Chapter 3
With a young family to support, Thackeray focused on producing material for periodicals. His stories for Fraser’s were well-received, and his work was steadily increasing.
In this section
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“The Common Lot” from Samuel Titmarsh and the Great Hoggarty Diamond (London: Bradbury & Evans, 1849) |
Catherine appears in Fraser’s.
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Thackeray satirizes publishing and authors in Reading a Poem (New York: Grolier Club, 1911) . |
Thackeray to his aunt Charlotte Ritchie, on Isabella’s decline, 10 September 1840. |
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Thackeray to Charlotte Ritchie, struggling to find a cure for his wife, 19 August 1841. |
Thackeray writes for Punch.
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Thackeray’s first letter to his daughter Anny (undated).
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Thackeray. Sketch of Anny and watercolor of himself and Anny, ca. 1840-41. |
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Thackeray to Charlotte Ritchie, on Isabella’s lack of improvement, 12 June 1844
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Thackeray’s first Christmas book, Mrs. Perkins’s Ball (London: Chapman & Hall, 1847). |
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The Ballymulligan Polka, as danced at Mrs. Perkins’s Ball (London, Tolkien, undated.) |
Thackeray, self portrait, ca. 1840.
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