Thackeray’s upper-class Regency world is a noisy and jostling commercial fairground, predominantly driven by acquisitive greed and soulless materialism, in which the narrator himself plays a brilliantly versatile role as a serio-comic observer.
Although subtitled ’A Novel without a Hero’, Vanity Fair follows the fortunes of two contrasting but inter-linked IJves: through the retiring Amelia Sedley and the brilliant Becky Sharp, Thackeray examines the posJtJon of women in an intensely expIoitative male world. When Vanity Fair was published in 1884, Charlotte Bronte commented: ’The more I read Tllackeray’s works the more certain I am that lie stands alone - alone in his sagacity, alone in his truth,alone ill his feeling... Thackeray is a Titan.’
William Makepeace Thackeray (1811-1863) was a relatively little known author when, in January 1847, his Vanity Fair began to appear in the popular Punch magazine in twenty monthly parts. If the serial made no immediate impact, it was probably because its early episodes and subtide, ’Pen and Pencil Sketches of English Society’, suggested a work of loosely connected sketches in the typical Punch satiric manner,to whose conventions Thackeray further conformed by supplying his own illustrations or ’candles’. Significantly, the author’s letters during the first stages of composition show that the ’Sketches’ were evolving in ways that he had not anticipated. His gathering serial audience was being similarly surprised - into admiring enthusiasm. After reading an early number, Thomas Carlyle’s wife Jane wrote to her husband that Thackeray’s work was ’very good indeed, beats Dickens out of the world’ (quoted in Simpson, p. 22).* Soon after, the serial’s first ten numbers were favourably greeted by the Edinburgh Review. It was,however, left to Charlotte Bronte, an avid reader of Thackeray’s serial, to champion its author as a new star in the firmament. Her preface to the second edition of Tane Eyre, prepared in December 1847 (when the Vanity Fair serial was roughly at mid-point), greeted Thackeray’s achievement and prompted her to explain: ’I have alluded to him, Reader, because I think I see in him an intellect profounder and more unique than his contemporaries have yet recognised;because I regard him as the first social regenerator of the day... [and]because to him ... I have dedicated this second edition of "Jane Eyre" ’ (Smith (ed.), p. 4). Thackeray’s serial having been a considerable succes d’estime, the novel was published in volume form in 1848 with a new and provocative subtitle, ’A Novel without a Hero’.
Chis’wick Mall
In which Miss Sharp and Miss Sedley prepare to open the campaign
Rebecca is in presence of the enemy
The green silk purse
Dobbin of ours
Vauxhall
Crawley of Queen’s Crawley
Private and confidential
Family Portraits
Miss Sharp begins to make friends
Arcadian simplicity
Quite a sentimental chapter
Sentimental and otherwise
Miss Crawley at home
In which Rebecca’s 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
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
In which Amelia invades the Low Countries
Brussels
’The girl I left behind me’
In which Tos Sedley takes care of his sister
In which Tos takes flight, and the waris brought to a close
In which Miss Crawley’s relations are very anxious about her
James Crawley’s pipe is put out
Widow and mother
How to lwe well on nothing a year
The subject continued
A family in a small way
A cynical chapter
In which Becky is recognisedby the family
In which Becky revisits the ballsof ber ancestors
Which treats of the Osborne family
In which the reader has to double the Cape
A roundabout between London and Hampshire
Between Hampshire and London
Struggles and trials
Gaunt House
In which the reader is introduced to the very best of company
In which we enjoy three coursesand a dessert
Contains a vulgar incident
In which a charade is acted which may or may not puzzle the reader
In which Lord Steyne shows himself in a most amiable light
A rescue and a catastrophe
Sunday after the battle
In which the same subject is pursued
Georgy is made a gentleman
Eothen
Our friend the Major
The old piano
Returns to the genteel world
In which two lights are put out
Am Rhein
In which we meet an old acquaintance
A vagabond chapter
Full of business and pleasure
Amantium Irae
Which contains births, marriages, and deaths
NOTES TO THE TEXT