Thomas Hardy

-
Standard Name: Hardy, Thomas
TH was a poet by vocation and became a novelist by profession. The Wessex of his novels has made him arguably a regional novelist. As well as a prolific output in both these forms, he published a unique verse epic bringing together human and supernatural characters, short fiction, a volume for children, and two volumes of actual autobiography masquerading as a biography by his second wife. Since his career as a publishing novelist ran from the 1870s to the 1890s, and his first volume of poetry post-dated his final novel, he has been seen as a Victorian novelist but a mostly twentieth-century poet. This description, however, is not true to the facts of composition. He wrote poetry from early in his life, but did not publish it in volume form until his final novel.

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Reception Laurence Hope
Hope's work was popular, and was recognised by a number of her contemporaries, including Thomas Hardy , Arthur Symons , James Elroy Flecker , and Edith Thomas . After her death she garnered, along with...
Textual Features Rosamund Marriott Watson
In addition to poems from all her previous volumes, the book includes The Story of Marpessa, which first appeared in the Universal Review in September 1889. This poem is a critique of marriage adapted...
Textual Features Lady Cynthia Asquith
Her authors are mostly well-known: Hardy , Barrie , Sir Henry Newbolt , Hilaire Belloc , Hugh Lofting , and Walter de la Mare , apart from two stories by herself.
Beauman, Nicola. Cynthia Asquith. Hamish Hamilton.
286
Colles, Hester Janet. “A Gallery of Children”. Times Literary Supplement, No. 1245, p. 804.
804
Sales in...
Textual Features Laetitia-Matilda Hawkins
With this novel LMH perfected her sagely meditative narratorial voice (which looks forward to George Eliot and Thomas Hardy ). She chose a plot of many characters and complicated interlocking machinations. Her initially unappealing heroine...
Textual Features Louise Page
The story is of local interest. The eighteenth-century protagonist, Francis Herries, moves his family from Doncaster to a crumbling manor house in Borrowdale, home of a reputed witch. He also defies social rules by...
Textual Features Elizabeth Daryush
She opens and closes the collection with two poems printed in italics. Her list of titles provides their opening words: an unnumbered poem placed before number one (from the first Verses) and another unnumbered...
Textual Features Martin Ross
This novel puts its female characters at the centre. Its tightly-interwoven social fabric is reminiscent of George Eliot ; its slow-burning, enduring passions suggest Thomas Hardy . The way that animals are used as subsidiary...
Textual Features John Oliver Hobbes
A number of critics note similarities between Hobbes's novel and Thomas Hardy 's Jude the Obscure. It is possible that the two friends discussed their novels, both of which began serial publication in December...
Textual Features Philip Larkin
His selection was resolutely unfashionable, favouring Hardy and Betjeman at the expense of Eliot and Pound . He was, however, remarkably generous in his selection of women poets (often for just one or two poems...
Textual Features Frances Hodgson Burnett
The male protagonist, James Murdoch, an awkward and rough Lancashire factory owner, is considered by Gretchen Gerzina to be an uncanny prefiguration of Thomas Hardy 's Henchard, Mayor of Casterbridge (in his novel of 1886).
Gerzina, Gretchen. Frances Hodgson Burnett. Chatto and Windus.
84
Textual Features Ada Leverson
In this novel Valentia Wyburn, another clever woman, has been five years married and has a lover (though their sexual relationship is never particularised) besides her husband. But she breaks with him when she discovers...
Textual Features Rosamund Marriott Watson
The title poem, which first appeared in the January 1889 issue of Harper's Magazine, reworks the familiar swan-maiden story.
Hughes, Linda K. “’Fair <span data-tei-ns-tag="tei_title" data-tei-title-lvl=‘m’>Hymen</span> holdeth hid a world of woes’: Myth and Marriage in Poems by ’Graham R. Tomson’ (Rosamund Marriott Watson)”. Victorian Poetry, Vol.
32
, No. 2, pp. 97-120.
101
This poem (largely about forced marriage, possession, and broken promises) is narrated by an...
Textual Production Laurence Alma-Tadema
As translator of Maeterlinck , LAT signed (with Yeats , Meredith , Swinburne , Hardy , Arthur Symons , Lucas Malet , John Oliver Hobbes, and others) a letter to the Times protesting against...
Textual Production Rosamund Marriott Watson
In 1894 RMW (as Graham R. Tomson) published in the American Independent two articles about Thomas Hardy , whom she had met in 1889.
Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.
Leighton, Angela, and Margaret Reynolds, editors. Victorian Women Poets: An Anthology. Blackwell.
581
He may have used her a couple of years...
Textual Production Lady Cynthia Asquith
LCA 's posthumous biographical study entitled Thomas Hardy at Max Gate was her final work to see print.
Whitaker’s Books in Print. J. Whitaker and Sons.
(1988)

Timeline

No timeline events available.

Texts

No bibliographical results available.