Publisher's Synopsis
The Memoir of my Aunt, Jane Austen, has been re-ceived with more favour than I had ventured to ex-pect. The notices taken of it in the periodical press, as well as letters addressed to me by many with whom I am not personally acquainted, show that an unabated inter-est is still taken in every particular that can be told about her. I am thus encouraged not only to offer a Second Edi-tion of the Memoir, but also to enlarge it with some addi-tional matter which I might have scrupled to intrude on the public if they had not thus seemed to call for it. In the present Edition, the narrative is somewhat enlarged, and a few more letters are added; with a short specimen of her childish stories. The cancelled chapter of "Persuasion‟ is given, in compliance with wishes both publicly and privately expressed. A fragment of a story entitled "The Watsons‟ is printed; and extracts are given from a novel which she had begun a few months before her death; but the chief addition is a short tale never before published, called "Lady Susan.‟ {0a} I regret that the little which I have been able to add could not appear in my First Edi-tion; as much of it was either unknown to me, or not at my command, when I first published; and I hope that I may claim some indulgent allowance for the difficulty of recovering little facts and feelings which had been merged half a century deep in oblivion.