Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 Daniel Defoe
- 2 Samuel Richardson
- 3 Henry Fielding
- 4 Laurence Sterne
- 5 Frances Burney
- 6 Jane Austen
- 7 Walter Scott
- 8 Charles Dickens
- 9 William Makepeace Thackeray
- 10 Charlotte Brontë
- 11 Emily Brontë
- 12 Elizabeth Gaskell
- 13 Anthony Trollope
- 14 George Eliot
- 15 Thomas Hardy
- 16 Robert Louis Stevenson
- 17 Henry James
- 18 Joseph Conrad
- 19 D. H. Lawrence
- 20 James Joyce
- 21 E. M. Forster
- 22 Virginia Woolf
- 23 Elizabeth Bowen
- 24 Henry Green
- 25 Evelyn Waugh
- 26 Graham Greene
- 27 William Golding
- Guide to further reading
- Index
9 - William Makepeace Thackeray
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2010
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 Daniel Defoe
- 2 Samuel Richardson
- 3 Henry Fielding
- 4 Laurence Sterne
- 5 Frances Burney
- 6 Jane Austen
- 7 Walter Scott
- 8 Charles Dickens
- 9 William Makepeace Thackeray
- 10 Charlotte Brontë
- 11 Emily Brontë
- 12 Elizabeth Gaskell
- 13 Anthony Trollope
- 14 George Eliot
- 15 Thomas Hardy
- 16 Robert Louis Stevenson
- 17 Henry James
- 18 Joseph Conrad
- 19 D. H. Lawrence
- 20 James Joyce
- 21 E. M. Forster
- 22 Virginia Woolf
- 23 Elizabeth Bowen
- 24 Henry Green
- 25 Evelyn Waugh
- 26 Graham Greene
- 27 William Golding
- Guide to further reading
- Index
Summary
Imagine, if you will, the following: a boy born to English parents, in Calcutta, during the waning years of the Napoleonic Wars. The boy's father dies four years later, and the boy is soon thereafter sent away from his mother - who had in the meantime resumed a prior attachment to an army captain - to distant England, where he will be schooled. (En route, the young boy catches sight of the exiled Bonaparte, tending the garden in his St Helena retreat.) His schooling is perfectly correct by the standards of his class and time, and perfectly nightmarish; he is initiated into the rituals of English social formation by the tyrannies, physical, moral, and sexual, of the pre- Victorian public school, and memories of these humiliations and the loneliness consequent upon them will follow the boy into adulthood and middle age. Youthful degradation leads to a prolonged period of diffident attempts to start a career and more serious cultural experimentation: an undistinguished period of time at Cambridge; travels to Paris, Weimar, and beyond, where the young man develops tastes for bohemian life; and a rapid dissipation of his patrimony thanks to gambling, unwise investments, and a bank failure. This once-genteel young man then turns to the London Grub Street of his day for a living, and begins to turn out spirited and witty sketches for newspapers and magazines. The list of his published pieces numbers in the hundreds, and the young man has married - unwisely, as it turns out, for his wife inexplicably and inexorably falls into a mental illness that results in her confinement in a series of asylums.
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- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to English Novelists , pp. 149 - 164Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009
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