Memoir of Jane Austen
- Authors
- Austen-Leigh, James Edward
- Publisher
- Independently Published
- ISBN
- 9798689923628
- Date
- 2021-01-29T00:00:00+00:00
- Size
- 0.19 MB
- Lang
- en
Book Excerpt: ...ion, though all orders may make some progress, yet it is most perceptible in the lower. It is a process of 'levelling up;' the rear rank 'dressing up, ' as it were, close to the front rank. When Hamlet mentions, as something which he had 'for three years taken note of, ' that 'the toe of the peasant comes so near the heel of the courtier, ' it was probably intended by Shakspeare as a satire on his own times; but it expressed a principle which is working at all times in which society makes any progress. I believe that a century ago the improvement in most country parishes began with the clergy; and that in those days a rector who chanced to be a gentleman and a scholar found himself superior to his chief parishioners in information and manners, and became a sort of centre of refinement and politeness.Mr. Austen was a remarkably good-looking man, both in his youth and his old age. During his year of office at Oxford he had been called the 'handsome Proctor;' and at Bath, when more than seventy yeam