For Students
Read Next
Discover
Legacy of Thomas Hardy
Quick Facts
- Born:
- June 2, 1840, Higher Bockhampton, Dorset, England
- Died:
- January 11, 1928, Dorchester, Dorset
- Notable Works:
- “A Changed Man”
- “A Pair of Blue Eyes”
- “Desperate Remedies”
- “Far from the Madding Crowd”
- “A Group of Noble Dames”
- “Jude the Obscure”
- “Life’s Little Ironies”
- “Poems of the Past and the Present”
- “Tess of the D’Urbervilles”
- “The Dynasts”
- “The Hand of Ethelberta”
- “The Mayor of Casterbridge”
- “The Poor Man and the Lady”
- “The Return of the Native”
- “The Well-Beloved”
- “The Woodlanders”
- “Under the Greenwood Tree”
- “Wessex Poems”
- “Wessex Tales”
The continuing popularity of Hardy’s novels owes much to their richly varied yet always accessible style and their combination of romantic plots with convincingly presented characters. Equally important—particularly in terms of their suitability to film and television adaptation—is their nostalgic evocation of a vanished rural world through the creation of highly particularized regional settings. Hardy’s verse has been slower to win full acceptance, but his unique status as a major 20th-century poet as well as a major 19th-century novelist is now universally recognized.
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica