Woodlanders

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Woodlanders

Classic fiction: general and literary Historical romance

Author: Thomas Hardy

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Language: English

Published by: Jazzybee Verlag

Published on: 1st November 2013

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 586 Kb

ISBN: 9783849638900


Annotated Edition

This is the annotated edition including a rare biographical essay on the life and works of the author.

In "The Woodlanders"

we have the intimate sense of the mystery and the passion of nature; again we have the wonderful power of describing rural characters; again we have the closely knit and powerful action; we even have glimpses of the old humor. Still there is an indefinable something that separates the author of "The Woodlanders" from the author of "Far from the Madding Crowd."

Mr. Hardy's Development

Twelve years have made Mr. Hardy a more practised writer, they have given him a wider experience, but they have not made him any more in love with life. On the contrary, as has been indicated, they have frequently made him see little in life except a purposeless struggle in the coils of an implacable fate.

Characters and Themes

And so Giles Winterbourne in "The Woodlanders" fails in the pursuit of his love, which is his life, when Farmer Oak, in "Far from the Madding Crowd" succeeds. Honesty, loyalty, and love meet death for their reward; while a barely decent repentance on the part of a rather repulsive personage is rewarded by the love of a heroine who though scarcely noble is worthy of a better fate.

Overall Impression

It, therefore, matters little when we view "The Woodlanders" as a whole, whether the descriptions of the forests to be found in its pages are unexcelled in truth and beauty even by Mr. Hardy himself, or whether the scene which describes Marty South dressing the grave of Winterbourne is the finest in the whole range of our author's novels; for the total impression produced by the book is painful because the fate that rules its characters is to Mr. Hardy, as well as to his readers, the relentless fate of alien times and peoples.

Conclusion

And yet how powerful and original the book is, and who else among modern Englishmen could have written it!

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