On the outbreak of Napoleonic Wars Austen was appointed to raise and organise a corps of Sea Fencibles at Ramsgate to defend a strip of the Kentish coast. He went on to be commanding officer of the third-rate HMSCanopus, in which he took part in the pursuit of the French Fleet to the West Indies and back and then fought at the Battle of San Domingo, leading the lee line of ships into the battle. He later commanded the third-rate HMSSt Albans and observed the Battle of Vimeiro from the deck of his ship before embarking British troops retreating after the Battle of Corunna. He went on to be commanding officer of the third-rate HMSElephant and captured the United States privateer Swordfish during the War of 1812.
Austen’s Emma... Where Cher’s desirable classmate Christian turns out to be gay, his equivalent in Austen’s novel, FrankChurchill, is unavailable to her because he is secretly engaged to another woman.
Emma is unique in being the only Austen novel in which the heroine does not marry into wealth, but it is nonetheless a book shot through with money, from Mrs Elton’s £10,000, to FrankChurchill’s dependency on his aunt, to Harriet’s nothing.
... finding them in some ways superior to Austen’s (Burney and Smith are credited with greater frankness concerning the sexual double standard, and the subjection of women under 18th-centuryBritish law).