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William Makepeace Thackeray

William Makepeace Thackeray (/ˈθækəri/ THAK-ər-ee; 18 July 1811 – 24 December 1863) was an English novelist and illustrator. He is known for his satirical works, particularly his 1847–1848 novel Vanity Fair, a panoramic portrait of British society, and the 1844 novel The Luck of Barry Lyndon, which was adapted for a 1975 film by Stanley Kubrick.

William Makepeace Thackeray
1855 daguerreotype of William Makepeace Thackeray by Jesse Harrison Whitehurst
Born(1811-07-18)18 July 1811
Calcutta, British India
Died24 December 1863(1863-12-24) (aged 52)
London, England
Occupation
  • Novelist
  • poet
NationalityEnglish
EducationCharterhouse School
Alma materTrinity College, Cambridge
Period1829–1863
GenreHistorical fiction
Notable worksVanity Fair, The Luck of Barry Lyndon
SpouseIsabella Gethin Shawe
Children3; including Anne and Harriet
Signature

Thackeray was born in Calcutta, British India, and was sent to England after his father's death in 1815. He studied at various schools and briefly attended Trinity College, Cambridge, before leaving to travel Europe. Thackeray squandered much of his inheritance on gambling and unsuccessful newspapers. He turned to journalism to support his family, primarily working for Fraser's Magazine, The Times, and Punch. His wife Isabella suffered from mental illness, leaving Thackeray a de facto widower. Thackeray gained fame with his novel Vanity Fair and produced several other notable works. He unsuccessfully ran for Parliament in 1857 and edited the Cornhill Magazine in 1860. Thackeray's health declined due to excessive eating, drinking, and lack of exercise. He died from a stroke at the age of fifty-two.

Thackeray began as a satirist and parodist, gaining popularity through works that showcased his fondness for roguish characters. He is best known for Vanity Fair, featuring Becky Sharp, and The Luck of Barry Lyndon. Thackeray's early works were marked by savage attacks on high society, military prowess, marriage, and hypocrisy, often written under various pseudonyms. His writing career began with satirical sketches like The Yellowplush Papers. Thackeray's later novels, such as Pendennis and The Newcomes, reflected a mellowing in his tone, focusing on the coming of age of characters and critical portrayals of society. During the Victorian era, Thackeray was ranked second to Charles Dickens but is now primarily known for Vanity Fair.

Biography edit

Thackeray, an only child, was born in Calcutta,[a] British India, where his father, Richmond Thackeray (1 September 1781 – 13 September 1815), was secretary to the Board of Revenue in the East India Company. His mother, Anne Becher (1792–1864), was the second daughter of Harriet Becher and John Harman Becher, who was also a secretary (writer) for the East India Company.[1] His father was a grandson of Thomas Thackeray (1693–1760), headmaster of Harrow School.[2]

Richmond died in 1815, which caused Anne to send her son to England that same year, while she remained in India. The ship on which he travelled made a short stopover at Saint Helena, where the imprisoned Napoleon was pointed out to him. Once in England, he was educated at schools in Southampton and Chiswick, and then at Charterhouse School, where he became a close friend of John Leech. Thackeray disliked Charterhouse,[3] and parodied it in his fiction as "Slaughterhouse".

Nevertheless, Thackeray was honoured in the Charterhouse Chapel with a monument after his death. Illness in his last year there, during which he reportedly grew to his full height of six-foot three, postponed his matriculation at Trinity College, Cambridge, until February 1829.[citation needed]

Never very keen on academic studies, Thackeray left Cambridge in 1830, but some of his earliest published writing appeared in two university periodicals, The Snob and The Gownsman.[4]

 
Self Caricature by Thackeray

Thackeray then travelled for some time on the continent, visiting Paris and Weimar, where he met Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. He returned to England and began to study law at the Middle Temple, but soon gave that up. On reaching age 21, he came into his inheritance from his father, but he squandered much of it on gambling and on funding two unsuccessful newspapers, The National Standard and The Constitutional, for which he had hoped to write. He also lost a good part of his fortune in the collapse of two Indian banks. Forced to consider a profession to support himself, he turned first to art, which he studied in Paris, but did not pursue it, except in later years as the illustrator of some of his own novels and other writings.[citation needed]

Thackeray's years of semi-idleness ended on 20 August 1836, when he married Isabella Gethin Shawe (1816–1894), second daughter of Isabella Creagh Shawe and Matthew Shawe, a colonel who had died after distinguished service, primarily in India. The Thackerays had three children, all daughters: Anne Isabella (1837–1919), Jane (who died at eight months old), and Harriet Marian (1840–1875), who married Sir Leslie Stephen, editor, biographer and philosopher.[citation needed]

Thackeray now began "writing for his life", as he put it, turning to journalism in an effort to support his young family. He primarily worked for Fraser's Magazine, a sharp-witted and sharp-tongued conservative publication for which he produced art criticism, short fictional sketches, and two longer fictional works, Catherine and The Luck of Barry Lyndon. Between 1837 and 1840, he also reviewed books for The Times.[5]

He was also a regular contributor to The Morning Chronicle and The Foreign Quarterly Review. Later, through his connection to the illustrator John Leech, he began writing for the newly created magazine Punch, in which he published The Snob Papers, later collected as The Book of Snobs. This work popularised the modern meaning of the word "snob".[6]

Thackeray was a regular contributor to Punch between 1843 and 1854.[7]

 
Thackeray portrayed by Eyre Crowe, 1845

In Thackeray's personal life, his wife Isabella sadly succumbed to depression after the birth of their third child in 1840. Finding that he could get no work done at home, he spent more and more time away, until September 1840, when he realised how grave his wife's condition was. Struck by guilt, he set out with his wife to Ireland. During the crossing, she threw herself from a water-closet into the sea, but she was pulled from the waters. They fled back home after a four-week battle with her mother. From November 1840 to February 1842, Isabella was in and out of professional care, as her condition waxed and waned.[2]

She eventually deteriorated into a permanent state of detachment from reality. Thackeray desperately sought cures for her, but nothing worked, and she ended up in two different asylums in or near Paris until 1845, after which Thackeray took her back to England, where he installed her with a Mrs. Bakewell at Camberwell. Isabella outlived her husband by 30 years, in the end being cared for by a family named Thompson in Leigh-on-Sea at Southend, until her death in 1894.[8][9] After his wife's illness, Thackeray became a de facto widower, never establishing another permanent relationship. He did pursue other women, however, in particular Mrs. Jane Brookfield and Sally Baxter. In 1851, Mr. Brookfield barred Thackeray from further visits or correspondence with Jane. Baxter, an American twenty years Thackeray's junior whom he met during a lecture tour in New York City in 1852, married another man in 1855.[citation needed]

In the early 1840s, Thackeray had some success with two travel books, The Paris Sketch Book and The Irish Sketch Book, the latter marked by its hostility towards Irish Catholics. However, as the book appealed to anti-Irish sentiment in Britain at the time, Thackeray was given the job of being Punch's Irish expert, often under the pseudonym Hibernis Hibernior ("more Irish than the Irish").[7] Thackeray became responsible for creating Punch's notoriously hostile and negative depictions of the Irish during the Great Irish Famine of 1845 to 1851.[7]

Thackeray achieved more recognition with his Snob Papers (serialised 1846/7, published in book form in 1848), but the work that really established his fame was the novel Vanity Fair, which first appeared in serialised instalments beginning in January 1847. Even before Vanity Fair completed its serial run, Thackeray had become a celebrity, sought after by the very lords and ladies whom he satirised. They hailed him as the equal of Charles Dickens.[10]

 
Portrait of Thackeray in his study, c. 1860

He remained "at the top of the tree", as he put it, for the rest of his life, during which he produced several large novels, notably Pendennis, The Newcomes, and The History of Henry Esmond, despite various illnesses, including a near-fatal one that struck him in 1849 in the middle of writing Pendennis. He twice visited the United States on lecture tours during this period. Longtime Washington journalist B.P. Poore described Thackeray on one of those tours:

The citizens of Washington enjoyed a rare treat when Thackeray came to deliver his lectures on the English essayists, wits, and humorists of the eighteenth century. Accustomed to the spread-eagle style of oratory too prevalent at the Capitol, they were delighted with the pleasing voice and easy manner of the burly, gray-haired, rosy-cheeked Briton, who made no gestures, but stood most of the time with his hands in his pockets, as if he were talking with friends at a cozy fireside.[11]

Thackeray also gave lectures in London on the English humorists of the eighteenth century, and on the first four Hanoverian monarchs. The latter series was published in book form in 1861 as The Four Georges: Sketches of Manners, Morals, Court, and Town Life .[2]

In July 1857, Thackeray stood unsuccessfully as a Liberal for the city of Oxford in Parliament.[2] Although not the most fiery agitator, Thackeray was always a decided liberal in his politics, and he promised to vote for the ballot in extension of the suffrage and was ready to accept triennial parliaments.[2] He was narrowly beaten by Cardwell, who received 1,070 votes, as against 1,005 for Thackeray.[2]

In 1860, Thackeray became editor of the newly established Cornhill Magazine,[12] but he was never comfortable in the role, preferring to contribute to the magazine as the writer of a column called "Roundabout Papers".[citation needed]

Thackeray's health worsened during the 1850s, and he was plagued by a recurring stricture of the urethra that laid him up for days at a time. He also felt that he had lost much of his creative impetus. He worsened matters by excessive eating and drinking and avoiding exercise, though he enjoyed riding (he kept a horse). He has been described as "the greatest literary glutton who ever lived". His main activity apart from writing was "gutting and gorging".[13] He could not break his addiction to spicy peppers, further ruining his digestion.

 
Thackeray's grave at Kensal Green Cemetery, London, photographed in 2014

On 23 December 1863, after returning from dining out and before dressing for bed, he suffered a stroke. He was found dead in his bed the following morning. His death at the age of fifty-two was unexpected and shocked his family, his friends and the reading public. An estimated 7,000 people attended his funeral at Kensington Gardens. He was buried on 29 December at Kensal Green Cemetery, and a memorial bust sculpted by Marochetti can be found in Westminster Abbey.[2]

Works edit

Thackeray began as a satirist and parodist, writing works that displayed a sneaking fondness for roguish upstarts, such as Becky Sharp in Vanity Fair and the title characters of The Luck of Barry Lyndon and Catherine. In his earliest works, written under such pseudonyms as Charles James Yellowplush, Michael Angelo Titmarsh and George Savage Fitz-Boodle, he tended towards savagery in his attacks on high society, military prowess, the institution of marriage and hypocrisy.

One of his earliest works, "Timbuctoo" (1829), contains a burlesque upon the subject set for the Cambridge Chancellor's Medal for English Verse. [14] (The contest was won by Tennyson with a poem of the same title, "Timbuctoo"). Thackeray's writing career really began with a series of satirical sketches now usually known as The Yellowplush Papers, which appeared in Fraser's Magazine beginning in 1837. These were adapted for BBC Radio 4 in 2009, with Adam Buxton playing Charles Yellowplush.[15]

Between May 1839 and February 1840 Fraser's published the work sometimes considered Thackeray's first novel, Catherine. Originally intended as a satire of the Newgate school of crime fiction, it ended up being more of a picaresque tale. He also began work, never finished, on the novel later published as A Shabby Genteel Story.

 
Title-page to Vanity Fair, drawn by Thackeray, who furnished the illustrations for many of his own books

Along with The Luck of Barry Lyndon, Thackeray is probably best known now for Vanity Fair. Literary theorist Cornelius Quassus wrote that "the meteoric rise of the heroine of Vanity Fair Rebecca Sharp is a satirical presentation of the striving for profit, power, and social recognition of the new middle class. Old and new members of the middle class strive to emulate the lifestyle of the higher class (noblemen and landowners), and thereby to increase their material possessions and to own luxury objects. In Vanity Fair, one can observe a greater degree of violation of moral values among members of the new middle class, for the decline of morality is proportionate to the degree of closeness of the individual to the market and its laws."[16] In contrast, his large novels from the period after Vanity Fair, which were once described by Henry James as examples of "loose baggy monsters", have largely faded from view, perhaps because they reflect a mellowing in Thackeray, who had become so successful with his satires on society that he seemed to lose his zest for attacking it. These later works include Pendennis, a Bildungsroman depicting the coming of age of Arthur Pendennis, an alter ego of Thackeray, who also features as the narrator of two later novels, The Newcomes and The Adventures of Philip. The Newcomes is noteworthy for its critical portrayal of the "marriage market", while Philip is known for its semi-autobiographical depiction of Thackeray's early life, in which he partially regains some of his early satirical power.

Also notable among the later novels is The History of Henry Esmond, in which Thackeray tried to write a novel in the style of the eighteenth century, a period that held great appeal for him. About this novel, there have been found evident analogies—in the fundamental structure of the plot; in the psychological outlines of the main characters; in frequent episodes; and in the use of metaphors—to Ippolito Nievo's Confessions of an Italian. Nievo wrote his novel during his stay in Milan where, in the "Ambrosiana" library, The History of Henry Esmond was available, just published.[17]

Not only Esmond but also Barry Lyndon and Catherine are set in that period, as is the sequel to Esmond, The Virginians, which is set partially in North America and includes George Washington as a character who nearly kills one of the protagonists in a duel.

Family edit

Parents edit

Thackeray's father, Richmond Thackeray, was born at South Mimms and went to India in 1798 at age sixteen as a writer (civil servant) with the East India Company. Richmond's father's name was also William Makepeace Thackeray.[18] Richmond fathered a daughter, Sarah Redfield, in 1804 with Charlotte Sophia Rudd, his possibly Eurasian mistress, and both mother and daughter were named in his will. Such liaisons were common among gentlemen of the East India Company, and it formed no bar to his later courting and marrying William's mother.[19]

 
Anne Becher and William Makepeace Thackeray by George Chinnery, c. 1813

Thackeray's mother, Anne Becher (born 1792), was "one of the reigning beauties of the day" and a daughter of John Harmon Becher, Collector of the South 24 Parganas district (d. Calcutta, 1800), of an old Bengal civilian family "noted for the tenderness of its women". Anne Becher, her sister Harriet and their widowed mother, also Harriet, had been sent back to India by her authoritarian guardian grandmother, Ann Becher, in 1809 on the Earl Howe. Anne's grandmother had told her that the man she loved, Henry Carmichael-Smyth, an ensign in the Bengal Engineers whom she met at an Assembly Ball in 1807 in Bath, had died, while he was told that Anne was no longer interested in him. Neither of these assertions was true. Though Carmichael-Smyth was from a distinguished Scottish military family, Anne's grandmother went to extreme lengths to prevent their marriage. Surviving family letters state that she wanted a better match for her granddaughter.[20]

Anne Becher and Richmond Thackeray were married in Calcutta on 13 October 1810. Their only child, William, was born on 18 July 1811.[21] There is a fine miniature portrait of Anne Becher Thackeray and William Makepeace Thackeray, aged about two, done in Madras by George Chinnery c. 1813.[22]

Anne's family's deception was unexpectedly revealed in 1812, when Richmond Thackeray unwittingly invited the supposedly dead Carmichael-Smyth to dinner. Five years later, after Richmond had died of a fever on 13 September 1815, Anne married Henry Carmichael-Smyth, on 13 March 1817. The couple moved to England in 1820, after having sent William off to school there more than three years earlier. The separation from his mother had a traumatic effect on the young Thackeray, which he discussed in his essay "On Letts's Diary" in The Roundabout Papers.

Descendants edit

Thackeray is an ancestor of the British financier Ryan Williams, and is the great-great-great-grandfather of the British comedian Al Murray[23] and author Joanna Nadin.

Reputation and legacy edit

 
Etching of Thackeray, c. 1867

During the Victorian era Thackeray was ranked second only to Charles Dickens, but he is now much less widely read and is known almost exclusively for Vanity Fair, which has become a fixture in university courses, and has been repeatedly adapted for the cinema and television.

In Thackeray's own day some commentators, such as Anthony Trollope, ranked his History of Henry Esmond as his greatest work, perhaps because it expressed Victorian values of duty and earnestness, as did some of his other later novels. It is perhaps for this reason that they have not survived as well as Vanity Fair, which satirises those values.

Thackeray saw himself as writing in the realistic tradition, and distinguished his work from the exaggerations and sentimentality of Dickens. Some later commentators have accepted this self-evaluation and seen him as a realist, but others note his inclination to use eighteenth-century narrative techniques, such as digressions and direct addresses to the reader, and argue that through them he frequently disrupts the illusion of reality. The school of Henry James, with its emphasis on maintaining that illusion, marked a break with Thackeray's techniques.

Indian popular Marathi politician Bal Thackeray's father Keshav Sitaram Thackeray was an admirer of William; Keshav later changed his surname from Panvelkar to "Thackeray".[24][25]

Charlotte Brontë dedicated the second edition of Jane Eyre to Thackeray.[26]

In 1887 the Royal Society of Arts unveiled a blue plaque to commemorate Thackeray at the house at 2 Palace Green, London, that had been built for him in the 1860s.[27] It is now the location of the Israeli Embassy.[28]

Thackeray's former home in Tunbridge Wells, Kent, is now a restaurant named after the author.[29]

Thackeray was also a member of the Albion Lodge of the Ancient Order of Druids at Oxford.[30]

In popular culture edit

List of works edit

Series edit

Arthur Pendennis

  1. The History of Henry Esmond (1852) – ISBN 0-14-143916-5
  2. The Virginians (1857–1859) – ISBN 1-4142-3952-1
  3. Pendennis (1848–1850) – ISBN 1-4043-8659-9
  4. The Newcomes (1854–1855) – ISBN 0-460-87495-0
  5. A Shabby Genteel Story (Unfinished) (1840) – ISBN 1-4101-0509-1
  6. The Adventures of Philip (1861–1862) – ISBN 1-4101-0510-5

The Christmas Books of Mr M. A. Titmarsh
Thackeray wrote and illustrated five Christmas books as "by Mr M. A. Titmarsh". They were collected under the pseudonymous title and his real name no later than 1868 by Smith, Elder & Co.[31]

The Rose and the Ring was dated 1855 in its first edition, published for Christmas 1854.

  1. Mrs. Perkins's Ball (1846), as by M. A. Titmarsh
  2. Our Street
  3. Doctor Birch and His Young Friends
  4. The Kickleburys on the Rhine (Christmas 1850) – "a new picture book, drawn and written by Mr M. A. Titmarsh"[32]
  5. The Rose and the Ring (Christmas 1854) – ISBN 1-4043-2741-X

Novels edit

Novellas edit

  • Elizabeth Brownbridge
  • Sultan Stork
  • Little Spitz
  • The Yellowplush Papers (1837) – ISBN 0-8095-9676-8
  • The Professor, loosely based on the life of Edward Dando
  • Miss Löwe
  • The Tremendous Adventures of Major Gahagan
  • The Fatal Boots
  • Cox’s Diary
  • The Bedford-Row Conspiracy
  • The History of Samuel Titmarsh and the Great Hoggarty Diamond
  • The Fitz-Boodle Papers
  • The Diary of C. Jeames de la Pluche, Esq. with his letters
  • A Legend of the Rhine
  • A Little Dinner at Timmins's
  • Rebecca and Rowena (1850), a parodic sequel to IvanhoeISBN 1-84391-018-7
  • Bluebeard's Ghost

Sketches and satires edit

Play edit

  • The Wolves and the Lamb

Travel writing edit

  • Notes of a Journey from Cornhill to Grand Cairo (1846), under the name Mr M. A. Titmarsh.
  • The Paris Sketchbook (1840), featuring Roger Bontemps
  • The Little Travels and Roadside Sketches (1840)

Other non-fiction edit

  • The English Humorists of the 18th Century (1853)
  • Four Georges (1860–1861) – ISBN 978-1410203007
  • Roundabout Papers (1863)
  • The Orphan of Pimlico (1876)
  • Sketches and Travels in London
  • Stray Papers: Being Stories, Reviews, Verses, and Sketches (1821–1847)
  • Literary Essays
  • The English Humorists of the 18th century: a series of lectures (1867)
  • Ballads
  • Miscellanies
  • Stories
  • Burlesques
  • Character Sketches
  • Critical Reviews
  • Second Funeral of Napoleon

Poems edit

  • The Pigtail
  • The Mahogany Tree (1847)

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Calcutta was the capital of the British Empire in India at the time. Thackeray was born on the grounds of what is now the Armenian College & Philanthropic Academy, on the old Freeschool Street, now called Mirza Ghalib Street.

References edit

  1. ^ Aplin, John (2010). The Inheritance of Genius : A Thackeray family biography, 1798-1875. Cambridge, UK: Lutterworth Press. ISBN 978-0718842109. OCLC 855607313.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g "Thackeray, William Makepeace (1811–1863)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). 2018. doi:10.1093/odnb/9780192683120.013.27155.
  3. ^ Dunton, Larkin (1896). The World and Its People. Silver, Burdett. p. 25.
  4. ^ "Thackeray, William Makepeace (THKY826WM)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  5. ^ Simons, Gary (2007). "Thackeray's contributions to The Times". Victorian Periodicals Review. 40 (4): 332–354. doi:10.1353/vpr.2008.0002. S2CID 163798912.
  6. ^ Dabney, Ross H. (March 1980). "Review: The Book of Snob by William Makepeace Thackeray, John Sutherland". Nineteenth-Century Fiction. 34 (4): 456–462, 455. doi:10.2307/2933542. JSTOR 2933542.
  7. ^ a b c Gray, Peter (23 January 2013). "Punch and the Great Famine". 18th–19th century history. History Ireland (historyireland.com). Retrieved 17 July 2019.
  8. ^ Monsarrat, Ann (1980). An Uneasy Victorian: Thackeray the man, 1811–1863. London, UK: Cassell. pp. 121, 128, 134, 161.
  9. ^ Aplin, John (2011). Memory and Legacy: A Thackeray family biography, 1876–1919. Cambridge, UK: Lutterworth. pp. 5, 136.
  10. ^ Brander, Laurence. "Thackeray, William Makepeace". Ebscohost. Britannica Biographies. Retrieved 3 June 2019.
  11. ^ Poore, Ben. Perley (1886). Perley's Reminiscences of Sixty Years in the National Metropolis. Vol. 1. pp. 430–431 – via Internet Archive (archive.org).
  12. ^ Pearson, Richard (1 November 2017). W.M. Thackery and the Mediated Text: Writing for periodicals in the mid-nineteenth century. Routledge. p. 289. ISBN 9781351774093 – via Google Books.
  13. ^ Wilson, Bee (27 November 1998). "Vanity Fare". New Statesman. Retrieved 4 January 2014.
  14. ^ "The Adventures of Thackeray". online exhibits. libraryharvard.edu. Harvard University. Retrieved 9 January 2022.
  15. ^ "The Yellowplush Papers". British Comedy Guide (comedy.org.uk/guide). Retrieved 9 February 2009.
  16. ^ Kvas, Kornelije (2019). The Boundaries of Realism in World Literature. Lanham, MD / Boulder, CO / New York, NY / London, UK: Lexington Books. p. 43. ISBN 978-1-7936-0910-6.
  17. ^ "Lea Slerca". leaslerca.retelinux.com. Retrieved 17 July 2019.
  18. ^ "William Makepeace Thackeray traded elephants in Sylhet". Cold Noon. 28 May 2016.
  19. ^ Menon, Anil (29 March 2006). . Round Dice. Archived from the original on 14 June 2010. Retrieved 3 December 2014 – via yet.typepad.com.
  20. ^ Alexander, Eric (2007). "Ancestry of William Thackeray". Henry Cort Father of the Iron Trade (henrycort.net). Archived from the original on 21 February 2013. Retrieved 10 February 2009.
  21. ^ Gilder, Jeannette Leonard; Gilder, Joseph Benson (15 May 1897). "[no title cited]". The Critic: An illustrated Monthly Review of Literature, Art, and Life. Good Literature Pub. Co. p. 335. Original from Princeton University, Digitized 18 April 2008
  22. ^ "Rabbiting on: Ooty well preserved & flourishing". gibberandsqueak.blogspot.com (blog). 8 February 2009.
  23. ^ Cavendish, Dominic (3 March 2007). . The Daily Telegraph. London, UK. Archived from the original on 28 December 2009.
  24. ^ Soutik Biswas (19 November 2012). "The legacy of Bal Thackeray". BBC.
  25. ^ Sreekumar (18 November 2012). "Why Bal Thackeray had an English surname". One India.
  26. ^ "Charlotte Brontë's dress gaffe ruled out 165 years after Thackeray dinner". The Guardian. 15 June 2016. Retrieved 6 May 2020.
  27. ^ "Thackeray, William Makepeace (1811-1863)". English Heritage. Retrieved 23 October 2012.
  28. ^ "The Crown estate in Kensington Palace Gardens: Individual buildings | British History Online". www.british-history.ac.uk.
  29. ^ Thackeray's, 85 London Rd, Tunbridge Wells, TN1 1EA Bookatable. Downloaded 20 February 2016.
  30. ^ "Oxfordshire County Council". 11 November 2005.
  31. ^ Library records of the 1868 Smith, Elder edition differ in details. Compare WorldCat records OCLC 4413727 and OCLC 559717915 (retrieved 13 February 2020). Much the same is true of WorldCat records with earlier and later dates in the Publisher field. From one record, select "View all editions and formats" for a point of entry.
  32. ^ "Smith, Elder & Co.'s new publications". The Examiner. No. 2235. 30 November 1850. p. 778.
    [This transcript represents all five elements of the listing faithfully, except in the use of capital letters. In that full-column advertisement by the publisher. this book is the first of two listed under the first subheading, "New Christmas Books." The entire listing:]
    Mr Thackeray's New Christmas Book.
    The Kicklebury's on the Rhine.
    A new Picture Book, drawn and written by Mr M. A. Titmarsh.
    Price 5s. plain; 7s. 6d. coloured.  [flushright] [On the 16th.
    [Thus the book is listed as "forthcoming" 16 December 1850.]
  33. ^ Harden, Edgar (2003). A William Makepeace Thackeray Chronology. UK: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 45. ISBN 978-0-230-59857-7. Retrieved 29 June 2016 – via Google Books.

Bibliography edit

  • Aplin, John (ed), The Correspondence and Journals of the Thackeray Family, 5 vols., Pickering & Chatto, 2011.
  • Aplin, John, The Inheritance of Genius – A Thackeray Family Biography, 1798–1875, Lutterworth Press, 2010.
  • Aplin, John, Memory and Legacy – A Thackeray Family Biography, 1876–1919, Lutterworth Press, 2011.
  • Catalan, Zelma. The Politics of Irony in Thackeray’s Mature Fiction: Vanity Fair, Henry Esmond, The Newcomes. Sofia (Bulgaria), 2010, 250 pp.
  • Sheldon Goldfarb Catherine: A Story (The Thackeray Edition). University of Michigan Press, 1999.
  • Ferris, Ina. William Makepeace Thackeray. Boston: Twayne, 1983.
  • Jack, Adolphus Alfred. Thackeray: A Study. London: Macmillan, 1895.
  • Monsarrat, Ann. An Uneasy Victorian: Thackeray the Man, 1811–1863. London: Cassell, 1980.
  • Peters, Catherine. Thackeray’s Universe: Shifting Worlds of Imagination and Reality. New York: Oxford University Press, 1987.
  • Prawer, Siegbert S.: Breeches and Metaphysics: Thackeray's German Discourse. Oxford: Legenda, 1997.
  • Prawer, Siegbert S.: Israel at Vanity Fair: Jews and Judaism in the Writings of W. M. Thackeray. Leiden: Brill, 1992.
  • Prawer, Siegbert S.: W. M. Thackeray's European sketch books: a study of literary and graphic portraiture. P. Lang, 2000.
  • Ray, Gordon N. Thackeray: The Uses of Adversity, 1811–1846. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1955.
  • Ray, Gordon N. Thackeray: The Age of Wisdom, 1847–1863. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1957.
  • Ritchie, H.T. Thackeray and His Daughter. Harper and Brothers, 1924.
  • Rodríguez Espinosa, Marcos (1998) Traducción y recepción como procesos de mediación cultural: 'Vanity Fair' en España. Málaga: Servicio de Publicaciones de la Universidad de Málaga.
  • Shillingsburg, Peter. William Makepeace Thackeray: A Literary Life. Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2001.
  • Bloom, Abigail Burnham; Maynard, John, eds. (1994). Anne Thackeray Ritchie: Journals and letters. Columbus: Ohio State Univ. Press. ISBN 9780814206386.
  • Williams, Ioan M. Thackeray. London: Evans, 1968.

External links edit

  • Works by William Makepeace Thackeray in eBook form at Standard Ebooks
  • Works by William Makepeace Thackeray at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about William Makepeace Thackeray at Internet Archive
  • Works by William Makepeace Thackeray at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • at
  • Works by William Thackeray at Poeticous
  • PSU's Electronic Classics Series William Makepeace Thackeray site
  • On Charity and Humor, discourse on behalf of a charitable organisation
  • Pegasus in Harness: Victorian Publishing and W. M. Thackeray by Peter L. Shillingsburg
  • "Bluebeard's Ghost" by W. M. Thackeray (1843)
  • Archival material at Leeds University Library
  • William Makepeace Thackeray at Library of Congress, with 484 library catalogue records
  • William Makepeace Thackeray Collection. General Collection, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University
  • Poems by William Makepeace Thackeray at English Poetry

william, makepeace, thackeray, thackeray, redirects, here, other, uses, thackeray, thackeray, disambiguation, thak, july, 1811, december, 1863, english, novelist, illustrator, known, satirical, works, particularly, 1847, 1848, novel, vanity, fair, panoramic, p. Thackeray redirects here For other uses see Bal Thackeray and Thackeray disambiguation William Makepeace Thackeray ˈ 8 ae k er i THAK er ee 18 July 1811 24 December 1863 was an English novelist and illustrator He is known for his satirical works particularly his 1847 1848 novel Vanity Fair a panoramic portrait of British society and the 1844 novel The Luck of Barry Lyndon which was adapted for a 1975 film by Stanley Kubrick William Makepeace Thackeray1855 daguerreotype of William Makepeace Thackeray by Jesse Harrison WhitehurstBorn 1811 07 18 18 July 1811Calcutta British IndiaDied24 December 1863 1863 12 24 aged 52 London EnglandOccupationNovelistpoetNationalityEnglishEducationCharterhouse SchoolAlma materTrinity College CambridgePeriod1829 1863GenreHistorical fictionNotable worksVanity Fair The Luck of Barry LyndonSpouseIsabella Gethin ShaweChildren3 including Anne and HarrietSignatureThackeray was born in Calcutta British India and was sent to England after his father s death in 1815 He studied at various schools and briefly attended Trinity College Cambridge before leaving to travel Europe Thackeray squandered much of his inheritance on gambling and unsuccessful newspapers He turned to journalism to support his family primarily working for Fraser s Magazine The Times and Punch His wife Isabella suffered from mental illness leaving Thackeray a de facto widower Thackeray gained fame with his novel Vanity Fair and produced several other notable works He unsuccessfully ran for Parliament in 1857 and edited the Cornhill Magazine in 1860 Thackeray s health declined due to excessive eating drinking and lack of exercise He died from a stroke at the age of fifty two Thackeray began as a satirist and parodist gaining popularity through works that showcased his fondness for roguish characters He is best known for Vanity Fair featuring Becky Sharp and The Luck of Barry Lyndon Thackeray s early works were marked by savage attacks on high society military prowess marriage and hypocrisy often written under various pseudonyms His writing career began with satirical sketches like The Yellowplush Papers Thackeray s later novels such as Pendennis and The Newcomes reflected a mellowing in his tone focusing on the coming of age of characters and critical portrayals of society During the Victorian era Thackeray was ranked second to Charles Dickens but is now primarily known for Vanity Fair Contents 1 Biography 2 Works 3 Family 3 1 Parents 3 2 Descendants 4 Reputation and legacy 5 In popular culture 6 List of works 6 1 Series 6 2 Novels 6 3 Novellas 6 4 Sketches and satires 6 5 Play 6 6 Travel writing 6 7 Other non fiction 6 8 Poems 7 See also 8 Footnotes 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksBiography editThackeray an only child was born in Calcutta a British India where his father Richmond Thackeray 1 September 1781 13 September 1815 was secretary to the Board of Revenue in the East India Company His mother Anne Becher 1792 1864 was the second daughter of Harriet Becher and John Harman Becher who was also a secretary writer for the East India Company 1 His father was a grandson of Thomas Thackeray 1693 1760 headmaster of Harrow School 2 Richmond died in 1815 which caused Anne to send her son to England that same year while she remained in India The ship on which he travelled made a short stopover at Saint Helena where the imprisoned Napoleon was pointed out to him Once in England he was educated at schools in Southampton and Chiswick and then at Charterhouse School where he became a close friend of John Leech Thackeray disliked Charterhouse 3 and parodied it in his fiction as Slaughterhouse Nevertheless Thackeray was honoured in the Charterhouse Chapel with a monument after his death Illness in his last year there during which he reportedly grew to his full height of six foot three postponed his matriculation at Trinity College Cambridge until February 1829 citation needed Never very keen on academic studies Thackeray left Cambridge in 1830 but some of his earliest published writing appeared in two university periodicals The Snob and The Gownsman 4 nbsp Self Caricature by ThackerayThackeray then travelled for some time on the continent visiting Paris and Weimar where he met Johann Wolfgang von Goethe He returned to England and began to study law at the Middle Temple but soon gave that up On reaching age 21 he came into his inheritance from his father but he squandered much of it on gambling and on funding two unsuccessful newspapers The National Standard and The Constitutional for which he had hoped to write He also lost a good part of his fortune in the collapse of two Indian banks Forced to consider a profession to support himself he turned first to art which he studied in Paris but did not pursue it except in later years as the illustrator of some of his own novels and other writings citation needed Thackeray s years of semi idleness ended on 20 August 1836 when he married Isabella Gethin Shawe 1816 1894 second daughter of Isabella Creagh Shawe and Matthew Shawe a colonel who had died after distinguished service primarily in India The Thackerays had three children all daughters Anne Isabella 1837 1919 Jane who died at eight months old and Harriet Marian 1840 1875 who married Sir Leslie Stephen editor biographer and philosopher citation needed Thackeray now began writing for his life as he put it turning to journalism in an effort to support his young family He primarily worked for Fraser s Magazine a sharp witted and sharp tongued conservative publication for which he produced art criticism short fictional sketches and two longer fictional works Catherine and The Luck of Barry Lyndon Between 1837 and 1840 he also reviewed books for The Times 5 He was also a regular contributor to The Morning Chronicle and The Foreign Quarterly Review Later through his connection to the illustrator John Leech he began writing for the newly created magazine Punch in which he published The Snob Papers later collected as The Book of Snobs This work popularised the modern meaning of the word snob 6 Thackeray was a regular contributor to Punch between 1843 and 1854 7 nbsp Thackeray portrayed by Eyre Crowe 1845In Thackeray s personal life his wife Isabella sadly succumbed to depression after the birth of their third child in 1840 Finding that he could get no work done at home he spent more and more time away until September 1840 when he realised how grave his wife s condition was Struck by guilt he set out with his wife to Ireland During the crossing she threw herself from a water closet into the sea but she was pulled from the waters They fled back home after a four week battle with her mother From November 1840 to February 1842 Isabella was in and out of professional care as her condition waxed and waned 2 She eventually deteriorated into a permanent state of detachment from reality Thackeray desperately sought cures for her but nothing worked and she ended up in two different asylums in or near Paris until 1845 after which Thackeray took her back to England where he installed her with a Mrs Bakewell at Camberwell Isabella outlived her husband by 30 years in the end being cared for by a family named Thompson in Leigh on Sea at Southend until her death in 1894 8 9 After his wife s illness Thackeray became a de facto widower never establishing another permanent relationship He did pursue other women however in particular Mrs Jane Brookfield and Sally Baxter In 1851 Mr Brookfield barred Thackeray from further visits or correspondence with Jane Baxter an American twenty years Thackeray s junior whom he met during a lecture tour in New York City in 1852 married another man in 1855 citation needed In the early 1840s Thackeray had some success with two travel books The Paris Sketch Book and The Irish Sketch Book the latter marked by its hostility towards Irish Catholics However as the book appealed to anti Irish sentiment in Britain at the time Thackeray was given the job of being Punch s Irish expert often under the pseudonym Hibernis Hibernior more Irish than the Irish 7 Thackeray became responsible for creating Punch s notoriously hostile and negative depictions of the Irish during the Great Irish Famine of 1845 to 1851 7 Thackeray achieved more recognition with his Snob Papers serialised 1846 7 published in book form in 1848 but the work that really established his fame was the novel Vanity Fair which first appeared in serialised instalments beginning in January 1847 Even before Vanity Fair completed its serial run Thackeray had become a celebrity sought after by the very lords and ladies whom he satirised They hailed him as the equal of Charles Dickens 10 nbsp Portrait of Thackeray in his study c 1860He remained at the top of the tree as he put it for the rest of his life during which he produced several large novels notably Pendennis The Newcomes and The History of Henry Esmond despite various illnesses including a near fatal one that struck him in 1849 in the middle of writing Pendennis He twice visited the United States on lecture tours during this period Longtime Washington journalist B P Poore described Thackeray on one of those tours The citizens of Washington enjoyed a rare treat when Thackeray came to deliver his lectures on the English essayists wits and humorists of the eighteenth century Accustomed to the spread eagle style of oratory too prevalent at the Capitol they were delighted with the pleasing voice and easy manner of the burly gray haired rosy cheeked Briton who made no gestures but stood most of the time with his hands in his pockets as if he were talking with friends at a cozy fireside 11 Thackeray also gave lectures in London on the English humorists of the eighteenth century and on the first four Hanoverian monarchs The latter series was published in book form in 1861 as The Four Georges Sketches of Manners Morals Court and Town Life 2 In July 1857 Thackeray stood unsuccessfully as a Liberal for the city of Oxford in Parliament 2 Although not the most fiery agitator Thackeray was always a decided liberal in his politics and he promised to vote for the ballot in extension of the suffrage and was ready to accept triennial parliaments 2 He was narrowly beaten by Cardwell who received 1 070 votes as against 1 005 for Thackeray 2 In 1860 Thackeray became editor of the newly established Cornhill Magazine 12 but he was never comfortable in the role preferring to contribute to the magazine as the writer of a column called Roundabout Papers citation needed Thackeray s health worsened during the 1850s and he was plagued by a recurring stricture of the urethra that laid him up for days at a time He also felt that he had lost much of his creative impetus He worsened matters by excessive eating and drinking and avoiding exercise though he enjoyed riding he kept a horse He has been described as the greatest literary glutton who ever lived His main activity apart from writing was gutting and gorging 13 He could not break his addiction to spicy peppers further ruining his digestion nbsp Thackeray s grave at Kensal Green Cemetery London photographed in 2014On 23 December 1863 after returning from dining out and before dressing for bed he suffered a stroke He was found dead in his bed the following morning His death at the age of fifty two was unexpected and shocked his family his friends and the reading public An estimated 7 000 people attended his funeral at Kensington Gardens He was buried on 29 December at Kensal Green Cemetery and a memorial bust sculpted by Marochetti can be found in Westminster Abbey 2 Works editThe Yellowplush Papers 1837 Catherine 1839 1840 A Shabby Genteel Story 1840 The Paris Sketchbook 1840 Second Funeral of Napoleon 1841 The Irish Sketchbook 1842 The Luck of Barry Lyndon 1844 Notes of a Journey from Cornhill to Grand Cairo 1846 Mrs Perkins s Ball 1846 under the name M A Titmarsh Stray Papers Being Stories Reviews Verses and Sketches 1821 1847 The Book of Snobs 1846 1848 Vanity Fair 1847 1848 Pendennis 1848 1850 Rebecca and Rowena 1850 a parody sequel to Ivanhoe Men s Wives 1852 The History of Henry Esmond 1852 The English Humorists of the Eighteenth Century 1853 The Newcomes 1854 1855 The Rose and the Ring 1854 1855 The Virginians 1857 1859 Lovel the Widower 1860 Four Georges 1860 1861 The Adventures of Philip 1861 1862 Roundabout Papers 1863 Denis Duval 1864 Ballads 1869 Burlesques 1869 The Orphan of Pimlico 1876 Thackeray began as a satirist and parodist writing works that displayed a sneaking fondness for roguish upstarts such as Becky Sharp in Vanity Fair and the title characters of The Luck of Barry Lyndon and Catherine In his earliest works written under such pseudonyms as Charles James Yellowplush Michael Angelo Titmarsh and George Savage Fitz Boodle he tended towards savagery in his attacks on high society military prowess the institution of marriage and hypocrisy One of his earliest works Timbuctoo 1829 contains a burlesque upon the subject set for the Cambridge Chancellor s Medal for English Verse 14 The contest was won by Tennyson with a poem of the same title Timbuctoo Thackeray s writing career really began with a series of satirical sketches now usually known as The Yellowplush Papers which appeared in Fraser s Magazine beginning in 1837 These were adapted for BBC Radio 4 in 2009 with Adam Buxton playing Charles Yellowplush 15 Between May 1839 and February 1840 Fraser s published the work sometimes considered Thackeray s first novel Catherine Originally intended as a satire of the Newgate school of crime fiction it ended up being more of a picaresque tale He also began work never finished on the novel later published as A Shabby Genteel Story nbsp Title page to Vanity Fair drawn by Thackeray who furnished the illustrations for many of his own booksAlong with The Luck of Barry Lyndon Thackeray is probably best known now for Vanity Fair Literary theorist Cornelius Quassus wrote that the meteoric rise of the heroine of Vanity Fair Rebecca Sharp is a satirical presentation of the striving for profit power and social recognition of the new middle class Old and new members of the middle class strive to emulate the lifestyle of the higher class noblemen and landowners and thereby to increase their material possessions and to own luxury objects In Vanity Fair one can observe a greater degree of violation of moral values among members of the new middle class for the decline of morality is proportionate to the degree of closeness of the individual to the market and its laws 16 In contrast his large novels from the period after Vanity Fair which were once described by Henry James as examples of loose baggy monsters have largely faded from view perhaps because they reflect a mellowing in Thackeray who had become so successful with his satires on society that he seemed to lose his zest for attacking it These later works include Pendennis a Bildungsroman depicting the coming of age of Arthur Pendennis an alter ego of Thackeray who also features as the narrator of two later novels The Newcomes and The Adventures of Philip The Newcomes is noteworthy for its critical portrayal of the marriage market while Philip is known for its semi autobiographical depiction of Thackeray s early life in which he partially regains some of his early satirical power Also notable among the later novels is The History of Henry Esmond in which Thackeray tried to write a novel in the style of the eighteenth century a period that held great appeal for him About this novel there have been found evident analogies in the fundamental structure of the plot in the psychological outlines of the main characters in frequent episodes and in the use of metaphors to Ippolito Nievo s Confessions of an Italian Nievo wrote his novel during his stay in Milan where in the Ambrosiana library The History of Henry Esmond was available just published 17 Not only Esmond but also Barry Lyndon and Catherine are set in that period as is the sequel to Esmond The Virginians which is set partially in North America and includes George Washington as a character who nearly kills one of the protagonists in a duel Family editParents edit Thackeray s father Richmond Thackeray was born at South Mimms and went to India in 1798 at age sixteen as a writer civil servant with the East India Company Richmond s father s name was also William Makepeace Thackeray 18 Richmond fathered a daughter Sarah Redfield in 1804 with Charlotte Sophia Rudd his possibly Eurasian mistress and both mother and daughter were named in his will Such liaisons were common among gentlemen of the East India Company and it formed no bar to his later courting and marrying William s mother 19 nbsp Anne Becher and William Makepeace Thackeray by George Chinnery c 1813Thackeray s mother Anne Becher born 1792 was one of the reigning beauties of the day and a daughter of John Harmon Becher Collector of the South 24 Parganas district d Calcutta 1800 of an old Bengal civilian family noted for the tenderness of its women Anne Becher her sister Harriet and their widowed mother also Harriet had been sent back to India by her authoritarian guardian grandmother Ann Becher in 1809 on the Earl Howe Anne s grandmother had told her that the man she loved Henry Carmichael Smyth an ensign in the Bengal Engineers whom she met at an Assembly Ball in 1807 in Bath had died while he was told that Anne was no longer interested in him Neither of these assertions was true Though Carmichael Smyth was from a distinguished Scottish military family Anne s grandmother went to extreme lengths to prevent their marriage Surviving family letters state that she wanted a better match for her granddaughter 20 Anne Becher and Richmond Thackeray were married in Calcutta on 13 October 1810 Their only child William was born on 18 July 1811 21 There is a fine miniature portrait of Anne Becher Thackeray and William Makepeace Thackeray aged about two done in Madras by George Chinnery c 1813 22 Anne s family s deception was unexpectedly revealed in 1812 when Richmond Thackeray unwittingly invited the supposedly dead Carmichael Smyth to dinner Five years later after Richmond had died of a fever on 13 September 1815 Anne married Henry Carmichael Smyth on 13 March 1817 The couple moved to England in 1820 after having sent William off to school there more than three years earlier The separation from his mother had a traumatic effect on the young Thackeray which he discussed in his essay On Letts s Diary in The Roundabout Papers Descendants edit Thackeray is an ancestor of the British financier Ryan Williams and is the great great great grandfather of the British comedian Al Murray 23 and author Joanna Nadin Reputation and legacy editThis section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed August 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Etching of Thackeray c 1867During the Victorian era Thackeray was ranked second only to Charles Dickens but he is now much less widely read and is known almost exclusively for Vanity Fair which has become a fixture in university courses and has been repeatedly adapted for the cinema and television In Thackeray s own day some commentators such as Anthony Trollope ranked his History of Henry Esmond as his greatest work perhaps because it expressed Victorian values of duty and earnestness as did some of his other later novels It is perhaps for this reason that they have not survived as well as Vanity Fair which satirises those values Thackeray saw himself as writing in the realistic tradition and distinguished his work from the exaggerations and sentimentality of Dickens Some later commentators have accepted this self evaluation and seen him as a realist but others note his inclination to use eighteenth century narrative techniques such as digressions and direct addresses to the reader and argue that through them he frequently disrupts the illusion of reality The school of Henry James with its emphasis on maintaining that illusion marked a break with Thackeray s techniques Indian popular Marathi politician Bal Thackeray s father Keshav Sitaram Thackeray was an admirer of William Keshav later changed his surname from Panvelkar to Thackeray 24 25 Charlotte Bronte dedicated the second edition of Jane Eyre to Thackeray 26 In 1887 the Royal Society of Arts unveiled a blue plaque to commemorate Thackeray at the house at 2 Palace Green London that had been built for him in the 1860s 27 It is now the location of the Israeli Embassy 28 Thackeray s former home in Tunbridge Wells Kent is now a restaurant named after the author 29 Thackeray was also a member of the Albion Lodge of the Ancient Order of Druids at Oxford 30 In popular culture editThackeray is portrayed by Michael Palin in the 2018 ITV television series Vanity Fair Miles Jupp plays Thackeray in the 2017 film The Man Who Invented Christmas Jonathan Keeble plays Thackery in the 2016 BBC audio drama Charlotte Bronte in Babylon A quote from Thackeray appears in episode 7 of JoJo s Bizarre Adventure Thackeray s quote Mother is the name for God appears in the 1994 movie The Crow Thackeray s The Colonel was mentioned by Anne Frank in The Diary of a Young Girl List of works editSeries edit Arthur Pendennis The History of Henry Esmond 1852 ISBN 0 14 143916 5 The Virginians 1857 1859 ISBN 1 4142 3952 1 Pendennis 1848 1850 ISBN 1 4043 8659 9 The Newcomes 1854 1855 ISBN 0 460 87495 0 A Shabby Genteel Story Unfinished 1840 ISBN 1 4101 0509 1 The Adventures of Philip 1861 1862 ISBN 1 4101 0510 5The Christmas Books of Mr M A Titmarsh Thackeray wrote and illustrated five Christmas books as by Mr M A Titmarsh They were collected under the pseudonymous title and his real name no later than 1868 by Smith Elder amp Co 31 The Rose and the Ring was dated 1855 in its first edition published for Christmas 1854 Mrs Perkins s Ball 1846 as by M A Titmarsh Our Street Doctor Birch and His Young Friends The Kickleburys on the Rhine Christmas 1850 a new picture book drawn and written by Mr M A Titmarsh 32 The Rose and the Ring Christmas 1854 ISBN 1 4043 2741 XNovels edit Catherine 1839 1840 ISBN 1 4065 0055 0 originally credited to Ikey Solomons Esq Junior 33 The Luck of Barry Lyndon 1844 ISBN 0 19 283628 5 Vanity Fair 1847 1848 ISBN 0 14 062085 0 Men s Wives 1852 ISBN 978 1 77545 023 8 Lovel the Widower Denis Duval unfinished 1864 ISBN 1 4191 1561 8Novellas edit Elizabeth Brownbridge Sultan Stork Little Spitz The Yellowplush Papers 1837 ISBN 0 8095 9676 8 The Professor loosely based on the life of Edward Dando Miss Lowe The Tremendous Adventures of Major Gahagan The Fatal Boots Cox s Diary The Bedford Row Conspiracy The History of Samuel Titmarsh and the Great Hoggarty Diamond The Fitz Boodle Papers The Diary of C Jeames de la Pluche Esq with his letters A Legend of the Rhine A Little Dinner at Timmins s Rebecca and Rowena 1850 a parodic sequel to Ivanhoe ISBN 1 84391 018 7 Bluebeard s GhostSketches and satires edit The Irish Sketchbook 2 Volumes 1843 ISBN 0 86299 754 2 The Book of Snobs 1846 1848 which popularised that term ISBN 0 8095 9672 5 Flore et Zephyr Roundabout Papers Some Roundabout Papers Charles Dickens in France Character Sketches Sketches and Travels in London Mr Brown s Letters The Proser MiscellaniesPlay edit The Wolves and the LambTravel writing edit Notes of a Journey from Cornhill to Grand Cairo 1846 under the name Mr M A Titmarsh The Paris Sketchbook 1840 featuring Roger Bontemps The Little Travels and Roadside Sketches 1840 Other non fiction edit The English Humorists of the 18th Century 1853 Four Georges 1860 1861 ISBN 978 1410203007 Roundabout Papers 1863 The Orphan of Pimlico 1876 Sketches and Travels in London Stray Papers Being Stories Reviews Verses and Sketches 1821 1847 Literary Essays The English Humorists of the 18th century a series of lectures 1867 Ballads Miscellanies Stories Burlesques Character Sketches Critical Reviews Second Funeral of NapoleonPoems edit The Pigtail The Mahogany Tree 1847 See also editBarry Lyndon the 1975 film adaptation by Stanley Kubrick The Rose and the Ring the 1986 film adaptation by Jerzy GruzaFootnotes edit Calcutta was the capital of the British Empire in India at the time Thackeray was born on the grounds of what is now the Armenian College amp Philanthropic Academy on the old Freeschool Street now called Mirza Ghalib Street References edit Aplin John 2010 The Inheritance of Genius A Thackeray family biography 1798 1875 Cambridge UK Lutterworth Press ISBN 978 0718842109 OCLC 855607313 a b c d e f g Thackeray William Makepeace 1811 1863 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed 2018 doi 10 1093 odnb 9780192683120 013 27155 Dunton Larkin 1896 The World and Its People Silver Burdett p 25 Thackeray William Makepeace THKY826WM A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Simons Gary 2007 Thackeray s contributions to The Times Victorian Periodicals Review 40 4 332 354 doi 10 1353 vpr 2008 0002 S2CID 163798912 Dabney Ross H March 1980 Review The Book of Snob by William Makepeace Thackeray John Sutherland Nineteenth Century Fiction 34 4 456 462 455 doi 10 2307 2933542 JSTOR 2933542 a b c Gray Peter 23 January 2013 Punch and the Great Famine 18th 19th century history History Ireland historyireland com Retrieved 17 July 2019 Monsarrat Ann 1980 An Uneasy Victorian Thackeray the man 1811 1863 London UK Cassell pp 121 128 134 161 Aplin John 2011 Memory and Legacy A Thackeray family biography 1876 1919 Cambridge UK Lutterworth pp 5 136 Brander Laurence Thackeray William Makepeace Ebscohost Britannica Biographies Retrieved 3 June 2019 Poore Ben Perley 1886 Perley s Reminiscences of Sixty Years in the National Metropolis Vol 1 pp 430 431 via Internet Archive archive org Pearson Richard 1 November 2017 W M Thackery and the Mediated Text Writing for periodicals in the mid nineteenth century Routledge p 289 ISBN 9781351774093 via Google Books Wilson Bee 27 November 1998 Vanity Fare New Statesman Retrieved 4 January 2014 The Adventures of Thackeray online exhibits libraryharvard edu Harvard University Retrieved 9 January 2022 The Yellowplush Papers British Comedy Guide comedy org uk guide Retrieved 9 February 2009 Kvas Kornelije 2019 The Boundaries of Realism in World Literature Lanham MD Boulder CO New York NY London UK Lexington Books p 43 ISBN 978 1 7936 0910 6 Lea Slerca leaslerca retelinux com Retrieved 17 July 2019 William Makepeace Thackeray traded elephants in Sylhet Cold Noon 28 May 2016 Menon Anil 29 March 2006 William Makepeace Thackeray The Indian in the closet Round Dice Archived from the original on 14 June 2010 Retrieved 3 December 2014 via yet typepad com Alexander Eric 2007 Ancestry of William Thackeray Henry Cort Father of the Iron Trade henrycort net Archived from the original on 21 February 2013 Retrieved 10 February 2009 Gilder Jeannette Leonard Gilder Joseph Benson 15 May 1897 no title cited The Critic An illustrated Monthly Review of Literature Art and Life Good Literature Pub Co p 335 Original from Princeton University Digitized 18 April 2008 Rabbiting on Ooty well preserved amp flourishing gibberandsqueak blogspot com blog 8 February 2009 Cavendish Dominic 3 March 2007 Prime time gentlemen please The Daily Telegraph London UK Archived from the original on 28 December 2009 Soutik Biswas 19 November 2012 The legacy of Bal Thackeray BBC Sreekumar 18 November 2012 Why Bal Thackeray had an English surname One India Charlotte Bronte s dress gaffe ruled out 165 years after Thackeray dinner The Guardian 15 June 2016 Retrieved 6 May 2020 Thackeray William Makepeace 1811 1863 English Heritage Retrieved 23 October 2012 The Crown estate in Kensington Palace Gardens Individual buildings British History Online www british history ac uk Thackeray s 85 London Rd Tunbridge Wells TN1 1EA Bookatable Downloaded 20 February 2016 Oxfordshire County Council 11 November 2005 Library records of the 1868 Smith Elder edition differ in details Compare WorldCat records OCLC 4413727 and OCLC 559717915 retrieved 13 February 2020 Much the same is true of WorldCat records with earlier and later dates in the Publisher field From one record select View all editions and formats for a point of entry Smith Elder amp Co s new publications The Examiner No 2235 30 November 1850 p 778 This transcript represents all five elements of the listing faithfully except in the use of capital letters In that full column advertisement by the publisher this book is the first of two listed under the first subheading New Christmas Books The entire listing Mr Thackeray s New Christmas Book The Kicklebury s on the Rhine A new Picture Book drawn and written by Mr M A Titmarsh Price 5s plain 7s 6d coloured flushright On the 16th Thus the book is listed as forthcoming 16 December 1850 Harden Edgar 2003 A William Makepeace Thackeray Chronology UK Palgrave Macmillan p 45 ISBN 978 0 230 59857 7 Retrieved 29 June 2016 via Google Books Bibliography editAplin John ed The Correspondence and Journals of the Thackeray Family 5 vols Pickering amp Chatto 2011 Aplin John The Inheritance of Genius A Thackeray Family Biography 1798 1875 Lutterworth Press 2010 Aplin John Memory and Legacy A Thackeray Family Biography 1876 1919 Lutterworth Press 2011 Catalan Zelma The Politics of Irony in Thackeray s Mature Fiction Vanity Fair Henry Esmond The Newcomes Sofia Bulgaria 2010 250 pp Sheldon Goldfarb Catherine A Story The Thackeray Edition University of Michigan Press 1999 Ferris Ina William Makepeace Thackeray Boston Twayne 1983 Jack Adolphus Alfred Thackeray A Study London Macmillan 1895 Monsarrat Ann An Uneasy Victorian Thackeray the Man 1811 1863 London Cassell 1980 Peters Catherine Thackeray s Universe Shifting Worlds of Imagination and Reality New York Oxford University Press 1987 Prawer Siegbert S Breeches and Metaphysics Thackeray s German Discourse Oxford Legenda 1997 Prawer Siegbert S Israel at Vanity Fair Jews and Judaism in the Writings of W M Thackeray Leiden Brill 1992 Prawer Siegbert S W M Thackeray s European sketch books a study of literary and graphic portraiture P Lang 2000 Ray Gordon N Thackeray The Uses of Adversity 1811 1846 New York McGraw Hill 1955 Ray Gordon N Thackeray The Age of Wisdom 1847 1863 New York McGraw Hill 1957 Ritchie H T Thackeray and His Daughter Harper and Brothers 1924 Rodriguez Espinosa Marcos 1998 Traduccion y recepcion como procesos de mediacion cultural Vanity Fair en Espana Malaga Servicio de Publicaciones de la Universidad de Malaga Shillingsburg Peter William Makepeace Thackeray A Literary Life Basingstoke Palgrave 2001 Bloom Abigail Burnham Maynard John eds 1994 Anne Thackeray Ritchie Journals and letters Columbus Ohio State Univ Press ISBN 9780814206386 Williams Ioan M Thackeray London Evans 1968 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to William Makepeace Thackeray nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to William Makepeace Thackeray nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about William Makepeace Thackeray Works by William Makepeace Thackeray in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by William Makepeace Thackeray at Project Gutenberg Works by or about William Makepeace Thackeray at Internet Archive Works by William Makepeace Thackeray at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Works by Thackeray at eBooks Adelaide Works by William Thackeray at Poeticous PSU s Electronic Classics Series William Makepeace Thackeray site On Charity and Humor discourse on behalf of a charitable organisation Pegasus in Harness Victorian Publishing and W M Thackeray by Peter L Shillingsburg Bluebeard s Ghost by W M Thackeray 1843 The Adventures of Thackeray on his way through the World An online exhibition at the Houghton Library Archival material at Leeds University Library William Makepeace Thackeray at Library of Congress with 484 library catalogue records William Makepeace Thackeray Collection General Collection Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library Yale University Poems by William Makepeace Thackeray at English Poetry Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Makepeace Thackeray amp oldid 1196119025, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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