
Lady Susan
by Jane Austen (1794),
(in Northanger Abbey, Lady Susan, The Watsons and Sanditon).
Oxford World’s Classics, 2008 (1871).
Will you walk into my parlour?” said the Spider to the Fly,
‘Tis the prettiest little parlour that ever you did spy;
… Oh no, no,” said the little Fly, “to ask me is in vain,
For who goes up your winding stair can ne’er come down again.”
This was my July 2013 review of Austen’s Lady Susan, reposted just as a film adaptation arrived in cinemas (though rebranded with a completely different Austen title as Love & Friendship – written when she was in her teens).
Are tweets a modern equivalent of Lady Susan‘s letters? And if so, how would public responses be written if, instead of handwritten letters, the emails of Lady Susan Vernon and other contemporaries were published piecemeal on the internet for general titillation?
It’s worth noting that, back in 2013, each tweet (as they were then called) was limited to 140 characters.
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