Thanks to the eagle-eyed folks at
JASNA-NYC, I learned today about the following blog post, which reveals for the
first time the text of an 1831 letter that John Murray--the very same publisher
of Emma whose late 1815 correspondence we have just been discussing--wrote to
Cassandra Austen in which he pitched to her the idea of his republishing all of
JA's novels:
It doesn't appear to be a a hoax,
although one must be on the alert for hoaxes about newly discovered documents
(or paintings) pertaining to Jane Austen, in a Janeite world still in the
throes of Austenmania.
The blog post, by someone named
Ellie Bennett (an interesting name to Janeites, even with the different
nickname and different surname spelling), does a pretty good job of analyzing
Murray's letter (which was actually a copy he kept, it's
not the original presumably sent to CEA). We all know that no publishing deal
was ever made by CEA and Murray, and that CEA instead went through Bentley the
next year.
It's interesting to compare Murray's
shrewd and tough negotiating position in late 1815, vs. his active courtship of
CEA's business in 1831. What changed for Murray in the intervening 16 years?
Had JA's
literary stature increased enough
among the literati to make republishing her novels seem financially attractive?
Was her having died, and therefore no more Austen novels were forthcoming, a significant
factor in Murray's calculations?
I need to go back and refresh my
memory about the history of ownership of the copyright to JA's novels. I'm
trying to recall how the copyrights to S&S, P&P and MP would have
reverted to JA's ownership.....
For those who for whatever reason
can't open the above link, here is the text of the letter, that "Ellie
Bennett" says she copied from the John Murray Archive:
12 May 1831.
Madam
I have long entertained a great
desire of being the means of trying to induce the public to become far more
generally acquainted with the admirable novels of your late estimable sister.
I should be glad therefore if you
would be so good as to inform me whether you approve this plan by which I would
undertake at my own cost & risque to bring them forward, in a new & attractive
form, & engage to give you half the profits , or if you should prefer
disposing of the copyright at once, if you would do me the favour of naming the
sum which you would be disposed to part with them for.
I am Madam
Your obedient servant
(signed) John Murray
Interesting stuff to ponder, as the
Bicentennial of P&P comes to a close today.
Cheers, ARNIE
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