<p> <strong>List of Illustrations.</strong></p> <p> <strong>About Longman Cultural Editions.</strong></p> <p> <strong>About this Edition.</strong></p> <p> <strong>Introduction.</strong></p> <p> <strong>Table of Dates.</strong></p> <p> <strong>Pride and Prejudice (1813).</strong></p> <p> <br></p> <p>Volume 1.</p> <p>Volume 2.</p> <p>Volume 3.</p> <p> <strong>Jane Austen's Letters.</strong></p> <p> <br></p> <p>“To Cassandra Austen,” 2 June 1799.</p> <p>“To Cassandra Austen,” 20-21 November 1800.</p> <p>“To Cassandra Austen,” 29 January 1813.</p> <p>“To Cassandra Austen,” 4 February 1813.</p> <p>“To Cassandra Austen,” 9 February 1813.</p> <p>“To Frank Austen,” 3 July 1813.</p> <p>“To Frank Austen,” 25 September 1813.</p> <p>“To Anna Austen,” 9 September 1814.</p> <p>“To James Stanier Clarke,” 11 December 1815.</p> <p>“To J. Edward Austen,” 16 December 1816.</p> <p> <strong>Contexts.</strong></p> <p> <br></p> <p> <strong>Money.</strong></p> <p> <br></p> <p>Money: From the 1790s to the Regency (1811-1820).</p> <p> <strong>Marriage and the Marriage Market.</strong></p> <p> <br></p> <p>Debates in the House of Commons on The Clandestine Marriage Bill.</p> <p>Jean-Jacques Rousseau, from Emile (1762, 1763).</p> <p>Revd. James Fordyce, Sermons to Young Women (1766, 1795).</p> <p>Mary Wollstonecraft, from A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792).</p> <p>Jane Austen, from Emma (1816).</p> <p>Lord Byron, Don Juan Canto 14. XVIII (1823).</p> <p> <strong>Female Character and Conduct.</strong></p> <p> <br></p> <p>Revd. James Fordyce, from Sermons to Young Women (1766, 1777).</p> <p>Dr. John Gregory, A Father's Legacy to His Daughters (1774).</p> <p>Mary Wollstonecraft, from A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792).</p> <p> <strong>Male Characters and Conduct.</strong></p> <p> <br></p> <p>Alexander Pope, from Epistle IV, To Richard Boyl, Earl of Burlington; Of the Uses of Riches (1731).</p> <p>Samuel Johnson, Rambler (1750).</p> <p> <strong>The Picturesque and Great Houses.</strong></p> <p> <br></p> <p>William Gilpin, from Observations, Relative chiefly to Picturesque Beauty, made in the year 1792, on Several Parts of England (1786) and Three Essays: On Picturesque Beauty, On Picturesque Travel, and on Sketching Landscape (1792).</p> <p>John Byng, Rules for Admission to Strawberry Hill.</p> <p> <strong>Reactions to Pride and Prejudice. </strong></p> <p> <br></p> <p> <strong>First Reviews and Readers.</strong></p> <p> <br></p> <p>British Critic XLI (1813).</p> <p>Critical Review 4/3 (1813).</p> <p>Anna Isabella Milbanke (1813).</p> <p>Walter Scott, Quarterly Review (1815).</p> <p> <strong>The Next Generation.</strong></p> <p> <br></p> <p>Henry Crabb Robinson.</p> <p>Richard Whatley, Quarterly Review (1821).</p> <p>Walter Scott, Journal, 1826-27.</p> <p>Maria Jane Jewsbury, The Athenaeum.</p> <p>Charlotte Bronte, letters.</p> <p> <strong>Further Reading.</strong></p>