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In her final years, Jane Austen was finally a published success, and quietly, unmistakably dying.
This episode follows Austen through the narrowing circle of her last months, her illness, her unfinished work, and the extraordinary mental clarity she retained as her body failed. From the calm precision of Persuasion to the sharp, unfinished promise of Sanditon, we see a writer still evolving, still experimenting, still thinking, even as time runs out.
We explore the mystery of her illness, the intimacy of her final letters, her small funeral in Winchester, and the silence that followed, shaped in part by her sister Cassandra’s decision to destroy so much of Jane’s private correspondence. What survives is not a full portrait, but a carefully guarded one.
This is not the story of a cosy literary icon. It is the story of a woman of discipline, irony, and quiet courage, whose final days sharpened rather than softened her vision, and whose legacy continues to speak precisely because so much was left unsaid.
Support the show
For books written and published by Keith Hocton
www.entrepotpublishing.com
By Keith Hockton3.7
33 ratings
Send us a text
In her final years, Jane Austen was finally a published success, and quietly, unmistakably dying.
This episode follows Austen through the narrowing circle of her last months, her illness, her unfinished work, and the extraordinary mental clarity she retained as her body failed. From the calm precision of Persuasion to the sharp, unfinished promise of Sanditon, we see a writer still evolving, still experimenting, still thinking, even as time runs out.
We explore the mystery of her illness, the intimacy of her final letters, her small funeral in Winchester, and the silence that followed, shaped in part by her sister Cassandra’s decision to destroy so much of Jane’s private correspondence. What survives is not a full portrait, but a carefully guarded one.
This is not the story of a cosy literary icon. It is the story of a woman of discipline, irony, and quiet courage, whose final days sharpened rather than softened her vision, and whose legacy continues to speak precisely because so much was left unsaid.
Support the show
For books written and published by Keith Hocton
www.entrepotpublishing.com

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