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The son of a master mason, Thomas Hardy was born in Upper Bockhampton,
Dorset. He was apprenticed to an architect in Dorchester when he was 16,
and his mother encouraged him to go on studying. His career in letters
notwithstanding, Hardy retained an interest in stonework and
architecture all his life.
It was his profession as an architect that took him to London in 1862,
about the time when he first began to write. In this he received
encouragement from his friend, Horace Moule, a university-trained
scholar. The friendship was a valuable stimulus to the young Hardy;
Moule was eight years his senior and had a classical background. (Moule
committed suicide in 1873, believing himself a failure. His death
affected Hardy deeply, and some of his characters-notably Jude-have more
than a suggestion of his friend in them.)
Hardy stayed in London, about which he had definite reservations, until
1867, reading incessantly, attending performances of Shakespeare and
visiting the opera. He went back in Dorset to assist in church
restoration and at the same time began to write a novel containing some
verse. This, called “The Poor Man and the Ladyâ€Â, was never
published, but comments from one reader, George Meredith for Chapman &
Hall, contained good advice and Hardy’s next novel, “Desperate
Remediesâ€Â, was published in 1871. It was not well received, but
“Under the Greenwood Tree†(1872) was also accepted, and did better,
being praised for the author’s delicate evocation of Dorset life. “A
Pair of Blue Eyes†followed, appearing as a serial in “Tinley’s
Magazine†and then in volume form in 1873. J.I.M. Stewart says it
“may be regarded as a last apprentice piece†and certainly his next
book, “Far from the Madding Crowd†(1874), demonstrated Thomas
Hardy’s mastery of his form. He felt assured and successful enough to
embark on marriage with Emma Gifford.
His confidence in himself was justified; he was now being asked for his
work. “The Hand of Ethalbertaâ€Â(1876), however, to some degree
disappointed his admirers. His was because the early instalments of
“Far from the Madding Crowd†had been likened to the work of George
Eliot and Hardy was determined to write something completely different.
“The Return of the Native†followed in 1878, written at the
Hardys’ first home in Sturminster Newton.
The Hardys returned to London in 1878.Hardy, as well as researching the
background for “The Trumpet-Major†(1880), was also taking his place
among well-known writers; he met Tennyson and Browning and began his
life-long friendship with Edmund Goose. He wa taken ill in the autumn of
1880, but succeeded in completing “A Laodicean†(1881), mostly by
dictation, and the Hardys went back to Dorset in the late spring of
1881.
The next novel was a romance, â€ÂTwo on a Towerâ€Â(1882) while “The
Mayor of Casterbridgeâ€Â(1886) and “The Woodlandersâ€Â(1887) were
already in his mind. In 1885 the Hardys moved into their house “Max
Gateâ€Â, the building of which Hardy had superintended, and welcomed
their first visitor, Robert Louis Stevenson. Hardy’s next major work
was “Tess of the D’Urbevillesâ€Â(1891), but meanwhile there were a
number of short stories, including two notable collections, “Wessex
Tales†(1888) and “A Group of Noble Dames†(1891).
Hardy was by now chafing more and more at the restraints that convention
was placing on truth in his fiction. Publishing so much in serial form,
he was often obliged to savage his work to make it “acceptableâ€Â. He
resented having to do it for Tess when he was called on to do the same
thing for “Jude the Obscure†(1896) his disillusion was nearly
complete. Both Tess and Jude in volume form, were the complete texts
and, predictably, they were severely criticized. The marital scene, too,
was becoming strained, and this was hardly helped by Emma Hardy’s
overestimation of her own contribution, and by her opposition to Jude.
Apart from the light “The Well-Beloved†(1987), “Jude the
Obscure†was Thomas Hardy’s last novel. What should be mentioned
here, before turning to his poetry, are the series of short stories that
are an important part of his fiction. Apart from the volumes already
mentioned there was “Life’s Little Ironies†(1894) and the
collection called “A Changed Manâ€Â, “The Waiting Supper and Other
Talesâ€Â, which was published in 1913 and Other Talesâ€Â, which was
published in 1913. A story for children, “Our Exploits at West
Poley†(1892), was first published in an American magazine, Household,
and did not appear in England until 1952.
Hardy had written poetry from the outset of his career, but his first
published volume, “Wessex Poems and Other Versesâ€Â, with
illustrations by Hardy himself, did not appear until 1898. It was
indifferently received, but he continued: “Poems of the Past and the
Present†came out in 1904, the first part of “The Dynastsâ€Â, a
verse drama of the time of the Napoleonic Wars. The completed work
brought him immense acclaim. From then on he was an honoured man of
letters, revered through England, an honorary D.Litt. four times over,
received by the king, and awarded the Order of Merit and the RSL Gold
Medal. Another volume of poems, “Time’s Laughing stocksâ€Â, was
published in 1909.
Emma Hardy died in 1912, and the poems that followed, in Satires of
Circumstance (1914), reflect his feeling of both loss and guilt-he
deeply regretted the strained relations of the last years. By then he
married Florence Dugdale and World War I begun. His Next book of verse,
â€ÂMoments of Vision†(1917), contained the patriotic verse, which he
and other English poets had felt called upon to write. “Late Lyrics
and Earlier†was published in 1922; the Prince of Wales called on
Thomas Hardy at “Max Gate†on 1923, and “The Famous Tragedy of the
Queen of Cornwallâ€Â, a verse drama about Tristan and Iseult, was
published at the end of the year. “Human Shows†(1925) was the last
book of poems published during his lifetime. Thomas Hardy died on 10
January 1928, at the age of 87, and was honoured with a tomb at
Westminster Abbey. His last volume of poems, “Winter Wordsâ€Â, was
published in the October of that year.
Hardy’s work seems to divide his admirers: some prefer the great
storyteller, some the poet; others admire “The Dynasts†and nothing
else. The greater number accept him complete and it is a tribute to him
that he has so much to offer those who do not. Even those who are cool
about his novels will admit to finding memorable things in his short
stories. His greatest strength no doubt lies in the deeply rooted Wessex
character which informs most of his work; Hardy was a country-man
without sentimentality and a fatalist. He knew perfectly that a way of
life was disappearing, but this was not, to him, something to deplore;
life was in many ways going to be better, with wider horizons. But the
tension of being between two worlds lends great poignancy to much of his
work and is at the heart of some of his novels. What he truly deplored
was the rigid code of behaviour, which existed in his time, and the
inflexibility imposed by tradition and routine which was the enemy of
truth.
His poetry had to wait for his feeling that he could say no more in
fiction; poetry was his first love and now he felt ready to be heard.
After a slow beginning he was listened to with great attention and with
increasing appreciation for his imaginative vision and his undeluded
mind.
The Trumpet-Major
In his glorious, witty, yet disarmingly down-to-earth novel of the
passionate fortunes of Miss Anna Garland, Hardy brings his childhood
fascination with the Napoleonic era stunningly to life. By turns comic
and tragic, The Trumpet-Major is a marvelously heartfelt emotional
adventure, a wonderful insight into a rural community under threat, and
an agonizing drama of unrequited love.
Anne and her widowed mother live quietly in a portion of the mill owned
by Miller Loveday, until their peace is shattered by the sudden blaze of
color and activity brought by a local encampment of several army
regiments. As they prepare to defend the country from the expected
invasion by Napoleon, Anne quickly builds her own defences against a
private army of suitors. She must apparently chose between the
headstrong and rude Festus Derriman who, in place of any manners at all,
nevertheless possesses good prospects, and the reflective and honest
trumpet-major, John Loveday, who does not. And there is a third,
Anne’s childhood sweetheart and John’s sailor brother, Robert, whose
sudden arrival with an unknown wife-to-be, throws the whole affair in a
thorough confusion.
Far from the Madding Crowd
A thoughtless joke of Bathsheba Everdene, the heroine, makes her the
object of Boldwood’s affections, but she is dazzled by Sergeant Troy,
whom she soon marries. Farmer Gabriel Oak, the first one who had asked
for her hand. After loosing his flock of sheep, his only fortune, he
gets a job in Bathsheba’s farm, inherited from an uncle. His constant
love and priceless friendship (he was her only true friend and became
her personal advisor)is finally rewarded: Troy is killed by the jealous
Boldwood, who goes alone in prison and Oak marries Bathsheba.
Ariadna Petri 10 M1
National College “Mihai Viteazul†Ploiesti
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