Plan your visit. 225 Madison Avenue at 36th Street, New York, NY 10016.

Plan your visit. 225 Madison Avenue at 36th Street, New York, NY 10016.

Jane Austen's Lady Susan

Thumbnails

121. MA 1226, p. 119, Letter 27
122. MA 1226, p. 120
123. MA 1226, p. 121
124. MA 1226, p. 122, Letter 28
125. MA 1226, p. 123
126. MA 1226, p. 124, Letter 29
127. MA 1226, p. 125
128. MA 1226, p. 126, Letter 30
129. MA 1226, p. 127
130. MA 1226, p. 128
131. MA 1226, p. 129
132. MA 1226, p. 130

The manuscript of Austen's Lady Susan is the only surviving complete draft of any of her novels. All of the manuscripts of Austen's novels were probably destroyed after serving as printer's copy, and neither she nor her family retained any of the earlier, rough drafts of the four novels published during her lifetime or the two novels published posthumously. The manuscript of Lady Susan is a fair copy in Austen's hand, almost free of corrections or revisions. There is no conclusive evidence for the date of composition, but Austen probably wrote Lady Susan in 1794–95. Two of the 158 pages of this manuscript are watermarked 1805, suggesting that she transcribed her earlier draft (which does not survive) between 1805 and 1809, perhaps for possible publication. Austen appears to have left the novel untitled. This manuscript of Austen's epistolary novel (a novel in the form of a series of letters) was first published in 1871 by her nephew James Edward Austen-Leigh in his Memoir of Jane Austen.