Female friendships outside the family group rarely feature in Jane Austen’s fiction, yet she and Cassandra enjoyed a close relationship with the three youngest daughters of many down park, Hampshire as Hazel Jones explores
Jane and Cassandra Austen’s final weeks together in Winchester, although distressing, were not devoid of comfort or company. Apart from regular visits by the doctor, their brothers James and Henry and their nephews William and Charles Knight, a valued old friend, Mrs Elizabeth Heathcote, walked the short distance between her house and College Street every day. She and her unmarried sister Alethea Bigg, rented number 12 (modern day number 11) in Cathedral Close from the Rev Philip Williams, an old family friend.
Elizabeth had lived in the grounds of Winchester Cathedral several years earlier with her husband, the Rev William Heathcote, first at number 10, then at number 2. After his sudden death in 1802, the young widow had returned home to Manydown Park with her baby son, only to move back to the Close with Alethea in 1813 when their father died.
The choice of location was a sensible one – Elizabeth’s son William was a scholar at Winchester College and his attendance as a day boy rather than as a boarder would save money. More importantly for Jane Austen, by the summer of 1817 Elizabeth knew the city well enough to recommend suitable accommodation for an invalid. “We have comfortable Lodgings engaged for us by our kind friend Mrs Heathcote,” Jane wrote to a friend, and the neat, well-appointed rooms on the first floor of Mrs David’s house in College Street, one with a bow window overlooking a pretty garden, appeared to please her.
Esta historia es de la edición 89 - September/October 2017 de Jane Austen's Regency World.
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Esta historia es de la edición 89 - September/October 2017 de Jane Austen's Regency World.
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