Set in the fictional town of Casterbridge, "The Mayor of Casterbridge" is Thomas Hardy's tragic story of Michael Henchard who over indulges in alcohol at a county fair and decides to auction off his wife and daughter to a sailor. When he recovers his sobriety Mr. Henchard realizes his mistake but it is too late to get his family back. Devastated he decides not to touch alcohol again for the next twenty-one years. The novel advances eighteen years to find the teetotaling Henchard as "The Mayor of Casterbridge" and a successful grain merchant. When his wife and daughter return to town a precipitous decline in Henchard's fortune is set in motion. In the end, Michael Henchard all he values in life and all those people he loves to his rival. Henchard is a visible proof of the fact that fiction displays "the human heart in conflict with itself." A Faustian striver who is ambitious in business as a corn chandler, he becomes mayor but loses the three women who have meant most to him in life. Henchard dies in an obscure hut, desiring to be completely forgotten by the world. As with all of Thomas Hardy's classic novels, the descriptions of the town folks and the flora and fauna of Wessex are beautifully written. Hardy is the best regional novelist in all of English literature. This novel is one you should read and enjoy.
Selected from thirty years of his poetry, this annotated collection of verse explores the various forms Hardy found interesting, as well the philosophical scope of his work, and includes moving elegies of regret and love lyrics written for ...
Collected in this single volume are his eight books of verse, all the uncollected poems, 'Domicilium' and the songs from The Dynasts. This new edition contains an additional poem, The Sound of Her .
This importance is only partly due to his capabilities as a social historian or provincial chronicler. Far more important than these is his faithful exploration of the daily trials and tragedies of men and women as feeling beings.
This collection of fresh essays sheds new light on Hardy's poems--some of which have received little critical attention--from a variety of thematic and analytical approaches, offering a detailed picture of how his works are currently being ...
19 The London and South Western Railway ran one station, with the Great Western Railway opening a second ... The First Mrs Thomas Hardy (New York: St Martin's Press, 1979), and Robert Gittings and Jo Manton, The Second Mrs Hardy ...
"Thomas Hardy was one of the great Victorian novelists - and also one of the great twentieth-century poets. This is the first of the many paradoxes he presents.
... 255 Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA), 59 Ruskin, John, 49, 136,239 Sampson Low, Marston & Co., 10 Sassoon, Siegfried, 261 Saturday Review, 15, 54, 116, 117, 136, 138, 178 Scott, Sir George Gilbert, 58 Scott, ...
Personal Notebooks of Thomas Hardy
Tanner , Tony ( 1968 ) : ' Colour and Movement in Hardy's Tess of the d'Urbervilles ' , Critical Quarterly , 10 : 219–39 ; reprinted ... Turner , Paul ( 1998 ) : The Life of Thomas Hardy : A Critical Biography ( Oxford : Blackwell ) .
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