Jane Austen Society of North America—Greater Chicago Region
Jane Austen Society of North America—Greater Chicago Region
JASNA-GCR: Promoting the study and appreciation of the works of Jane Austen, an author whose writings transcend time.
JASNA-GCR: Promoting the study and appreciation of the works of Jane Austen, an author whose writings transcend time.
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Answers to the Quiz

1. Who were Jane Austen's direct and immediate legatees? Cassandra Austen
Henry Austen
Madame Bigeon

2. What Austen character said, “My object,…, is to be of use to those that come after me.”

and to whom was it said?

Mrs. Norris


Lady Bertram

3. What “was an awful legacy for a mother to bequeath”

and which mother left it?

three daughters

Lady Elliot

4. What was “A valuable legacy indeed!”

and which mother received it?

china , plate and linen

Mrs. (Mary) Dashwood

5. Whose legacy was tripled ______________
by whom ______________
and why?
Wickham
Darcy
So he could study law

6. Who was recorded as the heir-presumptive? William Elliot
7. Whose heir-expectant's rights were injured Little Henry Knightley
8. Who received the attention of idle heir-apparents?

Mary Crawford
PAGE 2 Sister Fiction Writers/Inheritors
1. “I write only for Fame, and without any view to ______________ .” wrote Austen to Cassandra in 1796.

pecuniary emolument
2. Who wrote the following, printed in The Keepsake, and re-printed by James Austen-Leigh?

Oh Mrs. Bennet! Mrs. Norris too!
While memory survives we'll dream of you.
And Mr. Woodhouse, whose abstemious lip
Must thin, but not too thin, his gruel sip.
Miss Bates, our idol, though the village bore;
And Mrs. Elton, ardent to explore.
While the clear style flows on without pretense,
With unsustained purity and unmatched sense,
Or if a sister e'er approached the throne,
She called the rich “inheritance” her own.

George Howard, Lord Morpeth, 7 th Earl Carlisle
3. ______________, in her 2001 Austen biography wrote, “ Jane Austen's writing with its wit, elegance, and narrative control outshone that of her contemporaries and those Victorian novelists who came after her.”

Carol Shields
4. ______________, considered Emma as a detective story in her 1998 talk at Chawton, which she appended to her fragment of an autobiography.

P. D. James
5. ______________, on a 1969 “visit to Jane Austen's house”, confided to her diary, “I put my hand down on Jane's desk and bring it up covered with dust. Oh that some of her genius might rub off on me! ”

Barbara Pym
6. ______________, in her 1969 essay wrote of Austen's novels, “Their spirits, their wit, their celerity and harmony of motion, their symmetry of design appear still unrivaled in the English novel. Jane Austen's work at its best seems as nearly flawless as any fiction can be.”

Eudora Welty
7. ______________, in her 1942 book on English novelists wrote of Austen, “…as to matters of form, plot, characterisation, dialogue, setting – Jane Austen remains the most nearly flawless of English novelists.”

Elizabeth Bowen
8. ______________, after listening to Sense and Sensibility read aloud in 1934 exclaimed, “Ah, Jane, you sorceress.” She had already written, “ Jane Austen, of course, wise in her neatness, trim in her sedateness; she never fails, but there are few or none like her.”

Edith Wharton
9. ______________, in her 1925 Austen essay wrote, “Had she lived a few more years only … (s)he would have been the forerunner of Henry James and of Proust – but enough. Vain are these speculations: the most perfect artist among women, the writer whose books are immortal, died ‘just as she was beginning to feel confidence in her own success.' ”

Virginia Woolf
Page 3 Austen Readers in Fiction
1. In Patrick McGrath's ______________ a psychiatrist listens to Rachmaninoff and Elgar, and reads the life of Nietzsche and the novels of Jane Austen.

Trauma
2. In Andrew Trees' ______________ high school seniors read Emma.

Academy X
3. In Karen Joy Fowler's ______________ six characters read six novels.

The Jane Austen Book Club
4. In Iris Murdoch's ______________ a character reads (but never finishes) Sense and Sensibility “with a sad quiet feeling of revisiting another period of her life …”

Nuns and Soldiers
5. In Stella Gibbons' ______________ a young woman declares she will spend the next thirty years collecting material for a novel as good as Persuasion .

Cold Comfort Farm
6. In Rudyard Kipling's ______________ a World War I veteran says, "You take it from me, there's no one to touch Jane when you're in a tight place."

The Janeites
7. In Virginia Woolf's ______________ Mrs. Dalloway, onboard ship, reads aloud the beginning of Persuasion.

The Voyage Out
Page 3 Austen Readers in Fact
8. ______________ , writer, on a newly bought couch after her divorce, “read all of Jane Austen, six novels back to back … in a state of suspense so intense that you would never guess I have read them all at least ten times before.”

Nora Ephron
9. ______________ , philosopher, devoted to Austen, when asked if he read novels said, “Oh yes … All six, every year.”

Gilbert Ryle
10. ______________ , statesman, commented on having Austen read to him during World War II, “What calm lives they led, those people! No worries about the French Revolution, or the crashing struggle of the Napoleonic Wars! ”

Winston Churchill
11. ______________ , writer, in a 1898 letter wrote, “Every time I read Pride and Prejudice I want to dig her up and beat her over the skull with her own shin-bone.”

Mark Twain/ Samuel Clemens
12. ______________ , naturalist, rested on his sofa at three each afternoon, smoking a cigarette, and listening to a reading of Austen “or other book not scientific.”

Charles Darwin
13 . ______________, literary critic, in 1859 wrote that Austen “will doubtless be read as long as English novels find readers…” and had begun to read Austen with ______________, novelist, in 1857, after having previously urged ______________, novelist, to read Pride and Prejudice and whose 1848 letter states, “… you add, I must ‘learn to acknowledge her as one of the greatest artists, of the greatest painters of human character , and one of the writers with the nicest sense of means to an end that ever lived.' ”

George Henry Lewes

George Eliot

Charlotte Brontë

Page 4 Inspired by Austen
1. Which president, in the Winter 2008 Ms. Magazine , said of women in Pride and Prejudice and Persuasion , they “stand up to the conventions of the time, think for themselves, challenge authority and reject anything that doesn't fulfill their own needs.”?

Marsha Huff JASNA Pres.
2. Duma i upredzenie and Orgullo y prejuicio and Stolz und Vorurteil are translations of Pride and Prejudice into ______________, ______________, and ______________.

Polish , Spanish , German
3. ______________ , 1913, is billed as “the first Austen sequel.”

Old Friends and New Fancies
4. Name the authors of the multiple books/series described as follows:

The Mysterious Nine by ______________
The Darcy Family Five by ______________
The Diarist Heroes Five by ______________
The Mysterious Four by ______________
The Gentleman Three by ______________

 

Stephanie Barron
Elizabeth Ashton
Amanda Grange
Carrie Bebris
Pamela Aiden

5. Name the authors of the Jane Austen handbooks described/(sub)titled as follows:
A Reference for the Rest of Us by ______________
A Heroine's Guide to Life and Love by ___________
A Sensible Yet Elegant Guide to Her World by _____
Guide to Romance: the Regency Rules by __________
Guide to Good Manners by ______________
Quiz Book by

 

Joan Klingel Ray
Patrice Hannon
Margaret Sullivan
Lauren Henderson
Josephine Ross
Helen Barton

6. What did Deidre Le Faye, R. W. Chapman and Lord Brabourne do for Austen? edited Austen's letters
7. Who is the latest to complete the following:

The Watsons:
Charlotte ( Sanditon )

 

Joan Aiken
Julia Barrett

Page 5 Cinematic Austen
Match the Gentleman to the Lady  
X Kate Beckinsale

C Maria Bello

Y Tracey Childs

F Jennifer Ehle

B Sabina Franklyn

Q Greer Garson

T Elizabeth Garvie

A Susannah Harker

M Anne Hathaway

R Sally Hawkins

E Felicity Jones

L Keira Knightley

D Sylvestra Le Touzel

W Hattie Morahan

N Frances O'Connor

K Maureen O'Sullivan

P Gwyneth Paltrow

Z Rosamund Pike

U Billie Piper

H Aishwarya Rai

J Irene Richard

I Amanda Root

V Alicia Silverstone

G Emma Thompson

O Charity Wakefield

S Kate Winslet
A. Crispin Bonham Carter

B. Osmond Bullock

C. Hugh Dancy

D. Nicholas Farrell

E. JJ Feild

F. Colin Firth

G. Hugh Grant

H. Martin Henderson

I. Ciaran Hinds

J. Bosco Hogan

K. Bruce Lester

L. Matthew MacFayden

M. James McAvoy

N. Jonny Lee Miller

O. David Morrissey

P. Jeremy Northam

Q. Laurence Olivier

R. Rupert Penry-Jones

S. Alan Rickman

T. David Rintoul

U. Blake Ritson

V. Paul Rudd

W. Dan Stevens

X. Mark Strong

Y. Robert Swann

Z. Simon Woods
1. How is the Nobel Prize for Literature connected to Austen on film?

Prize winner Sir Harold Pinter played Sir Thomas Bertram in “Mansfield Park”.
2. Who played 2 film Janes? Olivia Williams
3. What exactly did Aldous Huxley and Fay Weldon do for cinematic Austen?

They wrote screenplays for “Pride and Prejudice”.
4. Who went from Emma to Star Wars ?

Ewan Mc Gregor
5. Who are the “real life” mother and her 2 daughters who appeared in 4 Austen- related films? Phyllida Law Emma Thompson Sophie Thompson
6. And who were their 5 characters?

Mrs. Bates
Miss Bates
Mrs. Austen
Elinor Dashwood
Mary Musgrove

Page 6
Which image is the authentic Jane Austen? the 2nd
A Charade for Harriet Smith

My first is one on which we stand,
A section, too, of a worthy race.
The rest sounds like we're not on land,
Yet find ourselves in a briny place.

But, ah, united, with one mind,
Do Janeites meet and together dream
Of all that She has left behind,
To celebrate this Chicago theme.

What is Austen's ______________?

 

 

 

 

 

 

LEGACY

The Last Word

 
Can you find in this Quiz a word that contains all 5 vowels?

The word is abstemious (all vowels in order) or Persuasion.

Quiz ©2008 Elsie Holzwarth, Greater Chicago Region, Jane Austen Society of North America