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Thomas Hardy (1840-1928)

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Title: Thomas Hardy (1840-1928)


1
Thomas Hardy(1840-1928)
  • If asked to state his profession, without
    hesitation Hardy would have declared himself a
    poet rather than a novelist. He began to write
    poetry in the late 1850s, in his early teens, and
    continued until his death at the age of
    eighty-seven.

2
Early Years
  • Thomas Hardy was born in Upper Bockhampton in
    Dorset, in the west of England. His father was a
    successful mason and offered his son a good
    education. His mother fostered in him a love of
    literature, at school he learned to read Latin,
    while at home he taught himself Greek. When he
    was sixteen he finished his formal education.
  • As his father was a master mason, the sons first
    ambition was to design buildings. At sixteen he
    was apprenticed to an ecclesiastical architect,
    John Hicks. His employer enjoyed the classics,
    and allowed his employees time to read. At the
    same time, he was encouraged in his literary
    interests by a Cambridge scholar, Horace Moule,
    who became Hardys friend and mentor. He
    introduced him to the Greek classics in the
    original, literary criticism and progressive
    theology. However a career in this profession did
    not present itself as a practical possibility.
    Having finished his apprenticeship, he left for
    London in 1862 and became assistant to an
    architect, Arthur Bloomfield.
  • Hardy was determined to become a great poet and
    he began writing in earnest in his spare time. He
    sent his verses to literary magazines throughout
    the capital but none were accepted. In 1867,
    bored by his work and disappointed by his lack of
    success as a poet, he moved back to Dorset.

3
The Novelist
  • With an attitude that he had little to lose,
    Hardy attempted his first novel in the summer of
    1867, The Poor Man and the Lady, and in doing so
    set himself on the road of being one of the most
    well-loved of all Victorian novelists. Like his
    verse, he wrote novels from an unselfconscious
    view of reality. Although this first novel was
    not accepted for publication, his second one,
    Desperate Remedies, was published in 1871.
    Thirteen more novels were to follow. With his
    novel, Far from the Madding Crowd, he had made
    enough in royalties to propose to Emma Lavinia
    Gifford, a woman he had fallen in love with while
    restoring a church in Cornwall four years
    previously. The marriage did not go well and
    after her illness (she suffered from a mental
    illness) and subsequent death, he wrote many love
    poems, evocations of her as she was in her
    air-blue gown half a century before.
  • Although writing novels gave him financial
    success, as a form it remained for him a
    compromise to poetry. In 1895 when his latest
    novel, Jude the Obscure, was lampooned, Jude the
    Obscene, he turned back to poetry. Ignoring the
    critics poor reception of his verse, he continued
    writing and published eight volumes between 1898
    and 1928.

4
The Poet
  • Thomas Hardy and Gerard Manley Hopkins are two
    Victorian poets, who stand as beacons for modern
    poetry. While Hopkins died before the twentieth
    century began, Hardy lived on until 1928. Hopkins
    might be characterized as looking upwards, while
    Hardy on the other hand was looking backwards. As
    has been mentioned, Hardys had an
    unselfconscious view of reality. He cannot be
    associated with other Victorian poets like
    Swinburne or Tennyson, whose style was more
    decorative and abstract.
  • Todays readers enjoy Hardys poems as much as
    his novels. He himself was very modest about
    them, and called them unadjusted impressions,
    which however might, by humbly recording diverse
    readings of phenomena as they are forced upon us
    by chance and change, lead to a philosophy. He
    is the first of the modern poets, who are
    suspicious of writing well. He broke away from
    poetic diction to a quite unexpected vocabulary.
    Against Matthew Arnolds disparagement, Hardy
    said that, a certain provincialism of feeling is
    invaluable. It is of the essence of
    individuality, and is largely made up of that
    crude enthusiasm without which no great thoughts
    are thought, no great deeds done. The
    awkwardness was intended to give a sense of
    penetrating through the façade of language and
    syntax as well as the deceptions of circumstance.
    Younger poets like W.H. Auden studying at Oxford,
    read Hardy, when they were looking for
    inspiration for their own craft. Auden wrote
    later, My first Master was Thomas Hardy, and I
    think I was lucky in my choice. He was a good
    poet, perhaps a great one, but not too good. Much
    as I loved him, even I could see that his diction
    was often clumsy and forced and that a lot of his
    poems were plain bad. This gave me hope, where a
    flawless poet would have given me despair. He was
    modern without being too modernIf I looked
    through his spectacles, at least I was conscious
    of a certain eyestrain. Lastly his metrical
    variety, his fondness for complicated stanza
    forms, were an invaluable training in the craft
    of making.

5
Late Years
  • With the poets belief that everything was a
    worthwhile subject for his work, he wrote of war,
    nature, friendship, bereavement and love and
    marriage. The collection published in 1914,
    Satires of circumstance, Lyrics and Reveries
    explore the private relationship between husband
    and wife, inspired by the death of his wife, Emma
    Gifford. The collection Moments of vision and
    Miscellaneous Verses which followed in 1917
    contain some of Hardys finest poems, prompted by
    the outbreak of the First World War which came as
    a great shock to the poet. before Marching and
    After commemorates the loss of his cousin, Frank
    George, while In Time of the Breaking of
    Nations , describing three different yet
    interconnected pastoral scenes, captures the
    futility of war and the greater importance of
    human life over territorial gain.
  • Hardy had no confidence in a supernatural god,
    but he was fond for a pantheon of forces. These
    are the demiurges who move us pathetically about.
    They are animated, Hardy seems to imply, not by
    malignity but by indifference as in Hap and
    The Subalterns. Hardys universe offers a
    grotesque version of the traditional one, because
    in place of an imminent divinity he substitutes
    an imminent indifference. Though many cite him as
    pessimistic, he is characterized nonetheless by
    compassion for humankind and his conscious
    purpose is always to defend and fortify, insofar
    as possible, the human.

6
The Mayor of Casterbridge
  • Homework Due Wednesday 17th August
  • Find the page number and highlight the passage,
    then make a summary to present in class
  • Find 2 examples in the novel of Hardys
    understanding of the countryside, its laborers,
    life and villages/towns
  • Find 2 examples of Hardys expert knowledge of
    architecture
  • Find an example of Hardys interest in Dorset
    history
  • Find examples of Hardys understanding of human
    life being controlled by indifferent forces
  • Find examples of his compassion for humankind
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