Jane Austen's handwriting

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Esredux

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Dear all,

I am sorry if my question is somewhat irrelevant on the site dedicated to modern English but probably you could provide me with an appropriate link.

While reading Jane Austen's manuscrips I came across some interesting spelling, namely 'fs' instead of 'ss' in such words as 'classical', 'Cassandra', 'Cassy', 'Dutchess', etc. In her papers you can read 'clafsical', 'Cafsandra', 'Cafsy', 'Dutchefs'. It might not look exactly like 'f' but very similar. The curator didn't seem to know anything about it.

I was interested to know if it was Jane Austen's perculiarity or simply the norm at that time, if the latter then the time frame and if it was possibly caused by German. Actually, I'd apprecate any information.
 
Google Jane Austen, spelling and pronunciation
 
Thanks for the hint. In fact, it has nothing to do with her allegedly 'bad' spelling. The long s was the norm apparantly till 1803 in Britain, at least according to Wiki :up:
 
That ſ long s was common usage, but she is supposed to have been poor at spelling. She also did things that annoy grammar purists. :-D
 
I was surprised by the fact that the people in the museum didn't know that.
As for her 'bad' spelling, I wonder if grammar or other purists could be happy with at least one writer in any language :lol:
 
She's not the only one. ;-)
 
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