Thomas Hardy

About the Author

Thomas Hardy was born in a rural village near Dorchester, England in 1840. He came from working-class roots: his mother was a former housemaid, and his father was a stonemason. Hardy’s mother instilled a love for books and music in her son. He also had a close relationship with his strong-willed sister, who may have served as an inspiration for some of his female characters. In his youth, he was a successful student, learning Greek, French, Latin, and German, and he began to publish his writing when he was still a teenager. Like the protagonist of Jude the Obscure, Hardy was not able to attend college in spite of his intellectual successes, largely because of his class status. At the age of 21, Hardy moved to London, with virtually no wealth or possessions to his name, to find a job as an architectural apprentice. Even as he worked towards a career as an architect, he continued writing poetry and novel drafts. His experiences in this early period of his life—including the class discrimination that he faced, as well as the sexual discrimination faced by the women he was close to—strongly influenced the strain of social criticism that is found throughout his works. His first novel, The Poor Man and the Lady, was rejected by publishers because its critique of class inequality was too severe. In 1870, Hardy met Emma Gifford, a woman with intellectual and artistic aspirations who would later become his first wife. After a four-year relationship, Emma faked pregnancy to pressure Hardy into marrying her (similar to the character Arabella in Jude the Obscure). Their marriage was largely unhappy and filled with disappointment, until her death in 1912. Shortly after marrying Emma, Hardy experienced his major breakthrough as a novelist with the publication of Far From the Madding Crowd in 1874. Yet his success as a novelist came at a price: throughout the next two decades, he was constantly battling with publishers and critics, who disapproved of Hardy’s tendency to subvert Victorian social and moral codes. His final two novels—Tess of the d’Urbervilles (1891) and Jude the Obscure (1895)—were his most controversial; the harsh critical response to the latter novel prompted his abandonment of novel-writing altogether. However, this turn away from novel-writing was also an expression of his own preference for poetry and drama. He would spend the remainder of his writing career, up until his death in 1928, pursuing a productive writing career as a Modernist poet and a dramatist (the major work of his later career was The Dynasts, a Napoleonic drama). Two years after Emma’s death, at the age of 72, Hardy remarried to Florence Dugdale, a writer of children’s stories who was 39 years younger than Hardy. Until the end of his life, when he died of a heart attack, Hardy lived in the Dorset countryside, near his childhood home—the rural setting that, under the fictionalized name of “Wessex,” had given him the inspiration for so many of his literary works.

LitCharts guides for works by Thomas Hardy

Explore LitCharts literature and poetry guides for works by Thomas Hardy. Each literature guide includes a full summary, detailed analysis, and helpful resources. Each poetry guide offers line-by-line analysis and exploration of poetic devices.

A Broken Appointment

Thomas Hardy's "A Broken Appointment" is a melancholy poem in which the speaker gets stood up by the woman that he loves. The speaker complains that the woman's non-arrival breaks a kind of ethical... view guide

A Wife in London

"A Wife in London" is a bleak anti-war poem by the English poet Thomas Hardy. It was composed two months after the start of the Boer War (1899), a brutal conflict between the British Empire, the So... view guide

Afterwards

Published in the 1917 collection Moments of Vision and Miscellaneous Verses, "Afterwards" is one of Hardy's most popular and widely anthologized poems. Wondering how people might remember him when ... view guide

At an Inn

"At an Inn" is a poem from Thomas Hardy's first collection, Wessex Poems, published in 1898. Generally thought to be based on Hardy's own life, the poem describes a visit to an inn, during which th... view guide

At Castle Boterel

"At Castle Boterel" is an elegy from "Poems 1912-13," a sequence in which Thomas Hardy reflects on his years with his late wife Emma Gifford. In this poem, Hardy revisits a road they walked togethe... view guide

Channel Firing

English poet and novelist Thomas Hardy wrote "Channel Firing" in 1914, just months before World War I began. The poem imagines a graveyard that is disturbed by the noise of warships firing their gu... view guide

Drummer Hodge

"Drummer Hodge" is an elegy for a young British casualty of the Second Boer War (1899-1902). First published as "The Dead Drummer" in 1899, the year the war broke out, it appeared under its better-... view guide

Far From the Madding Crowd

Far From the Madding Crowd opens with a description of farmer Gabriel Oak, a man just out of youth who has established himself as a sheep-farmer in the past year, putting all of his savings into ... view guide

Hap

Thomas Hardy's "Hap" laments the fact that life is governed by chance ("happenstance"). The poem's downtrodden speaker argues that even a cruel god would, in a way, be preferable to random bad luck... view guide

He Never Expected Much

In Thomas Hardy's "He Never Expected Much," an 86-year-old speaker takes a sober look back at life. He feels that the world has lived up to the "promise" it seemed to offer in his youth, but only b... view guide

Jude the Obscure

Jude the Obscure takes place in Wessex, England in the Victorian era. Jude Fawley is a poor orphan raised by his great-aunt, but he dreams of studying at the university in Christminster, a nearby ... view guide

Neutral Tones

"Neutral Tones" is a bleak and pessimistic poem that depicts the end of a love affair and the psychological aftereffects. Thomas Hardy wrote the poem in 1867, though it was not published until 1898... view guide

Tess of the d'Urbervilles

Tess Durbeyfield lives in the rural village of Marlott in southwest England. She first appears performing the May-Day dance, where she exchanges a meaningful glance with a young man named Angel Cl... view guide

The Convergence of the Twain

"The Convergence of the Twain," subtitled, "Lines on the loss of the Titanic," was written by English poet Thomas Hardy for the Titanic Disaster Fund. The Titanic, a luxurious ship believed to be u... view guide

The Darkling Thrush

“The Darkling Thrush” is a poem by the English poet and novelist Thomas Hardy. The poem describes a desolate world, which the poem’s speaker takes as cause for despair and hopelessness. However, a ... view guide

The Man He Killed

"The Man He Killed" was written by the British Victorian poet and novelist Thomas Hardy and first published in 1902. A dramatic monologue, the poem's speaker recounts having to kill a man in war wi... view guide

The Mayor of Casterbridge

On a September day in the 1820s, the Henchard family arrives on foot at the village of Weydon-Priors. Michael Henchard seeks work as a hay-trusser, but he and his wife Susan, who carries their sma... view guide

The Melancholy Hussar of the German Legion

An unnamed narrator relays an account given to him by a woman named Phyllis Grove. When Phyllis told him the story, he was a teenager and she an old woman. Now, Phyllis has been dead for nearly 20 ... view guide

The Oxen

"The Oxen," by English writer Thomas Hardy, tells a deceptively simple tale of nostalgia, loss, faith, and doubt. The poem's speaker, looking back on their childhood, remembers when all their frien... view guide

The Return of the Native

The Return of the Native opens with Venn, a reddleman, transporting Thomasin Yeobright back to Egdon Heath. Thomasin is upset because she was supposed to wed Damon Wildeve earlier that day but coul... view guide

The Ruined Maid

"The Ruined Maid" is Thomas Hardy's bitterly funny critique of Victorian sexual hypocrisy, written in 1866. The poem's speakers are a pair of former neighbors who find themselves in very different ... view guide

The Son’s Veto

“The Son’s Veto” is the story of a working-class woman’s marriage to a high-ranking Anglican church official, her widowhood, her fraught relationship with her son, and her unfulfilled romantic rela... view guide

The Voice

British poet Thomas Hardy wrote "The Voice" as part of a sequence of poems inspired by the death of his first wife, Emma Gifford, in 1912. The poem's speaker, widely agreed to be a version of Hardy... view guide

Weathers

Thomas Hardy's "Weathers" follows the rhythms of the English countryside through the spring and the fall while also illustrating the connection between humanity and the natural world. "This is the ... view guide

Where the Picnic Was

"Where the Picnic Was" (1913) is one of a number of elegies Thomas Hardy wrote for his wife, Emma Gifford, after her death in 1912. It does not mention her by name, however, and it gestures toward ... view guide