William Makepeace Thackeray |
William Makepeace Thackeray (July 18, 1811 - December 24, 1863)
was an English novelist of the 19th century. He was famous for his satirical works,
particularly Vanity Fair, a satire of middle class English society.
He was born in Calcutta, India, where
his father worked for the British East India
Company, but his family returned to England in 1817.
Thackeray was prolific and wrote under a number of amusing pseudonyms: "Charles James Yellowplush, a footman"; "Michael Angelo Titmarsh"; and "George Savage
Fitz-Boodle". In addition, he worked as a widely travelled journalist, who met many celebrities of his time, for example Goethe. Charlotte Brontė was one of his fans and dedicated the second edition of Jane Eyre to him.
Thackeray's connection with Tunbridge Wells is of special interest
and value from the fact that The Wells figures largely in his famous Novel "The Virginians" and also that in " Roundabout
Papers," one of his sketches entitled "Tonbridge Toys " describes his visits here and his early and later impressions of the
place.
The house 'Rock Villa' at which he stayed in 1860 still stands and preserves its
original features. It bears a placque denoting his visit there and is known as Thackeray's house, having a brass plate to that
effect attached to its gate pillar.
His first visit as a boy was in 1823 when he travelled by coach from London to this Town
arriving at a small house on the Common where his parents were staying for a time.
When he paid his final visit to The Wells in 1860 he was accompanied by his daughter Lady Ritchie. He was then Editor of The
Cornhill Magazine and wrote " Tonbridge Toys " and "de Gwentive" at Rock Villa. It has also been stated that a part, if not all,
of "The Virginians " was written here.
Novels
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