Javascript must be enabled to continue!
[Continuation of Kitty, or the Bower, by James Edward Austen]
View through CrossRef
Kitty continued in this state of satisfaction during the remainder of the Stanley’s visit—Who took their leave with many pressing invitations to visit them in London, when as Camilla said, she might have an opportunity of becoming acquainted with that sweet girl Augusta Hallifax—Or Rather...
Title: [Continuation of Kitty, or the Bower, by James Edward Austen]
Description:
Kitty continued in this state of satisfaction during the remainder of the Stanley’s visit—Who took their leave with many pressing invitations to visit them in London, when as Camilla said, she might have an opportunity of becoming acquainted with that sweet girl Augusta Hallifax—Or Rather.
Related Results
“What fucked version of hello kitty are you?”
“What fucked version of hello kitty are you?”
“Power often comes in deceptive packages” (Myers, 2002)
Hello Kitty is the ultimate icon of Japanese cuteness. She/it is simply the image of a cat with black eyes, a button...
“Who Needs a Hero? Redefining Female Agency in Jane Austen’s Novels”
“Who Needs a Hero? Redefining Female Agency in Jane Austen’s Novels”
Written as a way of introducing the exceptionally talented mind of Jane Austen, this article explores the broad array of geniuses that she embodies. The article traces the developm...
Wishing the Juvenilia Away
Wishing the Juvenilia Away
Caroline Austen wrote in 1867 that her aunt Jane, at the end of her life, had discouraged her from writing until she was 16, and had said that she herself wished that she had waite...
A Memoir of Jane Austen
A Memoir of Jane Austen
When James Edward Austen-Leigh's Memoir of his famous aunt was published in 1870, far from satisfying public curiosity about Jane Austen as the family had intended, it simply raise...
The Flemish Jane Austen
The Flemish Jane Austen
Walter Scott’s unsigned review of Emma in the Quarterly Review was the first to identify Austen’s writing as a new kind of fiction. In an intriguing gesture, Scott compares Austen'...
Jane Austen in Mid-Victorian Periodicals
Jane Austen in Mid-Victorian Periodicals
Victorian periodicals were an important part of the literary marketplace that shaped Jane Austen’s critical reception during the nineteenth century. Moreover, throughout the centur...
Austen on What Strategic Thinking Is Not
Austen on What Strategic Thinking Is Not
This chapter examines Jane Austen's views on what strategic thinking is not. Austen distinguishes strategic thinking from concepts possibly confused with it, such as selfishness, m...
Jane Austen and Crafts
Jane Austen and Crafts
Crafts – useful and decorative needlecrafts, netting, filigree work, screen painting and paper flower making – feature throughout Austen’s letters and fiction. Focusing on the plot...

