 --> 00:57:14,800 and it determines the rest of her writing life. 970 00:57:18,600 --> 00:57:24,999 She chooses to take the route of being an independent woman, 971 00:57:25,000 --> 00:57:29,440 to pursue her dream of being a writer. 972 00:57:32,720 --> 00:57:35,199 That is the moment when she says, 973 00:57:35,200 --> 00:57:37,120 "My life's going to be different." 974 00:57:40,000 --> 00:57:43,359 And I think there was almost a real pledge - 975 00:57:43,360 --> 00:57:44,839 an internal pledge - 976 00:57:44,840 --> 00:57:49,280 to the life that, "I am choosing for myself." 977 00:58:02,280 --> 00:58:03,999 Jane has gambled. 978 00:58:04,000 --> 00:58:06,479 She's gambled everything on writing. 979 00:58:06,480 --> 00:58:08,400 All of her chips are down. 980 00:58:10,120 --> 00:58:14,040 This is just a whole new chapter in her life. 981 00:58:15,280 --> 00:58:18,360 She's thinking, "This is just all going so well for me!" 982 00:58:19,760 --> 00:58:23,279 Then suddenly everything goes wrong. 983 00:58:23,280 --> 00:58:25,920 This is an absolute gut-punch. 984 00:58:27,560 --> 00:58:29,359 "What was I thinking, 985 00:58:29,360 --> 00:58:31,040 "thinking I could be a writer?" 986 00:58:36,080 --> 00:58:38,399 Take an interactive journey through spaces 987 00:58:38,400 --> 00:58:40,839 that shaped Jane Austen's life and work. 988 00:58:40,840 --> 00:58:43,719 And explore how her influence extends across time, 989 00:58:43,720 --> 00:58:45,239 place, and cultures. 990 00:58:45,240 --> 00:58:50,599 Scan the QR code or visit bbc.co.uk/austengenius 991 00:58:50,600 --> 00:58:52,840 and follow the links to the Open University. 992 00:58:52,890 --> 00:58:57,440 Repair and Synchronization by Easy Subtitles Synchronizer 1.0.0.0 78212

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