"Thomas Hardy" Essays and Research Papers

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    Book Report Book Title: Hardy Boys – Casefiles NO. 46: Foul Play Author: Franklin W. Dixon Date Published: December 1990 List of Characters: Frank and Joe Hardy: They are two brothers who solve the crime Stuart “Portside” Murphy: Owner of a minor league baseball team who hires the Hardy Brothers to solve a mystery for him. Rocky Synder: Owner of a rival minor league baseball team who is the one orchestrating the crimes against Stuart Murphy.

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    Hardy’s narrative methods in “The Voice” The voice is one of Hardy’s bleakest poems reflecting on how Emma is just a memory; Hardy uses the method of questioning to create enigma and a voice in his head highlighting the title. Hardy uses first person to convey his loneliness “how you call to me‚ call to me” The repetition suggests his longing pain and grief‚ Hardy the narrator seems to be very self-conscious and the story of pain is the most important emotion at this point. The direct address

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    Tess

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    materialism‚ history plays a great part in shaping Tess’s fate. To some extent‚ her tragedy is destined by the special history in which she exists; in turn‚ she‚ as the product of her history‚ reflects the qualities her history endows her generation. When Hardy wrote Tess‚ England was experiencing severe strains to adjust to immense alterations in its structure at the time of complete social transition from the old to new. The transition and problems juxtaposing it plunged the whole country into the nightmare

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    Female Characters: Externality of Ideology Contradiction Proposal Thomas Hardy‚ known as one of the most important literary figures in Victorian Age‚ holds a significant position in English literary history. Dale Kramer once claimed that‚ “it is fair and accurate to say that‚ apart from Dickens‚ no novelist’s writing in English has appealed to so many different readers for so many differing reasons.”(Kramer‚ 1979: 2) Hardy is highly known for his adeptness in portrayal of characters‚ especially

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    [Abstract]: The Return of the Native is one of Thomas Hardy ’s "Novels of Character and Environment". This paper mainly deals with the conflict between the main characters in the novel and the "Environment"----Egdon Heath‚ especially the conflict between Eustacia and the Heath. The Heath as a physical object is described as "inviolate"‚ untouchable and unalterable by man‚ as a symbol it is highly flexible: it becomes what the various characters want to make of it. It is ugly for Eustacia‚ beautiful

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    Drummer Hodge: An Essay

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    view Strange stars amid the gloam. III Yet portion of that unknown plain Will Hodge forever be; His homely Northern breast and brain Grow to some Southern tree‚ And strange-eyed constellations reign His stars eternally. It is my belief that Thomas Hardy’s poem‚ Drummer Hodge‚ speaks to us all‚ even now. How many other Drummer Hodges are in the American Armed Services? Where are our young men who didn’t come back? Where are the freckled-faced boys from those distant farms and crowded barrios

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    The Return of the Native: Style The Return of the Native is Thomas Hardy’s sixth novel and probably his best known. The story focuses on the lives and loves of residents in the fictional county of Wessex‚ England‚ an area which was based on the rural area where Hardy was raised. The narrative style of the novel is different to that of the traditional writing. He uses different narrative mechanisms in making it attractive to its readers. His different approach towards the treatment different components

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    Religion in Literature

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    Literature The Role of Religion in Thomas Hardy’s “Tess of the D’Urbervilles” and Matthew Arnold’s “Dover Beach”   Tess of the D’Urbervilles was published in 1891 by Thomas Hardy. Hardy was a novelist and a poet who wrote during both the Victorian and the Modern era. Tess of the D’Urbervilles shows many traditional Victorian views and religion plays a big role in those traditional views. The main character of the novel is Tess‚ a young and according to Hardy himself‚ a “pure woman”‚ from

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    In Tess of the D’Ubervilles Thomas Hardy creates a sense that fate is guiding each of the characters‚ often for the worst‚ to an inevitable end. From the beginning of the novel Tess shows a thorough understanding of her shortcomings and an acceptance that she is destined to lead a difficult life. Hardy uses societal circumstance and fate to create the powerfully tragic story of Tess‚ her family and her relationships‚ and how she chooses to play to the hand that she is dealt. From the beginning of

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    Tess of the D'Urbervilles

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    D’Urbervilles Thomas Hardy uses a number of narrative techniques in his novel which enable the reader to get more deeply involved into the plot and emphasize with the characters. Among the techniques he employs are the third person omniscient narrator‚ dialogues between the characters‚ letter writing‚ songs and poetry‚ religious and mythological allusions as well as extensive descriptions of the settings. All these techniques are applied in such a way that they underline the message Hardy has woven into

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