David Copperfield

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Charles Dickens 1850
English
  • Preface by the Author
  • I Am Born
  • I Observe
  • I Have a Change
  • I Fall Into Disgrace
  • I Am Sent Away
  • I Enlarge My Circle of Acquaintance
  • My "First Half" at Salem House
  • My Holidays, Especially One Happy Afternoon
  • I Have a Memorable Birthday
  • I Become Neglected, and am Provided For
  • I Begin Life on my Own Account, and Do Not Like It
  • Liking Life on my Own Account No Better, I Form a Great Resolution
  • The Sequel of my Resolution
  • My Aunt Makes Up Her Mind About Me
  • I Make Another Beginning
  • I Am A New Boy in More Senses Than One
  • Somebody Turns Up
  • A Retrospect
  • I Look About Me and Make A Discovery
  • Steerforth's Home
  • Little Em'ly
  • Some Old Scenes, and Some New People
  • I Corroborate Mr. Dick and Choose a New Profession
  • My First Dissipation
  • Good and Bad Angels
  • I Fall Into Captivity
  • Tommy Traddles
  • Mr. Micawber's Gauntlet
  • I Visit Steerforth at his Home Again
  • A Loss
  • A Greater Loss
  • The Beginning of a Long Journey
  • Blissful
  • My Aunt Astonishes Me
  • Depression
  • Enthusiasm
  • A Little Cold Water
  • A Dissolution of Partnership
  • Wickfield and Heep
  • The Wanderer
  • Dora's Aunts
  • Mischief
  • Another Retrospect
  • Our Housekeeping
  • Mr. Dick Fulfills My Aunt's Prediction
  • Intelligence
  • Martha
  • Domestic
  • I Am Involved in Mystery
  • Mr. Peggotty's Dream Comes True
  • The Beginning of a Longer Journey
  • I Assist at an Explosion
  • Another Retrospect
  • Mr. Micawber's Transactions
  • Tempest
  • The New Wound, and the Old
  • The Emigrants
  • Absence
  • Return
  • Agnes
  • I Am Shown Two Interesting Penitents
  • A Light Shines On My Way
  • A Visitor
  • A Last Retrospect
"David Copperfield" or "The Personal History, Adventures, Experience and Observation of David Copperfield the Younger of Blunderstone Rookery" was first published in 1850. Like all except five of his works, it originally appeared in serial form. Many elements within the novel follow events in Dickens' own life, and it is probably the most autobiographical of all of his novels. It is also Dickens' "favorite child." (Summary adapted from Wikipedia)

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