Thomas-Hardy的英文简介
哈代

《徳伯家的苔丝》现实意义
《苔丝》同以前的小说相比主题上更为广泛和深刻,人道主义色 彩更加浓郁。 哈代在总结苔丝历史时写道“ ‘死刑’执行了,用埃斯库洛斯 的话说,那个众神之王对苔丝的戏弄也就结束了。”在制造古希 腊式命运悲剧时,对资产阶级法律的不公道、非正义给予了讽刺 和谴责。 哈代生活的时代是资本主义迅速发展并向农村扩张的时期,广大 农民在贫困中挣扎求生。这一切都为他创作《苔丝》提供了素材, 他集中注意力在这些破产农民的生活上,思考他们未来的命运、 探索他们生活的前途,描写他们不幸的生活遭遇。 他以其现实主义的敏锐观察和对社会发展趋势的正确把握,描写 了破产的威塞克斯农民的新的追求、斗争和悲剧。哈代清楚的看 出了威塞克斯破产农民向工人阶级转化的必然趋势,同时也看到 了新的社会条件下出现的无产阶级和资产阶级新的矛盾和斗争。
3、注重在矛盾冲突中刻画心绪流程,表 现人物复杂的心态和丰富的精神世界
“近几年来,苔丝的生活从来没有像现在这样快乐过,也可 能再也不会像现在这样快乐了。在新的环境里,她在身心两 个方面都感到很融洽。她像一棵幼树,在原先栽种的地方, 已经把根扎进了有毒的土层里,而现在已经被移植到深厚的 土壤里了。另外,她和克莱也还处在好感和爱恋之间的不稳 固的土壤上;还没有达到一定的深度;也没有什么难以解决 的思虑和让人烦恼的问题,“这股新的爱潮要把我带到哪里 去?它对我未来的前途意味着什么?它对我的过去又是怎样 的?”
2)中期:《还乡》《林地居民》《卡斯特桥市长》 《还乡》的出版标志着哈代的小说创作在主题、题材和艺 术风格方面进入到一个新的时期。 从《还乡》到《林地居民》问世,哈代基本形成了自己 的现实主义理论、悲剧观念和美学思想。 《卡斯特桥市长》使他的悲剧小说在主题上达到了高潮。 3)晚期:《徳伯家的苔丝》《无名的裘德》
托马斯哈代

二、人物形象 苔丝:纯洁、善良、美丽、坚强、具有反
抗精神的英国农村女性形象 悲剧原因:
时代造成的 亚雷·德伯——元凶——肉体 安矶·克莱——————精神
苔丝性格的弱点 神秘莫测的命运
艺术成就
• 景物描写:客观自然的再现 主观中自然的反映
• 心理描写:注重在矛盾冲突中刻画心绪 流程,表现人物复杂的心态 和丰富的精神世界
后期创作 • 《还乡》(1878) 游苔莎 姚伯 • 《卡斯特桥市长》(1886)
亨察尔 伐尔伏雷 露赛妲
苏姗 伊利莎白 • 《德伯家的苔丝》(1891) • 《无名裘德》(1896)
长篇小说《德伯家的苔丝》
• 美丽的农家少女苔丝因家 庭经济变故,到地主德伯 家去做工.少爷亚雷污辱 了她,苔丝被迫远离家乡 到牛奶场打工.农场主的 儿子克莱与她发生了爱情, 在结婚之际,克莱听苔丝 讲了过去被亚雷污辱的遭 遇,愤而远走巴西.
• 苔丝家中又因欠债被迫离乡,投亲不遇,走 投无路.又遇亚雷,无奈之下,随亚雷回到他 家,当了亚雷的情妇,但是解决了家人的生活 问题.
• 克莱在巴西经历了许多磨难,对自己抛弃 苔丝的行为十分后悔.他写信给苔丝,但她没 有收到.回乡后,克莱找到德伯家,苔丝深感 亚蕾毁了自己的一生。杀死亚蕾,和克莱在原 野上度过了幸福的三天,被捕。
• 十九世纪英国现实主义文学的最后一位代 表
• 托马斯·哈代 英国西南部道塞特郡贵族 • 建筑—小说—诗歌 • 七十——九十年代创作以道塞特郡为背景
一套小说
《威塞克斯小说》
•威塞克斯小说
前期小说: • 描写了家长制农村社会的恬静生活,具
有浓郁的田园风味,表现了对前资本主 义农村生活的留恋。 1、《无望的补救》(1871)真正进入小 说创作 2、《远离尘嚣》(1874)第一部得到一 致赞扬的小说
英国文学家哈代Hardy的个人简介

2.1 Nostalgic touch for declining
rural life.
Living at the turn of the century, Hardy is often regarded as a transitional writer. In him we see the influence from both the Victorian and the modern. As some people put it, he is intellectually advanced and emotionally traditional.
The points of views
1. Nostalgic touch for declining rural life.
2. Attitude toward science and contemporary philosophy
3. His combined force of "nature" --view of Fatalism
Biography (Lifemas Hardy was born in Dorsetshire, Southwest of England, the area that later became the famous "Wessex" in many of his novels.
Thomas Hardy (1840~1928)
Procedures
• 1. A brief introduction to the biography. • 2. The points of views. • 3. Artistic features of his works. • 4. The Main points of the selected works. • 5.Relevent exercise. • Major works
Thomas_Hardy

Wessex novels
In his Wessex novels, there is an apparent nostalgic touch in his description of the simple and beautiful though primitive rural life, which was gradually declining and disappearing as England was marching fast into an industrial country. And with those traditional characters he is always sympathetic and mourns over their failure and misfortune.
Wessex Novels
The Wessex Novels include Under the Greenwood Tree, Far from the Madding Crowd, The Return of the Native, The Mayor of Casterbridge, Tess of the D’ Urbervilles, Jude the Obscure.
Thomas Hardy (1840~1928)
Hardy(1840-1928) Thomas Hardy(
English poet and novelist, famous for his depictions of the imaginary country “Wessex”. Hardy’s works reflected his stoical pessimism and sense of tragedy in human 奇与幻想小说) 传奇与幻想小说)
托马斯哈代

14 novels, 4 novellas,
8 collections of poetry,
3 dramas
Far from the Madding Crowd (1874) 《远离尘嚣》
The Return of the Native (1878) 《还乡》
The Mayor of Casterbridge (1886) 《卡斯特桥市长》
Hardy is the most representative he claims to be "the character and environment of the novel" of a group of works
THANK YOU
Unlike Dickens, most of Hardy’s novels are tragic.
Influence
Living in the Victorian era, a period when ideas of Darwinian Evolution were widely discussed, his novels represent evolutionary ideas about sexual selection, resulting in stories of “sexual pursuit” which largely adhere to even more modern conceptions of evolutionary mating strategies. His novels share a pessimistic view of the human condition. Nature is indifferent to a person’s desires and efforts; perverse luck is as important as individual character in determining one’s fate. The bitter ironies of fruitless efforts and lost affections five an ironic and tragic tone to Hardy’s novels, making them unlike mainstream Victorian novels with their hopeful conclusions. His novels are influenced by Darwin’s evolution theory, which stresses that the most adapted species survives the natural selection.
哈代

4.著名诗人
哈代创作的前期和后期,均以写 诗著称,只因他小说的光辉遮蔽了 诗歌的华彩,他洋洋大观的8部诗作 才鲜为人知。 哈代的诗达到了“诗与真理”合 一,理性与直觉无二,自然与情感 交融的“大诗”境界,比他的小说 更为精致耐读。
8部诗集
《威塞克斯诗集》 《时光的笑柄》 《幻觉的瞬间》 《人生小景》 《今昔之歌》 《即事讽刺诗》 《中晚期抒情诗》 《晚岁之歌》
二、生平与创作
1840年6月2日,托马斯·哈代出生 在英国西南荒原多塞特郡多切斯特县博 克汉普顿村。 1862-1867年,哈代在伦敦求学,此 外一生基本都在家乡“隐居”。 1928年1月11日,哈代去世,骨灰葬 在伦敦威斯敏斯特教堂“诗人之角”。 按照他的遗愿,心脏被安葬在故乡斯廷 斯福德教堂墓地。
4.抒情色彩
诗人哈代所有的作品都具有浓郁 的抒情特色,比如小说情景交融的环 境,诗意氤氲的人物性格,凄婉动人 的心理描写,悲怆离奇的命运,朴素 从容、散文化的叙事风格„„都具有 一种强烈的情绪感染力。
四、“威塞克斯”小说 (Wessex Novels )
1912年哈代在编纂自己的作品全 集时,把他的小说分成三类:罗曼 史和幻想小说、机敏和经验小说、 性格和环境小说,命名为 “威塞克 斯系列”。 主要包括14部长篇小说和5部中 短篇小说集。
1.长篇小说
(1)罗曼史和幻想小说
• 《一双蓝眼睛》 • 《号兵长》 • 《塔里的两个人》 • 《心爱的人》
(2)机敏和经验小说
• 《计出无奈》 • 《爱塞尔伯特的婚姻》 • 《冷漠的人》
(3)性格和环境小说
• 这类小说成就最大,包括: • 《绿荫下》 《远离尘嚣》 • 《还乡》 《卡斯特桥市长》 • 《林地居民》《德伯家的苔丝》 • 《无名的裘德》
第四节 哈代
遗言争执
1928年1月11日,哈代去世,• 享年88岁。 哈代留下的遗言是死后葬在故 乡的家墓里。可是政府为了表 示对有名作家的重视和敬意, 坚持要举行国葬,把遗体安葬 在威斯明斯特大教堂。为此, 哈代亲属和政府发生争执。最 后双方妥协,达成协议。取出 哈代的心脏葬在家乡,遗体火 化,骨灰葬在威斯明斯特教堂 的诗人角。
二、作品:复活了威塞克斯
创作成就
哈代从1865年发表第一篇散文到1925年完成 最后一部诗集的60年间,共写作了长篇小说 14部,短篇小说集4部,诗集8部,诗剧2部, 论文20余篇。哈代以写诗歌始,又以写诗歌 终,但他是以小说创作的成就奠定他在英国 文坛上的地位的。
威塞克斯小说(Wessex Novels)
哈代的婚姻——哈代与爱玛
1870,30岁,哈代
同爱玛相识并相爱。 1874,34岁,与爱 玛结婚,终身没有 孩子。 哈代中期创作平稳, 生活也比较优裕, 创作间隙,与爱玛 先后去荷兰、德国、 法国、意大利等国 旅行。
September 17, 1874 Married Emma Gifford.
MICHAEL HENCHARD’S WILL
That Elizabeth-Jane Farfrace not be told of my death, or made to grieve because of me. That I not be buried in a churchyard. That no bells are rung for me. That nobody is to see my dead body. That nobody walks behind my coffin. That no flowers be planted on my grave. That no man remember me. To this I put my name. MICHAEL HENCHARD
Thomas Hardy托马斯哈代
• To express his “twilight view of life,” he employs the architectural structure by accumulating each circumstance, each detail to strengthen the final effect—Fate (sinister, inexorable((不可阻挡的)) Fate, the tragic doom).
• Practiced architecture Living most of his life in Dorchester (southwest England)---Wessex of his novel he was very close to the English peasantry。 He was one of the important critical realistic writers, in his novels shows sympathy for the peasants in an age of decline and decay of peasantry, and at the same time shows his nostalgia for the pastoral and patriarchal mode of life.
• Tess Durbeyfield, Alec D’Urbervilles (doubtful right to it), Ange writer quotes Gloster’s speech to King Lear:
• ‘As flies to wanton(恶意) boys are we to the gods:
托马斯.哈代
“ The sudden disappointment of a hope leaves a scar which the ultimate fulfillment of that hope never entirely removes.” 一个希望的突然失落会留下一处伤痕, 即使那希望最终会实现,也决不能完全平 复。
1874 Far from the Madding Crowd 《远离尘嚣》
Other popular novels followed in quick succession: 1878 The Return of the Native《还乡》 1886 The Mayor of Casterbridge 《卡斯特桥市长》
——Tomas Hardy
Mankind is subjected to the rule of some hostile and mysterious fate, which brings misfortune to human life.
Fatalism(宿命论):chance and
fate, nature, the final disintegration of peasantry in England, Hypocritical morality.
The Return of the Native (1878)
Short Stories
Wessex Tales(1888)(威赛克斯诗集) 境的讽刺) … Poetry
(1904-1908) The Dynasts 《列王》是以拿破仑战 争为题材的三卷本诗剧,除此之外还有近千首短小 的抒情诗.
1910 he was awarded the Order of Merit.
第七章第三节2 哈代
哈代把威塞克斯小说分为三类:
①罗曼史和幻想 (Romances and Fantasies) ②爱情阴谋小说(Novels of Ingenuity) ③性格与环境小说(Novels of Character and Environment)
性格与环境小说
这个分类题名也表明,哈代要在小说中描写人与环境的冲
《苔丝》 Tess of the D’urbervilles (1891)
社会悲剧
经济原因
政治原因
伦理道德原因
性格悲剧
性格的矛盾性和悲剧性
纯洁、善良、坚强、具有反抗精神 传统道德观念和父权文化思想的束缚
命运悲剧
生态女性主义视角下的苔丝悲剧
生态女性主义认为,社会和男性对于自然和女性长时间存在着一种侵犯和 压迫,而这两种压迫有着直接的联系,因为自然和女性两者之间有着极大 的亲近性和相连性,女性与自然都经历过帝国战争、殖民扩张以及工业文 明的摧残与排挤。
乡下石匠的儿子—— 建筑师——诗人—— 小说家——诗人
Thomas Hardy (1840~1928)
“威塞克斯小说”(Wessex Novels )
威塞克斯是哈代家乡的古地名。 威塞克斯是6世纪中叶盎格鲁-撒克逊人入侵英 国后,建立的7个割据王国之一。公元838年, 威塞克斯王爱格柏统一了整个英国。
追求声色享受,没有道德,没有信念,充满肉欲。
例如:艾拉白拉(《裘德》)、亚雷(《苔丝》) (3)灵肉性人物(soul incarnate)
既有灵性人物的理性,又有肉性人物的情欲
例如:裘德(《裘德》)、苔丝(《苔丝》)、亨察尔(《卡斯特桥市 长》)、游苔莎(《还乡》)
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Thomas Hardy (1840-1904)Thomas Hardy was born at Higher Bockhampton, Dorset, on June 2, 1840, where his father worked as a master mason and builder. From his father he gained an appreciation of music, and from his mother an appetite for learning and the delights of the countryside about his rural home.Hardy was frail as a child, and did not start at the village school until he was eight years old. One year later he transferred to a new school in the county town of Dorchester.At the age of 16 Hardy helped his father with thearchitectural drawings for a restoration of Woodsford Castle.The owner, architect James Hicks, was impressed by the younger Hardy's work, and took him on as an apprentice.Hardy later moved to London to work for prominent architect Arthur Blomfield. He began writing, but his poems were rejected by a number of publishers. Although he enjoyed life in London, Hardy's health was poor, and he was forced to return to Dorset.In 1870 Hardy was sent to plan a church restoration at St. Juliot in Cornwall. There he met Emma Gifford, sister-in-law of the vicar of St.Juliot. She encouraged him in his writing, and they were married in 1874.Hardy published his first novel, Desperate Remedies in 1871, to universal disinterest. But the following year Under the Greenwood Tree brought Hardy popular acclaim for the first time. As with most of his fictional works, Greenwood Tree incorporated real places around Dorset into the plot, including the village school of Higher Bockhampton that Hardy had first attended as a child.The success of Greenwood Tree brought Hardy a commission to write a serialized novel, A Pair of Blue Eyes, for Tinsley's Magazine. Once more Hardy drew upon real life, and the novel mirrors his own courtship of Emma.Hardy followed this with Far From the Madding Crowd, set in Puddletown (renamed Weatherby), near his birthplace. This novel finally netted Hardy the success that enabled him to give up his architectural practice and concentrate solely on writing.The Hardys lived in London for a short time, then in Yeovil, then in Sturminster Newton (Stourcastle), which Hardy described as "idyllic". Itwas at Sturminster Newton that Hardy penned Return of the Native, one of his most enduring works.Finally the Hardys moved to Dorchester, where Thomas designed their new house, Max Gate, into which they moved in 1885. One year later Hardy published The Mayor of Casterbridge, followed in 1887 by The Woodlanders and in 1891 by one of his best works, Tess of the d'Urbervilles.Tess provoked interest, but his next work, Jude the Obscure (1896), catapulted Hardy into the midst of a storm of controversy. Jude outraged Victoria morality and was seen as an attack upon the institution of marriage. Its publication caused a rift between Thomas and Emma, who feared readers would regard it as describing their own marriage.Of course the publicity did no harm to book sales, but reader's hid the book behind plain brown paper wrappers, and the Bishop of Wakefield burned his copy! Hardy himself was bemused by the reaction his book caused, and he turned away from writing fiction with some disgust.For the rest of his life Hardy focussed on poetry, producing several collections, including Wessex Poems (1898).Emma Hardy died in November 1912, and was buried in Stinsford churchyard. Thomas was stricken with guilt and remorse, but the result was some of his best poetry, expressing his feelings for his wife of 38 years.All was not gloom, however, for in 1914 Hardy remarried, to Florence Dugdale, his secretary since 1912. Thomas Hardy died on January 11, 1928 at his house of Max Gate in Dorchester. He had expressed the wish to be buried beside Emma, but his wishes were only partly regarded; his body was interred in Poet's Corner, Westminster Abbey, and only his heart was buried in Emma's grave at Stinsford.A rumor has persisted since Hardy's death that it is not the author's heart that was buried beside Emma. The story goes that Hardy's housekeeper placed his heart on the kitchen table, where it was promptly devoured by her cat. Apparently a pig's heart was used to replace Hardy's own. Truth? Fiction? We will probably never know.English poet and regional novelist, whose works depict the imaginary county "Wessex" (=Dorset). Hardy's career as writer spanned over fifty years. His earliest books appeared when Anthony Trollope (1815-82) wrote his Palliser series, and he published poetry in the decade of T.S. Eliot'sThe Waste Land. Hardy's work reflected his stoical pessimism and sense of tragedy in human life."Critics can never be made to understand that that the failuremay be greater than the success... To have the strength toroll a stone weighting a hundredweight to the top of amountain is a success, and to have the strength to roll a stoneof then hundredweight only halfway up that mount is a failure.But the latter is two or three times as strong a deed." (Hardyin his diary, 1907)Thomas Hardy's own life wasn't similar to his stories. He was born on the Egdon Heath, in Dorset, near Dorchester. His father was a master mason and building contractor. Hardy's mother, whose tastes included Latin poets and French romances, provided for his education. After schooling in Dorchester Hardy was apprenticed to an architect. He worked in an office, which specialized in restoration of churches. In 1874 Hardy married Emma Lavinia Gifford, for whom he wrote 40 years later, after her death, a group of poems known as VETERIS VESTIGIAE FLAMMAE (Vestiges of an Old Flame).At the age of 22 Hardy moved to London and started to write poems, which idealized the rural life. He was an assistant in the architectural firm of Arthur Blomfield, visited art galleries, attended evening classes in French at King's College, enjoyed Shakespeare and opera, and read works of Charles Darwin, Herbert Spencer, and John Stuart Mills, whose positivism influenced him deeply. In 1867 Hardy left London for the family home in Dorset, and resumed work briefly with Hicks in Dorchester. He entered into a temporary engagement with Tryphena Sparks, asixteen-year-old relative. Hardy continued his architectural work, but encouraged by Emma Lavinia Gifford, he started to consider literature as his "true vocation."Unable to find public for his poetry, the novelist George Meredith advised Hardy to write a novel. His first novel, THE POOR MAN AND THE LADY, was written in 1867, but the book was rejected by many publishers and he destroyed the manuscript. His first book that gained notice, was FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD (1874). After its success Hardy was convinced that he could earn his living as an author. He devoted himself entirely to writing and produced a series of novels, among them THE RETURN OF NATIVE (1878), THE MAYOR OF CASTERBRIDGE (1886).TESS OF THE D'URBERVILLES (1891) came into conflict with Victorian morality. It explored the dark side of his family connections in Berkshire. In the story the poor villager girl Tess Durbeyfield is seduced by the wealthy Alec D'Uberville. She becomes pregnant but the child dies ininfancy. Tess finds work as a dairymaid on a farm and falls in love with Angel Clare, a clergyman's son. They marry but when Tess tells Angel about her past, he hypocritically desert her. Tess becomes Alec's mistress. Angel returns from Brazil, repenting his harshness, but finds her living with Alec. Tess kills Alec in desperation, she is arrested and hanged.Hardy's JUDE THE OBSCURE (1895) aroused even more debate. The story dramatized the conflict between carnal and spiritual life, tracing Jude Fawley's life from his boyhood to his early death. Jude marries Arabella, but deserts her. He falls in love with his cousin, hypersensitive Sue Bridehead, who marries the decaying schoolmaster, Phillotson, in a masochist fit. Jude and Sue obtain divorces, but their life together deteriorates under the pressure of poverty and social disapproval. The eldest son of Jude and Arabella, a grotesque boy nicknamed 'Father Time', kills their children and himself. Broken by the loss, Sue goes back to Phillotson, and Jude returns to Arabella. Soon thereafter Jude dies, and his last words are: "Wherefore is light given to him that is in misery, and life unto the bitter in soul?".In 1896, disturbed by the public uproar over the unconventional subjects of two of his greatest novels, Tess of the D'Urbervilles and Jude the Obscure, Hardy announced that he would never write fiction again. A bishop solemnly burnt the book, 'probably in his despair at not being able to burn me', Hardy noted. Hardy's marriage had also suffered from the public outrage - critics on both sides of the Atlantic abused the author as degenerate and called the work itself disgusting. In April, 1912, Hardy wrote:"Then somebody discovered that Jude was a moral work - austerein its treatment of a difficult subject - as if the writerhad not all the time said in the Preface that it was meantto be so. Thereupon many uncursed me, and the matter ended,the only effect of it on human conduct that I could discoverbeing its effect on myself - the experience completely curingme of the further interest in novel-writing."By 1885 the Hardys had settled near Dorchester at Max gate, a house designed by the author and built by his brother, Henry. With the exceptions of seasonal stays in London and occasional excursions abroad, his Bockhampton home, "a modest house, providing neither more nor less than the accommodation ... needed" (as Michael Millgate describes it in his biography of the author) was his home for the rest of his life.After giving up the novel, Hardy brought out a first group of Wessex poems, some of which had been composed 30 years before. During the remainder ofhis life, Hardy continued to publish several collections of poems. "Hardy, in fact, was the ideal poet of a generation. He was the most passionate and the most learned of them all. He had the luck, singular in poets, of being able to achieve a competence other than by poetry and then devote the ending years of his life to his beloved verses." (Ford Madox Ford in The March of Literature, 1938) Hardy's gigantic panorama of the Napoleonic Wars, THE DYNASTS, composed between 1903 and 1908, was mostly in blank verse. Hardy succeeded on the death of his friend George Meredith to the presidency of the Society of Authors in 1909. King George V conferred on him the Order of Merit and he received in 1912 the gold medal of the Royal Society of Literature.Hardy kept to his marriage with Emma Gifford although it was unhappy and he had - or he imagined he had - affairs with other women passing briefly through his life. Emma Hardy died in 1912 and in 1914 Hardy married his secretary, Florence Emily Dugdale, a woman in her 30's, almost 40 years younger than he. From 1920 through 1927 Hardy worked on his autobiography, which was disguised as the work of Florence Hardy. It appeared in two volumes (1928 and 1930). Hardy's last book published in his lifetime was HUMAN SHOWS, FAR PHANTASIES, SONGS AND TRIFLES (1925). WINTER WORDS IN VARIOUS MOODS AND METRES appeared posthumously in 1928.Hardy died in Dorchester, Dorset, on January 11, 1928. His ashes were cremated in Dorchester and buried with impressive ceremonies in the Poet's Corner in Westminster Abbey. According to a literary anecdote his heart was to be buried in Stinsford, his birthplace, and all went according to plan, until a cat belonging to the poet's sister snatched the heart off the kitchen, where it was temporarily kept, and disappeared into the woods with it.The center of Hardy's novels was the rather desolate and history-freighted countryside around Dorchester. His novels bravely challenged many of the sexual and religious conventions of the Victorian age, and dared to present a bleak view into human nature. In the early 1860s, after the appearance Darwin's Origin of Species (1859), Hardy's faith was still unshaken, but he soon adopted the mechanical-determinist view of nature's cruelty, reflected in the inevitably tragic and self-destructive fates of his characters. In his poems Hardy depicted rural life without sentimentality - his mood was often stoically hopeless. "Though he was a modern, even a revolutionary writer in his time, most of us read him now as a lyrical pastoralist. It may be a sign of the times that some of us take his books to bed, as if even his pessimistic vision was one that enabled us to sleep soundly." (Anatole Broyard in New York Times, May 12, 1982)For further reading: The Life of Thomas Hardy: A CriticalBiography by P.D.L. Turner (1998); Thomas Hardy in Our Timeby R.W. Langbaum (1995); Hardy and the Erotic by T.R. Wright(1989); Thomas Hardy by M. Millgate (1982); The Older Hardyby R. Gittings (1980); An Essay on Thomas Hardy by J. Bayley(1978); The Final Years of Thomas Hardy, 1912-1928 by H. Orel(1976); Young Thomas Hardy by R. Gittings (1975); ThomasHardy: A Critical Biography by J.I.M. Stewart (1971); ThePoetry of Thomas Hardy: A Handbook and Commentary by J.O.Bailey (1970); Thomas Hardy by I.Howe (1967); Thomas Hardy:A Critical Biography by E. Hardy (1954); Thomas Hardy by A.J.Guerard (1949); Hardy of Wessex: His Life and Career by C.J.Weber (1940) - See also: Wladyslaw Reymont, C.D.Lewis (TheLyrical Poetry of Thomas Hardy, 1953), Michael Innes,Francois La Rochefoucauld - "Hardy had an observing eye, aremembering mind; he did not need the Greeks to teach him thatthe Furies do arrive punctually, and that neither act, notwill, nor intention will serve to deflect a man's destiny fromhim, once he has taken the step which decides it." CatherineAnne Porter in Notes on a Criticism (1940)Selected works:•DESPERATE REMEDIES, 1871•UNDER THE GREENWOOD TREE, 1872• A PAIR OF BLUE EYES, 1973 - Sininen silmäpari•FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD, 1874 - film 1967, dir. by John Schlesinger, starring Julie Christie , Peter Finch, Terence Stamp, Alan Bates, Prunella Ransome•THE RETURN OF THE NATIVE, 1878 - Paluu nummelle•THE TRUMPET-MAJOR, 1880•THE MAYOR OF CASTERBRIDGE, 1886 - Pormestarin tarina•WESSWX TALES, 1888•THE WOODLANDERS, 1887• A GROUP OF NOBLE DMES, 1891 - Ylhäisiä naisia•TESS OF THE D'URBERVILLES, 1891 - Tessin tarina - film 1980, dir.by Roman Polanski."The 18th-century world Polanski presents is so believable that we sense the people we see really do live in those farmhouses, shacks, country estates, and townhouses. There is wonderful period detail, and few films have been more exquisitely photographed (Geoffrey Unsworth and Ghislain Cloquet share the credit). A lovely film." (Danny Perry in Guide for the Film Fanatic, 1986)•LIFE'S LITTLE IRONIES, 1894•JUDE THE OBSCURE, 1895 - Jude, film adaptation in 1996, dir. by Michael Winterbottom, starring Christopher Eccleston, Kate Winslet, Liam Cunningham, Rachel Griffiths, June Whitfield•WESSEX POEMS, 1898•POEMS OF THE PAST AND THE PRESENT, 1901•THE DYNASTS, 1903-08•TIME'S LAUGHINGSTOCKS, 1909• A CHANGED MAN AND OTHER TALES, 1913•SATIRES OF CIRCUMSTANCE, 1914•MOMENTS OF VISION, 1917•THE PLAY OF ST. GEORGE, 1921•LATE LYRICS AND EARLIER, 1922•THE FAMOUS TRAGEDY OF THE QUEEN OF CORNWALL, 1923•HUMAN SHOWS, FAR PHANTASIES, 1925•LIFE AND ART, 1925•COLLECTED POEMS, 1927•WINTER WORDS, 1928•LIFE OF THOMAS HARDY, 1928-30 (with Florence Hardy)•AN INDISCRETION IN THE LIFE OF AN HEIRESS, 1934•THE LETTERS OF THOMAS HARDY, 1954•THOMAS HARDY'S NOTEBOOKS AND SOME LETTERS FROM JULIA AUGUSTRA MARTIN, 1955•"DEAREST EMMIE": THOMAS HARDY'S LETTERS TO HIS FIRST WIFE, 1963 •THE ARCHITECTURAL NOTEBOOKS OF THOMAS HARDY, 1966•THOMAS HARDY'S PERSONAL WRITINGS, 1972•THE LITERARY NOTES OF THOMAS HARDY, 1974•THE NEW WESSEX EDITION OF THE STORIES OF THOMAS HARDY, 1977 (3 vols.) c•THE COLLECTED LETTERS OF THOMAS HARDY, VOL. 1, 1840-1892, 1978 •THE PERSONAL NOTEBOOKS OF THOMAS HARDY, 1979•THE VARIORUM EDITION OF THE COMPLETE POEMS OF THOMAS HARDY, 1979 •THE COLLECTED LETTERS OF THOMAS HARDY, VOL. 2, 1893-1901, 1980。