Show Summary Details
- Introduction
- Note on the Text
- Select Bibliography
- An Autobiography
- Chapter 1 My Education 1815–1834
- Chapter 2 My Mother
- Chapter 3 The General Post Office 1834–1841
- Chapter 4 Ireland—My First Two Novels
- Chapter 5 My First Success
- Chapter 6 ‘Barchester Towers’ and the ‘Three Clerks’
- Chapter 7 ‘Doctor Thorne’—‘The Bertrams’—‘The West Indies and the Spanish Main’
- Chapter 8 The ‘Cornhill Magazine’ and ‘Framley Parsonage’
- Chapter 9 ‘Castle Richmond’, ‘Brown, Jones, and Robinson’, ‘North America’, ‘Orley Farm’
- Chapter 10 ‘The Small House at Allington’, ‘Can You Forgive Her?’, ‘Rachel Ray’, and The ‘Fortnightly Review’
- Chapter 11 ‘The Claverings’, the ‘Pall Mall Gazette’, ‘Nina Balatka’, and ‘Linda Tressel’
- Chapter 12 On Novels and the Art of Writing Them
- Chapter 13 On English Novelists of the Present Day
- Chapter 14 On Criticism
- Chapter 15 ‘The Last Chronicle of Barset’—Leaving the Post Office—‘St Paul’s Magazine’
- Chapter 16 Beverley
- Chapter 17 The American Postal Treaty—the Question of Copyright with America—Four More Novels
- Chapter 18 ‘The Vicar of Bullhampton’—‘Sir Harry Hotspur’—‘An Editor’s Tales’—‘Cæsar’
- Chapter 19 ‘Ralph the Heir’—‘The Eustace Diamonds’ —‘Lady Anna’—‘Australia’
- Chapter 20 ‘The Way We Live Now’ and ‘The Prime Minister’—Conclusion
- Trollope on Jane Austen
- ‘On English Prose Fiction as a Rational Amusement’
- From Thackeray
- From ‘The Genius of Nathaniel Hawthorne’
- From ‘A Walk in a Wood’
- Appendix Passages Omitted from An Autobiography
- Explanatory Notes
You do not currently have access to this content
Sign in
Please sign in to access the full content.
Subscribe
Access to the full content requires a subscription
- Introduction
- Note on the Text
- Select Bibliography
- An Autobiography
- Chapter 1 My Education 1815–1834
- Chapter 2 My Mother
- Chapter 3 The General Post Office 1834–1841
- Chapter 4 Ireland—My First Two Novels
- Chapter 5 My First Success
- Chapter 6 ‘Barchester Towers’ and the ‘Three Clerks’
- Chapter 7 ‘Doctor Thorne’—‘The Bertrams’—‘The West Indies and the Spanish Main’
- Chapter 8 The ‘Cornhill Magazine’ and ‘Framley Parsonage’
- Chapter 9 ‘Castle Richmond’, ‘Brown, Jones, and Robinson’, ‘North America’, ‘Orley Farm’
- Chapter 10 ‘The Small House at Allington’, ‘Can You Forgive Her?’, ‘Rachel Ray’, and The ‘Fortnightly Review’
- Chapter 11 ‘The Claverings’, the ‘Pall Mall Gazette’, ‘Nina Balatka’, and ‘Linda Tressel’
- Chapter 12 On Novels and the Art of Writing Them
- Chapter 13 On English Novelists of the Present Day
- Chapter 14 On Criticism
- Chapter 15 ‘The Last Chronicle of Barset’—Leaving the Post Office—‘St Paul’s Magazine’
- Chapter 16 Beverley
- Chapter 17 The American Postal Treaty—the Question of Copyright with America—Four More Novels
- Chapter 18 ‘The Vicar of Bullhampton’—‘Sir Harry Hotspur’—‘An Editor’s Tales’—‘Cæsar’
- Chapter 19 ‘Ralph the Heir’—‘The Eustace Diamonds’ —‘Lady Anna’—‘Australia’
- Chapter 20 ‘The Way We Live Now’ and ‘The Prime Minister’—Conclusion
- Trollope on Jane Austen
- ‘On English Prose Fiction as a Rational Amusement’
- From Thackeray
- From ‘The Genius of Nathaniel Hawthorne’
- From ‘A Walk in a Wood’
- Appendix Passages Omitted from An Autobiography
- Explanatory Notes