Framley Parsonage
Page 66
Travels to Egypt, England and the West Indies on postal business
Doctor Thorne
1859 Charles Darwin, On the Origin of Species
Leaves Ireland to settle in Waltham Cross, Hertfordshire, after being appointed Surveyor of the Eastern District of England
The Bertrams and The West Indies and the Spanish Main
1860 Dickens, Great Expectations (–1861)
Framley Parsonage (–1861, his first serialized fiction) and Castle Richmond
1861 American Civil War (–1865)
John Stuart Mill, Utilitarianism. Mrs Beeton, Book of Household Management
Travels to USA to research a travel book
Orley Farm (–1862)
1862 Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Last Poems
Elected to the Garrick Club
The Small House at AUington (–1864) and North America
1863 His mother dies in Florence
Rachel Ray
1864 Elizabeth Gaskell, Wives and Daughters (–1866)
Elected to the Athenaeum Club
Can You Forgive Her? (–1865)
1865 Abraham Lincoln assassinated
Lewis Carroll, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland
Fortnightly Review founded by Trollope (among others)
Miss Mackenzie, The Belton Estate (–1866)
1866 Eliot, Felix Holt the Radical
The Claverings (–1867), Nina Balatka (–1867) and The Last Chronicle ofBarset (–1867)
1867 Second Reform Act extends the franchise further, enlarging the electorate to almost two million
Algernon Charles Swinburne, A Song of Italy
Resigns from the GPO and assumes editorship of St Paul’s Magazine
Phineas Finn (–1869)
1868 Last public execution in London
Wilkie Collins, The Moonstone
Visits the US A on a postal mission; returns to England to stand unsuccessfully as a Liberal candidate for Beverley, Yorkshire
He Knew He Was Right (–1869)
1869 Suez Canal opened
Richard Doddridge Blackmore, Lorna Doone
The Vicar of Bullhampton (–1870)
1870 Married Women’s Property Act passed
Dickens, The Mystery of Edwin Drood
Resigns editorship of St Paul’? Magazine
Ralph the Heir (–1871), Sir harry Hotspur of Humblethwaite, and a translation of The Commentaries of Caesar
1871 Eliot, Middlemarch (–1872)
Gives up house at Waltham Cross and sails to Australia with Rose to visit his son Frederic
The Eustace Diamonds (–1873)
1872 Thomas Hardy, Under the Greenwood Tree and A Pair of Blue Eyes (–1873)
Travels in Australia and New Zealand and returns to England via the USA
The Golden Lion of Granpere
1873 Mill, Autobiography
Settles in Montagu Square, London
Lady Anna (–1874), Phineas Redux (–1874); Australia and New Zealand and Harry Heathcote of Gangoil: A Tale of Australian Bush Life
1874 The first Impressionist Exhibition in Paris
Hardy, Far From the Madding Crowd
The Way We Live Now (–1875)
1875 Alexander Graham Bell patents the telephone
Travels to Australia, via Brindisi, Suez and Ceylon
Begins writing An Autobiography on his return. The Prime Minister (–1876)
1876 Mark Twain, Tom Sawyer
Finishes writing An Autobiography. The American Senator (–1877)
1877 Henry James, The American
Visits South Africa
Is He Popenjoy? (–1878)
1878 Hardy, The Return of the Native
Sails to Iceland
John Caldigate (–1879), The Lady of Launay, An Eye for an Eye (–1879) and South Africa
1879 George Meredith, The Egoist
Cousin Henry, The Duke’s Children (–1880) and Thackeray
1880 Greenwich Mean Time made the legal standard in Britain. First Anglo-Boer War (–1881)
Benjamin Disraeli, Evfymion
Settles in South Halting, W. Sussex
Dr Worth’s School and The Life of Cicero
1881 In Ireland, Parnell is arrested for conspiracy and the Land League is outlawed
Robert Louis Stevenson, Treasure Island (–1882)
Ayala’s Angel, The Fixed Period (–1882) and Marion Fay (–1882)
1882 Phoenix Park murders in Dublin
Visits Ireland twice to research a new Irish novel, and returns to spend the winter in London. Dies on 6 December
Kept in the Dark, Mr Scarborough’s Family (–1883) and The Landleaguers (–1883, unfinished)
1883 An Autobiography is published under the supervision of Trollope’s son Henry
1884 An Old Man’s Love
1923 The Noble Jilt
1927 London Tradesmen (reprinted from the Pall Man Gazette, 1880)
1972 The New Zealander
1 The Letters of Mrs Gaskell, ed. J. A. V. Chapple and A. Pollard (Manchester, 1966), p. 602.
2 The Letters of Elizabeth Barrett Browning, ed. F. G. Kenyon (London, 1897), vol. 2, p. 391.
3 The Letters of Anthony Trollope, ed. N. J. Hall (Stanford, Ca., 1983), (2 vols paginated as one), vol. 1, p. 89. (Referred to hereafter as Letters.)
4 Letters, p. 91.
5 An Autobiography, ed. F. Page and M. Sadleir (Oxford: the Oxford Trollope, 1950; reprinted in World’s Classics, 1980), p. 141.
6 E. S. Dallas [anon], ‘Anthony Trollope’, The Times, 23 May 1859,12.
7 Letters, pp. 116–17.
8 Journey to a War (London, 1939), pp. 3 7–8.
9 Autobiography, pp. 142–3.
10 Letters, p. xxxii.
11 Saturday Review, xl, 4 May 1861, 451–2.
12 William Hepworth Dixon [anon.], notice of Part One of Orles Farm, Athenaeum, no. 1741, 9 March 1861, 319–20.
13 British Quarterly Review, xxxiv, July 1861, 263.
14 R. H. Hutton [anon.], obituary, Spectator, lv, 9 December 1882,1573–4.
15 The Art of Eating in France, trans. N. Rootes (London, 1975),pp. 158-9.
16 Letters, p. 141.
17 Letters, pp. 104 and III.
18 N. N. Glisev, Chronicle of the Life and Work of L. N. Tolstoy 1828-1890 (Moscow, 1958), p. 315; quoted by R. M. Polhemus, The Changing World of Anthony Trollope (Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1968), p. 207n.
19 Autobiography, pp. 226–7.
20 Graham Greene, Collected Essays (Penguin, 1970), p. 91.
21 pp. 46 and 348.
22 See R. H. Hutton [anon.], ‘From Miss Austen to Mr. Trollope’, Spectator, lv, 16 December 1882,1609-11.
23 p. 240
24 Autobiography, p. 143.
25 p. 369.
26 p. 558.
27 Letters, pp. 145-6.
28 Autobiography, p. 139.
29 letters, pp. 92-3.
30 Letters, p. 131.
31 The editors wish to thank the Librarian and Trustees of Harrow School for access to the manuscript.
32 Letters, p. 93.
33 Letters, p. 99.
34 Letters, p. 114.
35 Letters, p. 129.
36 Letters, pp. 142-3.
37 Letters, p. 250.
38 p. 414.
39 P. 57.
40 p. 402.
41 p. 482.
42 Letters, p. 93.
43 Letters, p. 106. See note 1 to Chapter 20.
44 See note 1 to Chapter 33.
45 See note 1 to Chapter 26.
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