Vanity FairA marvelous, incisive social satire that gleefully exposes the greed and corruption raging in England during the turmoil of the Napoleonic wars through its tracing of the changing fortunes of two unforgettable women. It is a comic masterpiece that still resonates today. "Re-reading Vanity Fair, one realises what a brilliant innovation this was in the English novel," remarked V. S. Pritchett. "Thackeray is like the modern novelists who derive from James and Proust, in his power of dissecting (and of desiccating!) character." Generally considered to be his masterpiece, Vanity Fair is Thackeray's resplendent social satire that exposes the greed and corruption raging in England during the turmoil of the Napoleonic wars. Subtitled "A Novel Without a Hero," it traces the changing fortunes of two unforgettable women: the scheming opportunist Becky Sharp—one of literature's most resourceful, engaging, and amoral heroines—and her foil, the faithful, naive Amelia Sedley. Thackeray's subversive, comic attack on the hypocrisy and "dismal roguery" of an avaricious world resonates 150 years later with implications for our own times. "Thackeray is an urbane nineteenth-century guide and commentator in a portrait gallery that is for all time," observed Louis Auchincloss. "He is the restless inhabitant of a prudish age, nostalgic, discursive, anecdotal, sentimental, worldly-wise, now warning us, now making fun of us, now reproving us .... Thackeray's harshest criticism of humanity is simply the point where ours commences. His perception of self-interest in every act is the ABC of modem psychology." |
Contents
In Which Rebeccas Husband Appears for a Short Time | |
The Letter on the Pincushion | |
How Captain Dobbin Bought a Piano | |
Who Played on the Piano Captain Dobbin Bought | |
Miss Crawley at Nurse | |
In Which Captain Dobbin Acts as the Messenger of Hymen | |
A Quarrel About an Heiress | |
A Marriage and Part of a Honeymoon | |
Private and Confidential | |
Family Portraits | |
Miss Sharp Begins to Make Friends | |
Arcadian Simplicity | |
Quite a Sentimental Chapter | |
Sentimental and Otherwise | |
Miss Crawley at Home | |
Captain Dobbin Proceeds on His Canvass | |
In Which Mr Osborne Takes Down the Family Bible | |
In Which All the Principal Personages Think Fit to Leave Brighton | |
Between London and Chatham | |
In Which Amelia Joins Her Regiment | |
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Common terms and phrases
admired Amelia asked Bareacres Baronet Becky Becky Sharp blushed Brighton brother Brussels Bute Crawley Captain Dobbin carriage child Chiswick Colonel Crawley Crawley's cried daughter dear delight dinner door drawing-room drove Emmy eyes face father fellow Firkin Frederick Bullock French Gaunt gave George Osborne George's girl Glorvina hand happy heart honest honour horses husband kind kissed knew Lady Crawley Lady Jane Lady Southdown laughing letter little Rawdon looked Lord Steyne Major Dobbin mamma married Miss Briggs Miss Crawley Miss Osborne Miss Pinkerton Miss Sedley Miss Sharp morning mother never night O'Dowd old gentleman Osborne's passed poor pretty Pumpernickel Queen’s Queen's Crawley Raggles Rawdon Crawley Rebecca regiment round Russell Square Sambo Sedley’s servants Sir Pitt Crawley sister smile Southampton Street talk tell thought told took Vanity Fair Vauxhall walked wife woman women young ladies