Difference between revisions of "Pendennis (Thackeray, 1850)"
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==Theme Tracking== | ==Theme Tracking== | ||
===Reading and Writing=== | ===Reading and Writing=== | ||
− | 14 "He never read to improve himself out of school-hours, but, on the contrary, devoured all the novels, plays, and poetry on which he could lay his hands." | + | *14 "He never read to improve himself out of school-hours, but, on the contrary, devoured all the novels, plays, and poetry on which he could lay his hands." |
*24 first writing - poetry in County Chronicle | *24 first writing - poetry in County Chronicle | ||
− | *26 Mr Smirke his tutor gives Pen an Elzevir | + | *26 Mr Smirke his tutor gives Pen an Elzevir Horace |
+ | *68 Pen's "imaginative phrensy" with verse in his head and paper steven on his bed | ||
===Materiality=== | ===Materiality=== |
Revision as of 14:38, 14 June 2017
Thackeray, William Makepeace. Pendennis. Pub. 1850. Ed. John Sutherland. Oxford: World's Classics, 1999.
Transpose notes from 1875 ed to Sutherland
Contents
General Notes
- interesting how much class makes a difference in development between pen and david
- also Thackeray isn't interested in childhood at all whereas for Dickens it's central to the first third of the book - pen is 16 when we start
- also difference in character: P is a rascal where D is just undisciplined
- 1850 preface interesting for acknowledgement of serialization pressures
- 13 young Arthur's idolization of his mother like Copperfield - though Mrs P seems more deserving of the "angel" title
- but her "idol worship" of his father and uncle cause problems - 14
- 14 "He had not got beyond the theory yet...prison-house"
- 56 really funny - Pen effuses while Ms F thinks about household chores
- 65 satirizing the "jolly old times" of travel by mail coach
Theme Tracking
Reading and Writing
- 14 "He never read to improve himself out of school-hours, but, on the contrary, devoured all the novels, plays, and poetry on which he could lay his hands."
- 24 first writing - poetry in County Chronicle
- 26 Mr Smirke his tutor gives Pen an Elzevir Horace
- 68 Pen's "imaginative phrensy" with verse in his head and paper steven on his bed
Materiality
- 2 material description of the Major's correspondence and his "Hot newspaper"
Shakespeare References
- 24 "he read Shakespeare to his mother (which she said she liked, but didn't)"
- 33 Foker "Mrs Dropsicum, Bingley's mother in law, Great in Macbeth"
- 48 Ms Fotheringay prepping to be Ophelia when she and Pen meet, then P quizzes her on Hamlet and Kotzebue
- 55 Pen's fathers love of the bard, though he didn't much read the works
- 58 "He [Smirke] and Mrs. Pendennis brought books of Hamlet with them to follow the tragedy, as is the custom of honest country-folks who go to a playbin state."