Thomas Hardy, The Well-Beloved

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德伯家的苔丝读后感英文版

德伯家的苔丝读后感英文版

德伯家的苔丝读后感英文版篇一:Why was Tess’s girlish purity lost? Why did such a beautiful, noble and pure woman as Tess should suffer inevitable ruin? Why does the wrong man take the wrong woman? Why it is always the woman who pays? Why they are always hurt? Why is beauty damaged by ugliness? Why the tragedy is happened more than one hundred years ago repeated in modern times? Is everything too late?Recently I’ve read the British famous writer Thomas Hardy’s masterpiece-Tess of the D’urbervilles. It describes the misfortune of a poor peasant girl Tess. In this novel, we can see Tess resist her unjust fate again and again, till to be ruined. With the development of the plot we find that her tragedy is inevitable. We can not but feel the intense emotions of pity and fear.The cause of Tess’s tragedy has always been the concern of people, such a beautiful, noble and pure woman as Tess should suffer inevitable ruin. What leads to her tragic destiny? Who killed her? I can’t do very well in analysis the novel. I don’t know clearly how the time she lived in affect her life. I do have an understanding of the novel by myself. Alec and Angel who are the two people very closely related to Tess’s fate. I think fierce Alec played a very important role in killing Tess, but in fact, it was hypocritical Angel who killed Tess indirectly but more cruelly.I wanted to cry, Tess, do not follow him when I read that plot.I hope she met her true love before she was seduced, buteverything was too late. She was seduced by a so called gentleman-Alec, and from then on her life totally changed from this loss of innocence. People looked down on her and respect her no more. Actually she did nothing wrong because before she was seduced she knew nothing of man. Women were too weak. Tess was poor, weak and helpless and met the wrong person at the wrong time.I strongly believed that it was Angel who killed Tess cruelly and without mercy. Angel was a liberal bourgeoisie. He made himself lived in the countryside rather than serving the god. Angel was a man who questioned the church’s teaching. He thought the church’s views were too strict and did not allow free thinking. Angel e*tricated him from religion and his family, but he couldn’t break with traditional moral principles. He wanted a wife who was the daughter of nature, honest, sensitive, intelligent, graceful, pure as snow and e*tremely beautiful. In the first part I thought Angel loved tess very much. In the following part I found that he loved an image he imagined. After their wedding Angel confessed the crime he committed to a woman long time ago and asked Tess’s forgiveness. Tess was not at all angry and forgave angel at once. She innocently thought that the thing she was going to confess would be forgiven. Poor Tess! She sat and told everything to angel, hoping he would forgive her as he was forgiven, but she was wrong. The woman pays.Angel claimed that you were one person, now you are another when tess asked why. The woman Angel had loved was not tess, was another woman in tess’s shape. Angel loved the person he imagined. He considered tess the daughter of nature. Compared to tess’s words, “ I thought angel, that you loved me-me my very self!If you do love me, how can you treat me like this? It frightened me! Having begun to love you, I will love you forever, in all changes, in all troubles, because you are yourself. I ask no more.”we know how deep tess loved angel. She would have laid down life for angel. She not only loved the merits but also accept the demerits. We know from the book that when angel came back from Brazil, he could hardly be recognized by his mother because the cruel climate and hard work had aged him by twenty years, but tess accepted angel immediately, because he was the man she fell in love with.I don’t know why angel couldn’t forgive tess since he himself had done the similar thing.篇二:The reason I read it As a English mayor , I prefer watching foreign films. Occasionally , I encountered a film named Tess of the d’Urbervilles. The gorgeous plot and characters impelled me to read the famous essay.1. Brief Introduction of Thomas HardyThomas Hardy was a famous British novelist and poet. He carried forward and developed the literary traditions of the Victorian Age. He described the tragic plots vividly and truthfully in his works. He was considered as “Shakespeare of British novels”. Hardy was born in an architect’s family and was e*pected to become an architect. He trained as an architect and worked in London and Dorset for ten years. Hardy began his writing career as a novelist in 1871 publishing Desperate Remedies. He was soon successful and left architecture for writing.Hardy was pessimistic about life. The main theme of his novels is the futility of man’s effort to struggle against cruel and unintelligible fate, chance, andcircumstances, which are all predestined by the immanent will. He bravely challenged many of the se*ual and religious conventions of the Victorian Age. He e*posed thehypocritical morals, laws and people’s miserable life, especially the women’s life in social economic, politics, morals, custom, etc. after the invasion of industrial capital to the British villages. He described people of different social classes. He was good at viewing life with “a tragic light”.2. PlotThe story is about the tragic life of Tess Durbeyfield, the daughter of a poor family. She is sent to work as a maid for d’Urbervilles, because she has to support her poor family. Tess is seduced by Alec, the son of the family which she serves for, and then gives birth to a child. However, the child dies in infancy, which makes her very depressed. After that, she goes to work on a dairy farm, and then she is engaged to Angel Clare, the son of a clergyman. On their wedding night, they tell each other about their past hoping to be forgiven by each other. However, Clare leaves her after that because he can’t accept the truth. Then Tess becomes a labor again. She is insulted and ill-treated by her master. What’s worse, her father’s death and the bad condition of her family drive her to seek help from Alec who is a preacher now, and she can do nothing but to abbey him. Angel Clare comes back and wants to be reconciled to Tess, but the fact that Tess’ living with Alec hinders her from comingback to Clare. At last, Tess kills Alec in despair and she is soon arrested, tried and hanged.3. Character AnalysisTess ------the leading ladyIntelligent, strikingly attractive, and distinguished by her deep moral sensitivity and passionate intensity, Tess is indisputably the central character of the novel that bears her name. But she is also more than a distinctive individual. Hardy have ever said that her eyes are “neither black nor blue nor grey nor violet; rather all these shades together,” like “an almost standard woman.”In my part, Tess represents the changing lady of the agricultural workers in England in the late nineteenth century. Also Tess is a symbol of unclear and unstable notions of class in nineteenth-century Britain, where old family lines retained their earlierglamour, but where cold economic realities made sheer wealth more important than inner nobility.Beyond her social symbolism, Tess represents fallen humanity in a religious sense, as the frequent biblical allusions in the novel remind us. Just as Tess’s clan was once glorious and powerful but is now sadly diminished, so too did the early glory of the first humans, Adam and Eve, fade with their e*pulsion from Eden, making humans sad shadows of what they once were. Tess thus represents what is known in Christian theology as original sin, the degraded state in which all humans live, even whenlike Tess herself after killing Prince or succumbing to Alecthey are not wholly or directly responsible for the sins for which they arepunished. This torment represents the most universal side of Tess: she is the myth of the human who suffers for crimes that are not her own and lives a life more degraded than she deserves.AlecAlec is a representative of the bourgeois society’s authority, the wealth and the evil. He has an aristocrat d’Urbervilles surname, a large amount of money and a great power which dominate the local people. He takes advantage of Tess’ poor family condition, and tempts her with money to go to his family as a servant. He always forces Tess to do something she is not willing to do. For e*ample, when in the cart, Tess wants him to slow down, but he says that he will not do unless Tess let him “put one little kiss on those holmberry lips” (Hardy p57). That is a total insult to Tess. Then he seduces Tess, destroying her chastity which means all her life. At the end of the story, when Tess’ father dies, and her family is homeless, Alec “helps” her again. He tells Tess that her family can move to his cottage, and “the children can go to school” (Hardy p385). In fact, he just wants to possess Tess. He is full of violence and plots. He says that he is Tess’“friend”, but he is unlikely to treat Tess as his real friend because they belong to different social class and they have totally different status and life e*periences.AngelAngel is a representative of the traditional moral concepts. At that time, the whole society is full of those ridiculous traditional moral concepts. At first, Angel considers Tess as the fresh and virginal daughter of nature” (Hard p131), but when he knows the history of Tess, he abandons her. He says“forgiveness does not apply to the case. You were one person; now you are another” (Hardy p247). It shows the traditional moral concepts are still deep-rooted in his mind. Angel is born in a pastor family, but he refuses to go to college and to be a pastor “serves for God”. On the contrary, he chooses to work on a farm and “serves for the humanity”. It seems that he is a person who has already run away from all traditional concepts. He falls in love with Tess, a dairy woman, and he doesn’t care whether she is born in a good family or not. It seems that his love to Tess is true love. However, when it comes to marriage, he still considers Tess’ social status. He wants Tess to take “mistress Teresa d’Urbervilles as her name and he claims that the change “may take an appreciable difference to acceptance of you as my wife”. “After I have made you the well-read woman that I mean to make you” his mother will think much better of her. This means he holds the same idea as his mother to some e*tent.4. comment:Firstly I want to say that Tess’ tragedy comes from her helpless and pessimistic characters. As I know, the Durbeyfields were born with downfallen clan. I even called back to mind the dialogue from Tess of the D’urbervilles:“Tess, are stars either good or bad?“Yes. I think each star represents a family. ”“Is our star bad?”“I think so.”From the above dialogue I got that Tess is pessimistic about her life and reality, which press her to ask Alec for help and laid the seed of her tragedy .She becomes Alec’s victim in theforest. She probably should have known not to put herself in such a situation, but she has few other options. Here, it seems as though she is destined to rely on others, even when they are unreliable.Therefore, I should recognize that her family acts as a considerable accomplice with Alec to a certain e*tend.Secondly, I am dedicated to analysis the three characters’attitudes towards love. Who is to blame for this tragic love? Alec, Tess or Angel? Or ridiculous fate? I believe it was Tess herself. Certainly, that bad age and those hypocritical men weree*ecutionersthat push Tess into the abyss of destruction. But Tess should have led a better life if she don’t treat herself as a satellite of men. How stupid is she to spend her life waiting for a man who betrayed her and escaped away when she was dying for help! When there is no help offered by men, women should fight on their own instead of waiting for men’s mercy and forgiveness since there is nothing needed to be forgiven.ConclusionAll in all, Women’s tragedy will never come to an end until they treat themselves as totally independent, which means they can lead a normal life with or without men.。

哈代最有名的诗

哈代最有名的诗

哈代最有名的诗
哈代(Thomas Hardy)是英国著名的小说家和诗人,他的作品以其深刻的思想和精湛的文学技巧而闻名于世。

在他的众多诗歌作品中,有一首被誉为他最有名的诗,那就是《被复活的人》(The Re-awakening)。

《被复活的人》讲述了一个人在乡间漫步时,突然发现一个被遗忘的坟墓。

坟墓上的铭文让他产生了对逝去的人的好奇心,他开始想象逝去者的生活和悲伤。

这首诗描绘了人们对生死和逝去的思考,以及对未知事物的好奇心和恐惧。

这首诗以其深刻的主题和优美的语言而广为传颂。

哈代通过这首诗表现了对生命和死亡的思考,以及对逝去者的怀念和敬仰。

他通过这首诗表达了对逝去者的尊重和悼念之情,展现了他对生命和死亡的深刻思考和对人类命运的关怀之情。

《被复活的人》的语言优美,情感细腻,给人以深刻的冲击。

它通过对生命和死亡的思考,引导人们对生命的热爱和对逝去者的怀
念。

这首诗以其独特的艺术魅力和深刻的思想内涵,成为了哈代最有名的诗歌作品之一。

通过《被复活的人》,我们不仅可以感受到哈代对生死的思考和对逝去者的怀念,还能从中领略到他对人类命运的关怀和对人生的深刻思考。

这首诗以其独特的艺术魅力和深刻的思想内涵,成为了哈代最有名的诗歌之一,也为我们留下了一部深刻思考人生和死亡的杰作。

英语论文范文

英语论文范文

The Analysis of Angel Clare’s Tragedy in Tess of The D’urbervilles中文摘要:文学作品是现实生活的一面镜子,反映了生活的方方面面。

越来越多的学者开始从文学的角度研究一个国家的经济,政治和文化根源。

悲剧是小说创作的手法之一。

西方早在古希腊时期就有了悲剧创作。

悲剧不是简单的艺术形式或艺术技巧,而是对现实社会的特征的再现,它可以通过尖锐、激烈的事件展示令人怜悯、悲痛、同情、哭泣等的情节。

英国著名作家托马斯•哈代是维多利亚时期著名的小说家之一。

他塑造了许多悲剧人物,展现出各种人物魅力。

小说除了给人以命运悲剧庄严凝重以外,还蕴涵了作者深厚的理性主义,蕴涵了对人类历史逻辑矛盾深邃反思的社会悲剧。

哈代的悲剧小说《德伯家的苔丝》真实地反映了其当时的社会现实。

小说成功地塑造了女主人苔丝的形象,无情地揭露了资产阶级社会虚伪的伦理道德。

本文试从男主人公安琪儿•克莱尔的社会背景和人物心理两个方面,探讨导致其悲剧的成因。

关键词:托马斯•哈代悲剧安琪尔•克莱尔Abstract: Literature is a mirror of real life which can reflect all aspects of people’s lives. More an d more scholars have begun to study a country from the roots of economy, politics and culture. As early as ancient Greece, there were some creations of tragedy. Tragedy is a kind of literary creati on, which is not a simple artistic form or technique but the repeat of real society. It can depict the piteous, sad, distressing and sentimental plots by describing some tortuous or complicated events. The British famous writer Thomas Hardy was one of the excellent novelists of the Victorian age. He delineated a lot of characters of tragedies, showing various persons’ enchantment. Besides prov iding the dignity of life tragedy to the readers, the novels contains the profound rationalism of the writer and Thomas Hardy’s Tess of the D’urbervilles reflected his real society. Hardy succeeded in portraying the image of heroine Tess and revealing the hypocritical ethics and morals of bourgeois society. This paper will discuss the causes of Clare’s tragedy from the hero –Angel Clare’s social background and psycho logy.Key words: Thomas Hardy, tragedy, Angel ClareChapter1 IntroductionLiterature is not only an art but also a mirror of real life. When studying a literary work, scholars actually study history. Nowadays an increasing number of scholars have begun to study the histor y of a country’s economic, political and cultural forms from the perspective of literature because thr ough different kinds of literary works, we can see all sorts of feelings such as joy, anger, sorrow a nd various truths. The manifestation of literature is manifold, one of which is tragedy. The writers often want to show the piteous, sad, distressing and sentimental plots by describing some tortuous or complicated events. In the tragedy, it is inevitable that the heroes or heroines should suffer a s etback or disadvantage, cover themselves in dishonor, experience tribulation or even fail or die tho ugh they have reasonable motivation, wishes, ideal, or passion which may indicate a victory or suc cess. But finally they will either die or get mad. With a bad ending, tragedy often contains a certai n philosophy of life. There are lots of tragedies in western literature such as Oedipus, Prometheus Bound, Romeo and Juliet, Macbeth, Hamlet, Faust, etc. And the famous tragedians are also legion like Aeschylus, Sophocles, Shakespeare, etc –Thomas Hardy for one. He was a prolific and excellent writer, publi shing fourteen novels and four volumes of short stories. His works were noted for the intense tragi c spirit and sense of fortune, from which we can feel the atmosphere of tragedy brought by fortun e deeply.“Tess of the D’urbervilles” is one of the Hardy’s tragedies, a masterpiece which brought him into a number of literary critics notice. It reflected the writer’s real society and its social system and m orals; therefore studying this novel can help us to know about the history of his age. But many pa pers showed that most of critics used to research the writing background from the tragedy of Tess. Many scholars have always put emphasis on the tragedy of Tess for a long time. Only a few sch olars made researches for the tragedy of its hero Angel Clare. He was a contradictory unity –he w as bold in struggling with the traditional view but in the meantime he could not break the shackles of feudal ideas. This paper will see the society from this perspective –Angel Clare, the hero’s trag edy and discuss the causes of Clare’s tra gedy from his social background and psychology.Chapter2 A brief account of Tess of The D’urbervillesIt seems that the fictional works do not concern with the real world. But we know that before th e writers begin to create their works, it can be said that their social experience may be their prima ry material for creation. Some writers created the roles and environments in order to revolt against the worldly prejudice of their ages. These kinds of words are expected to tell people the truth of a soci ety. In many cases, the social background of the novel is the writer’s background. Before an alyzing the roots of Clare’s tragedy, this paper will discuss two aspects of this novel, namely “the writing background” and “the writer and his works” from which w e can see the background of this novel.。

部分英国作家作品名称

部分英国作家作品名称

部分英国作家作品名称William Butler Yeats 叶芝The Collected Poems 诗集Collected Plays 剧作集A Vision幻象Mythologies 神话• George Bernard Shaw 萧伯纳Major Critical Essays 主要批评文选Heartbreak House心碎之家Pygmalion 皮格马利翁/卖花女Saint Joan 圣女贞德Major Barbara 芭芭拉少校Back to Methuselah 长生/回到玛土撒拉/回复到密福沙勒的时代• John Millington Synge 辛格Collected Plays 剧作集• Sean O'Casey 奥凯西Juno and the Paycock 朱诺和孔雀The Plough and the Stars犁与星The Shadow of a Gunman枪手的影子• George Douglas Brown 乔治•道格拉斯•布朗House with the Green Shutters 带绿色百叶窗的房子• Thomas Hardy 哈代The Well-Beloved意中人The Woodlanders林地居民The Return of the Native 还乡The Mayor of Casterbridge 卡斯特桥市长Far From the Madding Crowd 远离尘嚣Tess of the D'Urbervilles 苔丝/德伯家的苔丝Jude the Obscure 无名的裘德Collected Poems 诗集• Rudyard Kipling 吉卜林Kim 基姆Collected Stories 故事集Puck of Pook's Hill波克山中的小精灵Complete Verse 诗全集• A. E. Housman A.E.豪斯曼Collected Poems 诗集• Max Beerbohm 马克斯•比尔博姆Zuleika Dobson朱莱卡•多卜森Seven Men and Two Others 七个男人和两个外人• Joseph Conrad 康拉德Lord Jim 吉姆爷The Secret Agent 间谍Nostromo 诺斯特拉莫Under Western Eyes在西方的注视下Victory 胜利• Ronald Firbank 罗纳德•菲尔班克Five Novels 小说五部• Ford Madox Ford 福特•麦多克斯•福特Parade's End行进的目的The Good Soldier 好兵• W. Somerset Maugham 毛姆Collected Short Stories 短篇小说集The Moon and Sixpence 月亮与六便士• John Cowper Powys约翰•考柏•波伊斯Wolf Solent 索隆特狼A Glastonbury Romance 格拉斯顿伯里传奇• Saki (H. H. Munro) 萨基The Short Stories 短篇故事集• H. G. Wells H.G.威尔斯The Science Fiction Novels 科幻小说集• David Lindsay 大卫•林赛A V oyage to Arcturus 大角星之旅• Arnold Bennett 阿诺德•班奈特The Old Wives' Tale 老妇人的故事• Walter De la Mare 沃尔特•德拉梅尔Collected Poems 诗集Memoirs of a Midget 侏儒回忆录• Wilfred Owen 威尔弗里德•欧文Collected Poems 诗集• Isaac Rosenberg 艾萨克•罗森伯格Collected Poems 诗集• Edward Thomas 爱德华•托马斯Collected Poems 诗集• Robert Graves 罗伯特•格雷夫斯Collected Poems 诗集King Jesus 耶稣王• Edwin Muir 埃德温•缪尔Collected Poems 诗集• David Jones 大卫•琼斯In Parenthesis 括号The Anathemata 咒逐• John Galsworthy 高尔斯华绥The Forsyte Saga 福尔赛世家• E. M. Forster E.M.福斯特Howards End 霍华德别业A Passage to India 印度之行• Frank O'Connor 弗兰克•奥康纳Collected Stories 故事集• D. H. Lawrence D.H.劳伦斯Complete Poems 诗歌全集Studies in Classic American Literature 美国古典文学研究Complete Short Stories 短篇小说全集Sons and Lovers 儿子与情人The Rainbow 虹Women in Love 恋爱中的女人• Virginia Woolf 伍尔芙Mrs. Dalloway 达洛维夫人To the Lighthouse 到灯塔去Orlando: A Biography 奥兰多The Waves 海浪Between the Acts 幕间• James Joyce 乔伊斯Dubliners 都柏林人Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man 一个青年艺术家的肖像Ulysses 尤利西斯Finnegans Wake 芬尼根的苏醒/为芬尼根守灵• Samuel Beckett 贝克特Murphy 莫非Watt 瓦特Three Novels: Molloy, Malone Dies, The Unnameable 小说三部曲:莫洛伊,马洛纳之死,难以命名者Waiting for Godot 等待戈多Endgame 终局Krapp's Last Game 克拉普的最后磁带How It Is 如此情况• Elizabeth Bowen 伊丽莎白•鲍恩Collected Stories 故事集• J. G. Farrell J. G.法雷尔The Siege of Krishnapur 克里希普纳围城• Henry Green 亨利•格林Nothing 虚无Loving 爱着Party Going 赴宴• Evelyn Waugh 伊夫林•沃A Handful of Dust 一抔尘土Scoop 独家新闻Vile Bodies 邪恶的躯体Put Out More Flags 多升几面旗• Anthony Burgess 安东尼•伯吉斯Nothing Like the Sun 唯一的太阳• G. B. Edwards G. B.爱德华兹The Book of Ebenezer Le Page 埃比尼泽•勒•佩奇之书• Iris Murdoch 爱丽丝•默多克The Good Apprentice 好徒弟Bruno's Dream 布鲁诺的梦• Graham Greene 格雷厄姆•格林Brighton Rock 布莱顿硬糖The Heart of the Matter 问题的核心The Power and the Glory 权利与荣耀• Christopher Isherwood 克里斯托弗•衣修伍德The Berlin Stories 柏林故事• Norman Douglas 诺曼•道格拉斯South Wind 南风• Aldous Huxley 阿道斯•赫胥黎Collected Essays 散文选Antic Hay滑稽的环舞Point Counter Point旋律和对立Brave New World 美丽新世界• Lawrence Durrell 劳伦斯•达雷尔Alexandria Quartet 亚历山大四部曲• William Golding 威廉•戈尔丁Pincher Martin 品彻•马丁• Doris Lessing 多丽丝•莱辛The Golden Notebook 金色笔记• Mervyn Peake 马文•匹克The Gormenghast Trilogy 歌门鬼城三部曲• Jeanette Winterson珍妮特•温特森The Passion 激情• W. H. Auden W. H.奥登Collected Poems 诗集The Dyer's Hand染匠之手• Roy Fuller 罗伊•富勒Collected Poems 诗集• Gavin Ewart 加文•艾瓦特Selected Poems 诗选• Basil Bunting 邦廷Collected Poems 诗集• William Empson 燕卜荪Collected Poems 诗集Milton's God 弥尔顿的上帝Some Versions of Pastoral 田园诗的几种变体• George Wilson Knight 乔治•威尔森•奈特The Wheel of Fire 火轮The Burning Oracle 燃烧的神谕• R. S. Thomas R. S.托马斯Poems 诗集• Frank Kermode 弗兰克•柯莫德The Sense of an Ending 结尾的意义• Stevie Smith 史蒂夫•史密斯Collected Poems 诗集• F. T. Prince F. T.普林斯Collected Poems 诗集• Philip Larkin 菲利普•拉金Collected Poems 诗集• Donald Davie 唐纳德•戴维Selected Poems 诗选• Geoffrey Hill 杰弗里•希尔Collected Poems 诗集• Jonathan Spence 史景迁The Death of Woman Wang 王氏之死The Memory Palace of Matteo Ricci 利玛窦的记忆迷宫• Elizabeth Jennings 伊丽莎白•詹宁斯Selected Poems 诗选• Keith Douglas 基思•道格拉斯The Complete Poems 诗歌全集• Hugh MacDiarmid 休•麦克迪尔米德Complete Poems 诗歌全集• Louis MacNeice 刘易斯•麦克尼斯Collected Poems 诗集• Dylan Thomas 迪伦•托马斯The Poems 诗集• Nigel Dennis 奈杰尔•丹尼斯Cards of Identity 身份证• Seamus Heaney 希尼Selected Poems: 1969-1987 诗选:1969-1987Field Work 农活Station Island史泰逊岛• Thomas Kinsella 托马斯•金塞拉Peppercanister Poems 胡椒罐诗集• Paul Muldoon 保罗•马尔登Selected Poems 诗选• John Montague 约翰•蒙塔古Selected Poems 诗选• John Arden 约翰•阿登Plays 戏剧集• Joe Orton 乔•奥顿The Complete Plays 戏剧全集• Flann O'Brien 弗莱恩•奥布莱恩The Dalkey Archive 道尔基档案The Third Policeman 第三个警察• Tom Stoppard 汤姆•斯托帕德Travesties 滑稽模仿• Harold Pinter 哈罗德•品特The Caretaker 看门人The Homecoming 归家• Edward Bond 爱德华•邦德The Fool 愚人Saved 获救• George Orwell 乔治•奥威尔Collected Essays 散文集1984 1984• Edna O'Brien 爱德娜•奥布莱恩A Fanatic Heart 狂热的心。

英语文学世界名著书目

英语文学世界名著书目

英语文学世界名著书目必读书目:必读书目: 1. Jane Eyre (Charlotte Bronte) 《简爱》夏洛蒂·勃朗特 2. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (Mark Twain) 《哈克贝利·弗恩历险记》马克·吐温3.The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (Mark Twain) 《汤姆.索亚历险记》马克·吐温 4.The French Lieutenant’s Woman (John Fowles) 《法国中尉的女人》约翰·福尔斯5.Tess of the D’Urbervilles (Tomas Hardy) 《德伯家的苔丝》托马斯·哈代 6. Rebecca (Daphne du Maurier) 《蝴蝶梦》达夫妮.杜穆里埃 7. David Copperfield (Charles Dickens) 《大卫科波菲尔》查尔斯.狄更斯8.Great Expectations (Charles Dickens)《远大前程》查尔斯.狄更斯 9. Treasure Island (Robert Louis Stevenson)《金银岛》罗伯特.路易斯.史蒂文森10. Gone with the Wind (Margaret Mitchell)《飘》玛格丽特.米切尔 11. Pride and Prejudice (Jane Austin) 《傲慢与偏见》简·奥斯丁 12. Lord Jim (Joseph Conrad) 《吉姆老爷》约瑟夫.康拉德 13. The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (Arthur Conan Doyle) 《福尔摩斯探案集》亚瑟·柯南·道尔14. A Passage to India (E. M. Forster) 《印度之行》E·M·福斯特 15. Robison Crusoe (Daniel Defoe) 《鲁滨逊漂流记》丹尼尔.笛福 16.Uncle Tom’s Cabin (Harriet Beecher Stowe)《汤姆叔叔的小屋》斯托夫人 17. Martin Eden (Jack London)《马丁·伊登》杰克·伦敦 18. Catch-22 (Joseph Heller)《第二十二条军规》约瑟夫·海勒 19. The Invisible Man (H.G. Wells) 《隐形人》 20. Sister Carrie (Theodore Dreiser) 《嘉莉妹妹》西奥多·德莱塞 21. Jude the Obscure (Thomas Hardy) 《无名的裘德》托马斯·哈代 22. The Old and the Sea (Ernest Hemingway)《老人与海》欧内斯特·米勒尔·海明威23. An American Tragedy (Theodore Dreiser)《美国悲剧》西奥多·德莱塞 24. Great Gatsby (F. Scott Fitzgerald) 《了不起的盖茨比》斯各特·菲茨杰拉德 25. The Sun Also Rises (Ernest Hemingway)《太阳照样升起》欧内斯特·米勒尔·海明威 26. The Woman Warrior (Maxine Hong Kingston) 《女勇士》汤亭亭 27. The Call of the Wild (Jack London) 《荒野的欢呼》杰克·伦敦 28. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (James Joyce)《青年艺术家画像》乔伊斯 29. The Picture of Dorian Gray (Oscar Wilde) 《格雷的画像》奥斯卡·王尔德 30. Mrs. Dalloway (Virginia Woolf) 《黛洛维夫人》维吉尼亚‧吴尔芙 31. To the Lighthouse(Virginia Woolf)《到灯塔去》维吉尼亚‧吴尔芙 32. The Catcher in the Rye (J. D. Salinger) 《麦田里的守望者》塞林格 33. The Grapes of Wrath (John Steinbeck) 《愤怒的葡萄》約翰·史坦貝克 34. Wuthering Heights (Emily Bronte) 《呼啸山庄》艾米莉·勃朗特 35.Sophie’s Choice (William Styron) 《苏菲的抉择》威廉·斯泰伦 36. Little Women (Louisa May Alcott) 《小妇人》露意莎.梅.奥尔科特推荐书目:37. Hamlet (Shakespeare)《哈姆雷特》莎士比亚 38. Romeo and Juliet (Shakespeare)《罗密欧朱丽叶》莎士比亚Othello (Shakespeare)《奥瑟罗》莎士比亚King Lear (Shakespeare)《李尔王》莎士比亚Macbeth (Shakespeare)《麦克白》莎士比亚The Merchant of Venice (Shakespeare)《维纳斯商人》莎士比亚 Twelfth Night (Shakespeare)《第十二夜》莎士比亚A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Shakes peare)《仲夏夜之梦》莎士比亚 The Taming of the Shrew (Shakespeare) 《驯悍妇》莎士比亚Gulliver’s Travels (Jonathan Swift) 《格列佛游记》乔纳森.斯威夫特Vanity Fair (William M. Thackeray)The Red Badge of Courage (Steven Crane)《红色英勇勋章》斯蒂芬.克莱恩Go Down, Moses (William Faulkner) 《去吧,摩西》威廉·福克纳The Sound and the Fury (William Faulkner)《喧哗与骚动》威廉·福克纳Light in August (William Faulkner) 《八月之光》威廉·福克纳The Scarlet Letter (Nathaniel Hawthorne)《红字》纳撒内尼·霍桑 The Bluest Eye (Toni Morrison)《最蓝的眼睛》托妮·莫里森Beloved (Toni Morrison)《宠儿》托妮·莫里森The Color Purple (Alice Walker)《紫色》艾丽斯·沃克The Age of Innocence (Edith Warren) 《纯真年代》All the King’s Men (Robert Penn Warren) 《国王班底》罗伯特·佩·华伦Women in Love (D. H. Lawrence)《恋爱中的女人》.劳伦斯Heart of Darkness (Joseph Conrad) 《黑暗之心》约瑟夫.康拉德Middle March (George Eliot) 《米德尔马契》乔治.艾略特补充书目:1.The Good Earth (Pearl Buck)《大地》赛珍珠2.2. Pilgrim’s Progress (Paul Bunyan) 《天路历程》班扬3.3. Alice in Wonderland (Lewis Carroll) 《爱丽丝梦游仙境》路易斯·卡洛4.4. My Antonia (Willa Cather)《我的安东尼娅》薇拉·凯瑟5.5. Don Quixote de la Mancha (Miguel de CervantesSaavedrea)《唐吉诃德》塞万提斯6.6. The Canterbury Tales (Geoffrey Chaucer)《坎特伯雷故事集》乔叟7.7. Last of the Mohicans (James Fenimore Cooper) 最后的摩根战士》《詹姆斯· 费尼莫尔· 库柏8.8. Two Years Before the Mast (Richard Henry Dana)《七海豪侠》9.9. Crime an Punishment (Dostoevsky)《《罪与罚》陀思妥耶夫斯基10.10. The Hound of the Baskervilles (Arthur Conan Doyle)《福尔摩斯侦探小说全集》亚瑟·柯南·道尔11.11. The Three Musketeers (Alexander Dumas)《三个火枪手》大仲马12.12. Mill on the Floss (George Eliot)《弗罗斯河上的磨坊》乔治.艾略特13.13. The Reivers (William Faulkner) 《流氓好汉》威廉·福克纳14.14. Tom Jones (Henry Fielding)《汤姆·琼斯》亨利·菲尔丁15.15. Madame Bovary (Gustave Flaubert)《包法利夫人》福楼拜16.16. The Ret urn of the Native (Thomas hardy) 《还乡》托马斯·哈代17.18.The luck of Roaring Camp (F. Bret Harte)《咆哮营的幸运》布雷特·哈特Farewell to Arms (Ernest Hemingway)《永别了,武器》欧内斯特.海明威Good-bye Mr. Chips (James Hilton) 《万世师表》詹姆斯·希尔顿19.The Iliad and the Odyssey (Homer)《伊里亚特与奥德赛》荷马20.Les Miserables (Victor Hugo) 《悲惨世界》雨果21.Ramona (Helen Jackson) Portrait of a Lady (Henry James)《妇人的肖像》亨利·詹姆斯22.Sons and Lovers (D. H. Lawrence) 《儿子与情人》.劳伦斯23.Main Street (Sinclair Lewis)《大街》辛克来·刘易斯24.The Magic Mountain (Thomas Mann) 《魔山》托马斯·曼25.Of Human Bondage (Somerset W. Maugham)《人性的枷锁》索默斯特·毛姆26.Moby Dick (Herman Melville)《白鲸》赫尔曼·梅尔维尔27.Remembrance of Things Past (Marcel Proust)《追忆似水年华》马塞尔·普鲁斯特28.All Quiet on the Western Front (Erich Maria Remarque)《新西线无战事》埃里希.马里亚. 雷马克29.Cyrano de Bergerac (Edmond Rostand) 《大鼻子情圣》艾德蒙德·罗斯坦德30.Ivanhoe (Sir Walter Scott) 《劫后英雄传》沃尔特·司各特plete Works (William Shakespeare) 《莎士比亚全集》威廉·莎士比亚32.The Jungle (Upton Sinclair)《森林王子》辛克萊33.War and Peace (Leo Tolstoy)《战争与和平》列夫·托尔斯泰34.Kristin Lavransdatter (Sigrid Undset) 西格丽德·温塞特35.Around the World in 80 Days (Jules Verne) 《80 天环游世界》儒勒·凡尔纳36.Ethan Frome (Edith Wharton) 《伊坦·弗洛美》沃顿·伊迪丝37.The Bridge of San Luis Rey (Thornton Wilder) 《圣路易斯雷的大桥》38.Look Homeward Angel (Thomas Wolfe)《天使,望故乡》托马斯·沃尔夫。

英国文学Thomas Hardy作者介绍ppt

英国文学Thomas Hardy作者介绍ppt

1856 At 16, he was apprenticed to a local architect.
1862
He moved to London and become an architect. Meanwhile, he tried writing poetry, but was rejected
by publishers, so he failed to get any published.
1867
poor health forced him to return to Dorset, but he still worked as an architect to support himself while writing
• Their setting is the agricultural region of the southern counties of England. He truthfully depicts the poverty and decay of small farmers who become hired field hands(沦落为雇佣的田间劳动者) and these labourers are mercilessly exploited by the rich landowners.
Thomas Hardy 托马斯·哈代 (1840-1928)
17英语2 Rita
Contents
0 1 Life 0 2 Writing styles 0 3 Works 0 4 Comments
• Novelist and poet, is one of the representatives of English critical realism at the turn of the 19th century.

背景

背景

His Major Works
Hardy himself divided his novels into three groups: 1、Novels of Character & Environment 、
• • • • • • • • • • • • The Poor Man and the Lady(1867, unpublished and lost) 穷汉与贵妇人》 《穷汉与贵妇人》 Under the Greenwood Tree(1872) 《绿树荫下 》 Far from the Madding Crowd(1874) 《远离尘嚣》 远离尘嚣》 The Mayor of Casterbridge(1886) 《卡斯特桥市长》 卡斯特桥市长》 Tess of the d'Urbervilles(1891) 《德伯家的苔丝》 德伯家的苔丝》 Jude the Obscure(1895) 无名的裘德》 《无名的裘德》 A Pair of Blue Eyes(1873) 《一双蓝眼睛》 一双蓝眼睛》 Two on a Tower(1882) 《塔里的两个人》 塔里的两个人》 The Well-Beloved(1897) (first published as a serial from 1892) 《心爱的人》 心爱的人》 Desperate Remedies(1871)《铤而走险》 《铤而走险》 The Hand of Ethelberta(1876) 《埃塞尔伯塔的婚姻》 埃塞尔伯塔的婚姻》 A Laodicean(1881) 《冷漠的人》 冷漠的人》
Contents
Brief Introduction Background
英国的维多利亚时代
作家的背景 小说的地理背景

Tess of the d’Urbervilles 介绍

Tess of the d’Urbervilles  介绍

2019年小学美术工作计划范文4篇新的一月又开始了,本学期我的教学任务是五年科学和二年美术五年科学是我第一次接触的新学科,而二年美术是我已经教过一遍的旧学科新时期的小学美术教育不再是一种单纯的技能技巧训练,而是一种文化学习;小学美术教育不同于专业美术教育,它为发展学生整体素质服务以学生发展为本,注重培养发展学生审美能力,感知力,想象力,表现力等方面的能力,注重培养创新精神,注重学生的个性发展和全面发展新教育培养学生学习兴趣,强调学生自主探究学习,合作互动学习,情感体验,注重学习的过程,注重跨学科学习,通过美术实践活动提高学生的整体素质,最终使学生学会学习,学会做人,终身受益为了进一步提高教学质量,做好本职工作,本学期我拟定了如下计划抓好常规教学1,认真备课,做到重难点突出,简明条理,课后分析评价恰当2,充实课堂容纳量,充分利用好教学时间加强自身建设从目前教育发展的要求出发,认真开展"两学"学习业务和政治,进一步提高师表形象具体做法是1,坚持参加集体学习,并与自学相结合,以《中华人民共和国教育法》,《教师法》,《新课程改革指导》,及各类业务书籍为主,借鉴先进经验,树立创新意识2,在学习中学会反思,改进自我进一步规范教育言行,不迟到,不早退,维护集体利益,不做有损学校声誉的事三,关注学优生,进行培优训练加强对尖子生的培养,发展学生的学科兴趣及个性特长积极组织学生参加全国,省,市各种比赛活动,丰富学生的校园生活总之我将严格要求自己,不断提高业务水平,做一名合格的美术教师在科学课方面为了能尽快熟练本学科的授课技巧,我也做了如下的计划4月小学美术教师工作计划课前准备备好课认真钻研教材,对教材的基本思想,基本概念,每句话,每个都弄清楚,了解教材的结构,重点与难点,掌握知识的逻辑,能运用自如,知道应补充哪些资料,怎样才能教好了解学生原有的知识技能的质量,他们的兴趣,需要,方法,习惯,学习新知识可能会有哪些困难,采取相应的预防措施考虑教法,解决如何把已掌握的教材传授给学生,包括如何组织教材,如何安排每节课的活动课堂上的情况组织好课堂教学,关注全体学生,注意信息反馈,调动学生的有意注意要提高教学质量,还要做好课后辅导工作,做好对学生学习的辅导和帮助工作,尤其在后进生的转化上,对后进生努力做到从友善开始,比如,握握他的手,摸摸他的头,或帮助整理衣服从赞美着手,所有的人都渴望得到别人的理解和尊重积极参与听课,评课,虚心向同行学习教学方法,博采众长,提高教学水平走进21世纪,社会对教师的素质要求更高,在今后的教育教学工作中,我将更严格要求自己,努力工作,发扬优点,改正缺点,开拓前进,为美好的明天奉献自己的力量小学美术教师工作计划2019年小学美术工作计划范文2|返回目录一、指导思想以推进素质教育为中心,以市教研室有关精神和区教研室制定的学期工作要点为指导,结合我校实际,把工作重点放到一线教学研究上,坚持以提高课堂教学质量为目标,以生为本,务实教学。

ThomasHardy简介

ThomasHardy简介

哈代(1840~1928)英国诗人、小说家。

他是横跨两个世纪的作家,早期和中期的创作以小说为主,继承和发扬了维多利亚时代的文学传统;晚年以其出色的诗歌开拓了英国20世纪的文学。

哈代1840年6月2日生于英国西南部的一个小村庄,毗邻多塞特郡大荒原,这里的自然环境日后成了哈代作品的主要背景。

他的父亲是石匠,但爱好音乐。

父母都重视对哈代的文化教育。

1856年哈代离开学校,给一名建筑师当学徒。

1862年前往伦敦,任建筑绘图员,并在伦敦大学进修语言,开始文学创作。

Thomas Hardy was born on June 2, 1840, in Higher Bockhampton in Dorset, a rural region of southwestern England that was to become the focus of his fiction. His father , who likes music very much, was a stonemason. Hardy parents attached great importance to his education. Being the child of a builder, Hardy left school and apprenticed at the age of sixteen to John Hicks, an architect who lived in the city of Dorchester. The location would later serve as the model for Hardy’s fictional Casterbridge. In 1862, Hardy went to London served as architectural draftsman. And studied language at London University, meanwhile,he began his writing.哈代的文学生涯开始于诗歌,后因无缘发表,改事小说创作。

Thomas Hardy

Thomas Hardy

Selected reading : The Woman Pays
TESS PAYS
The failure of her wedding journey to the d'Urberville manor marks the beginning of Tess's decline, which proves to be continuous and irreversible. She is humiliated by how her reappearance in Marlott looks to friends and neighbors. There is no longer a place for her in the family home; not only is her bedroom occupied by her siblings, but her father doubts whether she is really married. Tess's isolation deepens. Her social and economic status decline with the temporary jobs she takes. They become more physically demanding, and she suffers poverty. Pride prevents her from letting either her parents or Angel's parents know of her financial difficulties. She is completely alone.
Thomas Hardy (1840-1928)

英语专业文学德伯家的苔丝论文

英语专业文学德伯家的苔丝论文

从生态女性主义的角度来分析苔丝专业:英语学号:学生姓名:指导老师:摘要托马斯.哈代的小说《德伯家的苔丝》是英国以及世界文学史上的经典之作。

本文主要通过女性生态主义的角度来理解和分析这篇小说。

生态女性主义者认为,自然与女性是人类生存和发展的本源,二者均与男性相对立,而且都是资本主义工业化经济扩张过程中的受害者。

在小说中,苔丝作为哈代塑造的一位女性,身处在英国工业大肆向农村扩张的时期,同时被男性所欺凌和压迫。

同时,她身边的自然环境和生产方式的改变也体现着以男性为中心的社会对于自然界的扩张和侵犯。

因此,本文将通过生态女性主义的角度来分析《德伯家的苔丝》。

通过生态女性主义的视角分析哈代的自然观、妇女观在作品中的体现和其作品中反映的苔丝与自然的亲密关系以及在男权社会中女权主义的崛起,能给读者以一个新的角度来重新理解这部作品,与此同时,能够对生态女性主义及其发展有很好的了解。

关键词:生态女性主义;自然;工业化;男权社会Analysis of Tess of the D’urbervilles in the Light of EcofeminismAbstractThomas Hardy’s novel Tess of the D’urbervilles is a great classic work in England as well as in the world. This thesis will analysis Tess of the D’urbervilles in the light of ecofeminism. Ecofeminists argues that nature and feminist are the origin of human being’s existence and development ,the two are incompatible to men .Moreover, are the victims in the process of capitalistic industrialization and expansive male intrusion. In the novel ,Tess is a heroine created by Hardy, who was set to live in the times of industrialization approach to rural area., and bullied and oppressed by masculine. Besides ,the nature surrounding her and the modify of production style also can reflect the expansion as well as the invasion endowed by male centered world .Therefore ,this thesis will read Tess of the D’urbervilles by angel of ecofeminism. Through Analysis of Hardy’s view of nature and women in the light of ecofeminism as well as Tess’s close relationship with nature and the emergency of feminism among male chauvinism, which will give reader a new angel to understand the novel. Meanwhile ,we can have a good understanding of ecofeminism .Key Words: Tess of the D’urbervilles; Ecofeminism; Women; Nature; IndusrtilizationCONTENTS摘要 (I)Abstract (I)Chapter 1 Introduction (2)1.1 The writing background (2)1.2 The main content of Tess of the D’ubervilles (3)1.3 Literature review (4)1. 4What is new in my studyChapter 2 Ecofeminism and Its Development (5)2. 1 Definiation of specialized terms (5)2. 2 The Development of Ecofeminism (6)2. 3 Differences of social psychology ...................................................... 错误!未定义书签。

德伯家的苔丝作者生平人物关系个性背景情节概要

德伯家的苔丝作者生平人物关系个性背景情节概要
的婚姻》 ❖ A Laodicean(1881) 《冷漠的人》
Thomas Hardy’s Tess of the
D’urbervilles reflected his real society. Hardy succeeded in portraying(描绘)
the image of heroine Tess and revealing the hypocritical (伪善的、虚 伪)ethics and morals of bourgeois(资 产阶级) society.
❖ The Mayor of Casterbridge(1886) 《卡斯特桥市长》
❖ Tess of the d'Urbervilles(1891) 《德伯家的苔丝》
❖ Jude the Obscure(1895)
《无名的裘德》
2.Romances and Fantasies
(传奇与幻想小说)
❖ A Pair of Blue Eyes(1873) 《一双蓝眼睛》 ❖ Two on a Tower(1882) 《塔里的两个人》 ❖ The Well-Beloved(1897) (first published as a serial
Major characters
Angel Tess Alec
Major characters
• Tess Durbeyfield —
The protagonist, eldest daughter (长女) in a poor rural (农村) working family.
• Tess is a good, beautiful and strong country girl.
德伯家的苔丝

Tess-of-the-D’Urbervilles

Tess-of-the-D’Urbervilles

• Climax: Tess's new husband discovers her earlier seduction by Alec and decides to leave her, going off to Brazil and not answering her letters, and bringing Tess to despair.
Tess
• She is a good-natured girl, when her husband
Men Dominating Women
• One of the recurrent themes of the novel is the way in which men can dominate women, exerting a power over them linked primarily to their maleness.
Phase the Fifth --The Woman Pays (Chap.35)
Confession
Forgiv e
Not Forgive
Angel Clare
As his name—in French, close to “Bright Angel”—suggests, Angel is not quite of this world, but floats above it in a transcendent sphere of his own. The narrator says that Angel shines rather than burns .His moral system is readjusted as he is brought down to Earth. Ironically, it is not the angel who guides the human in this novel, but the human who instructs the angel, although at the cost of her own life.

Hardy

Hardy

About Tess of the D’Urbervilles D’
The subject of the novel ,according to Hardy ,is the fate of” pure” woman . the novel is one of the best and the most popular work by Hardy A) critical realism it is a fierce attack on the hypocritical morality of the bourgeois society and the capitalist invasion in to the country and destruction of the English peasantry towards the ends of the century . Tess ,as a pure woman brought up with the traditional ideas of womanly virtues is abused and destroyed by both Alec and agents of destructive force of the society. The misery .the poverty ,the heartfelt pain she suffers and her final tragedy give rise to a most bitter cry of protest and denunciation of the society .
At the age of 55 Hardy returned to writing poetry, a form he had previously abandoned. Wessex Poems (1898) and Poems of the Past and Present (1901) contained poems he had written earlier. In The Dynasts, written between 1903 and 1908, Hardy created what some consider his most successful poetry. An unstageable epic drama in 19 acts and 130 scenes, it deals with the role of England during the Napoleonic Wars. Hardy's vision is the same as in his novels: History and the actors, who are racked by feeling, are nevertheless dominated by necessity. Hardy's short poems, both lyric and visionary, were published as Time's Laughing Stocks (1909), Satires of Circumstances (1914), Moments of Vision (1917), Late Lyrics and Earlier (1922), Human Shows, Far Fantasies (1925), and Winter Words (1928). Hardy's techniques of rhythm and his diction are especially noteworthy. Among his most successful shorter poems are “Channel Firing, April 1914,””Wessex Heights,””In 1914,””Wessex Heights,””In Tenebris, I,””God's I,””God's Funeral,” Funeral,” and “Nature's Questioning.” Questioning.”

(英语毕业论文)哈珀.李《杀死一只知更鸟》中的西方教育观

(英语毕业论文)哈珀.李《杀死一只知更鸟》中的西方教育观

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tess英文原著鉴赏

tess英文原著鉴赏

blood
Changing ideas of social class In Victorian English
fortune and worldly success cash matters more than lineage
Man dominating woman
• man’s full knowledge of his exploitation Alec Tess Angel Tess
Main characters
Tess Durbeyfield Angel Clare Alec d'Urberville John Durbeyfield Joan Durbeyfield
Tess of the D’Urbervilles
农民的贫穷的女儿
诱骗 D'Urbervilles 寻找 回来
Tess of the d'Urbervilles
Thomas
Hardy
Review from others
• Virginia Woolf称他是“英国小说 •
中的最伟大的悲剧大师” Weber称他是“英国小说中的莎 士比亚”
Thomas Hardy
Major works
Novels of romance and fantasy A Pair of Blue Eyes, 1873《一双湛蓝的秋波》 The Trumpet Major, 1880《号兵长》 Two on a Tower, 1882《塔上二人》 The well-Beloved, 1897《意中人》 A Group of Noble Dames, 1891《一群贵妇人》 Novels of love trapping Desperate Remedies, 1871《计出无奈》第一部出版小说 The Hand of Etherberta, 1876,《埃塞尔伯塔的手》 A Laodicean, 1881《冷漠的人》 Novels of character and environment Under the Greenwood Tree ,1872《树林下》第一部乡村

Thomas_Hardy的英文简介

Thomas_Hardy的英文简介

Thomas Hardy (1840-1904)ThomasHardy was born at Higher Bockhampton, Dorset, on June 2, 1840, where his father worked as a master masonand builder. From his father he gained an appreciation of music, and from his mother an appetite for learning and the delights of the countryside about his rural home.Hardy was frail as a child, and did not start at the village school until he was eight years old. One year later he transferred to a new school in the county town of Dorchester.At the age of 16 Hardy helped his father with thearchitectural drawings for a restoration of Woodsford Castle.The owner, architect James Hicks, was impressed by the younger Hardy'swork, and took him on as an apprentice.Hardy later moved to London to work for prominent architect Arthur Blomfield. He began writing, but his poems were rejected by a number of publishers. Althoughhe enjoyed life in London, Hardy's health was poor, and he was forced to return to Dorset.In 1870 Hardy was sent to plan a church restoration at St. Juliot inCornwall. There he met Emma Gifford, sister-in-law of the vicar of . She encouraged him in his writing, and they were married in 1874.Hardy published his first novel, Desperate Remedies in 1871, to universal disinterest. But the following year Under the GreenwoodTree brought Hardy popular acclaim for the first time. As with most of his fictional works,Greenwood Tree incorporated real places around Dorset into the plot,including the village school of Higher Bockhampton that Hardy hadfirst attended as a child.The success of Greenwood Tree brought Hardy a commission to write aserialized novel, A Pair of Blue Eyes, for Tinsley's Magazine. Once more Hardy drew upon real life, and the novel mirrors his own courtship of Emma.Hardy followed this with Far From the Madding Crowd, set in Puddletown (renamed Weatherby), near his birthplace. This novel finally netted Hardy the success that enabled him to give up his architectural practice and concentrate solely on writing.The Hardys lived in London for a short time, then in Yeovil, then inIt Sturminster Newton (Stourcastle), which Hardy described as "idyllic". was at Sturminster Newton that Hardy penned Return of the Native, one of his most enduring works.Finally the Hardys moved to Dorchester, where Thomas designed their new house, Max Gate, into which they moved in 1885. One year later Hardypublished The Mayor of Casterbridge, followed in 1887 by The Woodlanders and in 1891 by one of his best works, Tess of the d'Urbervilles.Tess provoked interest, but his next work, Jude the Obscure (1896),catapulted Hardy into the midst of a storm of controversy. Jude outraged Victoria morality and was seen as an attack upon the institution ofmarriage. Its publication caused a rift between Thomas and Emma,who feared readers would regard it as describing their own marriage.Of course the publicity did no harm to book sales, but reader's hid thebook behind plain brown paper wrappers, and the Bishop of Wakefield burned his copy! Hardy himself was bemused by the reaction his book caused, and he turned away from writing fiction with some disgust.For the rest of his life Hardy focussed on poetry, producingseveral collections, including Wessex Poems (1898).EmmaHardy died in November 1912, and was buried in Stinsford churchyard. Thomas was stricken with guilt and remorse, but the result was some of his best poetry, expressing his feelings for his wife of 38 years.All was not gloom, however, for in 1914 Hardy remarried, to FlorenceDugdale, his secretary since 1912. Thomas Hardy died on January 11, 1928 at his house of Max Gate in Dorchester. He had expressed the wish to beburied beside Emma, but his wishes were only partly regarded; his bodywas interred in Poet's Corner, Westminster Abbey, and only his heart was buried in Emma's grave at Stinsford.Did You KnowA rumor has persisted since Hardy's death that it is not the author's heart that was buried beside Emma. The story goes that Hardy's housekeeperplaced his heart on the kitchen table, where it was promptly devoured by her cat. Apparently a pig's heart was used to replace Hardy's own. Truth Fiction We will probably never know.English poet and regional novelist, whose works depict the imaginarycounty "Wessex" (=Dorset). Hardy's career as writer spanned over fiftyyears. His earliest books appeared when Anthony Trollope (1815-82) wrote his Palliser series, and he published poetry in the decade of . Eliot'sThe Waste Land. Hardy's work reflected his stoical pessimism and senseof tragedy in human life."Critics can never be madeto understand that that the failuremay be greater than the success... To have the strength toroll a stone weighting a hundredweight to the top of amountain is a success,and to have the strength to roll a stoneof then hundredweight only halfway up that mount is a failure.But the latter is two or three times as strong a deed."(Hardyin his diary, 1907)ThomasHardy's own life wasn't similar to his stories. He was born on the Egdon Heath, in Dorset, near Dorchester. His father was a master masonand building contractor. Hardy's mother, whose tastes included Latinpoets and French romances, provided for his education. After schoolingin Dorchester Hardy was apprenticed to an architect.He worked in an office, which specialized in restoration of churches. In 1874 Hardy married Emma Lavinia Gifford, for whomhe wrote 40 years later, after her death, a group of poems known as VETERIS VESTIGIAE FLAMMAE (Vestiges of an Old Flame).At the age of 22 Hardy moved to London and started to write poems,which idealized the rural life. He was an assistant in the architectural firmof Arthur Blomfield, visited art galleries, attended evening classes inFrench at King's College, enjoyed Shakespeare and opera, and read worksof Charles Darwin, Herbert Spencer, and John Stuart Mills, whosepositivism influenced him deeply. In 1867 Hardy left London for the familyhome in Dorset, and resumed work briefly with Hicks in Dorchester. Heentered into a temporary engagement with Tryphena Sparks, asixteen-year-old relative. Hardy continued his architectural work, butencouraged by EmmaLavinia Gifford, he started to consider literature as his "true vocation."Unable to find public for his poetry,the novelist George Meredith advised Hardy to write a novel. His first novel, THE POOR MAN AND THE LADY, was written in 1867, but the book was rejected by many publishers and hedestroyed the manuscript.His first book that gained notice,was FARFROM THE MADDING CROWD (1874). After its success Hardy was convinced that he could earn his living as an author.He devoted himself entirely to writing and produced a series of novels, among them THE RETURNOF NATIVE (1878), THE MAYOR OF CASTERBRIDGE (1886).TESS OF THE D'URBERVILLES (1891) came into conflict with Victorianmorality. It explored the dark side of his family connections in Berkshire. In thestory the poor villager girl Tess Durbeyfield is seduced by thewealthy Alec D'Uberville. She becomes pregnant but the child dies ininfancy. Tess finds work as a dairymaid on a farm and falls in love withAngel Clare, a clergyman's son. They marry but when Tess tells Angel about her past, he hypocritically desert her. Tess becomes Alec's mistress.Angel returns from Brazil,repenting his harshness, but finds her living with Alec. Tess kills Alec in desperation, she is arrested and hanged.Hardy's JUDE THE OBSCURE (1895) aroused even more debate. The story dramatized the conflict between carnal and spiritual life, tracing JudeFawley's life from his boyhood to his early death. Jude marries Arabella,but deserts her. He falls in love with his cousin, hypersensitive SueBridehead, who marries the decaying schoolmaster, Phillotson, in amasochist fit. Jude and Sue obtain divorces, but their life togetherdeteriorates under the pressure of poverty and social disapproval. Theeldest son of Jude and Arabella, a grotesque boy nicknamed 'Father Time', kills their children and himself. Broken by the loss, Sue goes back toPhillotson,and Jude returns to Arabella. Soon thereafter Jude dies,and his last words are: "Wherefore is light given to him that is in misery,and life unto the bitter in soul".In 1896, disturbed by the public uproar over the unconventional subjects of two of his greatest novels, Tess of the D'Urbervilles and Jude theObscure, Hardy announced that he would never write fiction again. A bishop solemnly burnt the book, 'probably in his despair at not being able toburn me', Hardy noted. Hardy's marriage had also suffered from the public outrage - critics on both sides of the Atlantic abused the author asdegenerate and called the work itself disgusting. In April, 1912, Hardywrote:"Then somebodydiscovered that Jude was a moral work - austere inits treatment of a difficult subject - as if the writerhad not all the time said in the Preface that it was meantto be so. Thereupon many uncursed me, and the matter ended,the only effect of it on humanconduct that I could discover being itseffect on myself - the experience completely curing me of the furtherinterest in novel-writing."By 1885 the Hardys had settled near Dorchester at Max gate, a housedesigned by the author and built by his brother, Henry. With the exceptions of seasonal stays in London and occasional excursions abroad, his Bockhampton home, "a modest house, providing neither more nor less thanthe accommodation ... needed" (as Michael Millgate describes it in hisbiography of the author) was his home for the rest of his life.After giving up the novel,Hardy brought out a first group of Wessexpoems, some of which had been composed 30 years before. During the remainder ofhis life, Hardy continued to publish several collections of poems. "Hardy, in fact, was the ideal poet of a generation. He was the most passionateand the most learned of them all. He had the luck, singular in poets, ofbeing able to achieve a competence other than by poetry and then devotethe ending years of his life to his beloved verses." (Ford Madox Ford inThe March of Literature,1938) Hardy's gigantic panorama of the Napoleonic Wars, THE DYNASTS, composed between 1903 and 1908, was mostly in blank verse. Hardy succeeded on the death of his friend George Meredith to the presidency of the Society of Authors in1909. King George V conferred on him the Order of Merit and he received in 1912 the gold medal of the Royal Society of Literature.Hardy kept to his marriage with EmmaGifford although it was unhappy and he had - or he imagined he had - affairs with other womenpassing briefly through his life. Emma Hardy died in 1912 and in 1914 Hardy married his secretary, Florence Emily Dugdale, a woman in her 30's, almost 40 years younger than he. From 1920 through 1927 Hardy worked on his autobiography, which was disguised as the work of Florence Hardy. It appeared in twovolumes (1928 and 1930). Hardy's last book published in his lifetime was HUMAN SHOWS, FAR PHANTASIES, SONGS AND TRIFLES (1925). WINTER WORDS IN VARIOUS MOODS AND METRES appeared posthumously in 1928.Hardy died in Dorchester, Dorset, on January 11, 1928. His ashes werecremated in Dorchester and buried with impressive ceremonies in the Poet'sCorner in Westminster Abbey. According to a literary anecdote his heartwas to be buried in Stinsford,his birthplace, and all went according toplan, until a cat belonging to the poet's sister snatched the heart offthe kitchen,where it was temporarily kept, and disappeared into the woodswith it.The center of Hardy's novels was the rather desolate and history-freighted countryside around Dorchester.His novels bravely challenged many of thesexual and religious conventions of the Victorian age, and dared topresent a bleak view into human nature. In the early 1860s, after theappearance Darwin's Origin of Species (1859), Hardy's faith was stillunshaken,but he soon adopted the mechanical-determinist view of nature's cruelty, reflected in the inevitably tragic and self-destructive fatesof his characters. In his poems Hardy depicted rural life withoutsentimentality - his mood was often stoically hopeless. "Though he wasa modern, even a revolutionary writer in his time, most of us read himnow as a lyrical pastoralist. It may be a sign of the times that some ofus take his books to bed, as if even his pessimistic vision was one thatenabled us to sleep soundly."(Anatole Broyard in NewYork Times, May 12, 1982)For further reading: The Life of Thomas Hardy: A CriticalBiography by Turner (1998); Thomas Hardy in Our Time by .Langbaum (1995); Hardy and the Erotic by . Wright (1989);Thomas Hardy by M. Millgate (1982); The Older Hardy by R.Gittings(1980);An Essay on ThomasHardy by J. Bayley (1978);The Final Years of ThomasHardy,1912-1928 by H. Orel (1976);Young Thomas Hardy by R. Gittings (1975); Thomas Hardy: ACritical Biography by Stewart(1971); The Poetry of ThomasHardy: A Handbook and Commentary by . Bailey (1970); ThomasHardy by (1967); Thomas Hardy: A Critical Biography by E.Hardy (1954); Thomas Hardy by . Guerard (1949); Hardy ofWessex: His Life and Career by . Weber (1940) - See also:Wladyslaw Reymont, (The Lyrical Poetry of Thomas Hardy,1953),Michael Innes, Francois La Rochefoucauld- "Hardy had an observing eye, a remembering mind; he did not need theGreeks to teach him that the Furies do arrive punctually,and that neither act, not will, nor intention will serve todeflect a man's destiny from him, once he has taken the stepwhich decides it."Catherine Anne Porter in Notes on a Criticism (1940)Selected works:DESPERATE REMEDIES, 1871UNDER THE GREENWOOD TREE, 1872A PAIR OF BLUE EYES, 1973 - Sininen silm? pariFAR FROM THE MADDINGCROWD,1874 - film1967, Schlesinger, starring Julie Christie , Peter Finch,dir. by John Terence Stamp,Alan Bates, Prunella RansomeTHE RETURN OF THE NATIVE, 1878 - Paluunummelle THE TRUMPET-MAJOR, 1880THE MAYOR OF CASTERBRIDGE, 1886 - Pormestarin tarinaWESSWX TALES, 1888THE WOODLANDERS, 1887A GROUP OF NOBLE DMES, 1891 - Ylh? isi ?naisiaTESS OF THE D'URBERVILLES, 1891 - Tessin tarina - film 1980, dir.by Roman Polanski."The 18th-century world Polanski presents is so believable that we sense the people we see really do live in those farmhouses, shacks, country estates,and townhouses.There is wonderful period detail, and few films have been more exquisitely photographed (Geoffrey Unsworth and Ghislain Cloquet share the credit). A lovely film." (Danny Perry in Guide for the Film Fanatic, 1986)LIFE'S LITTLE IRONIES, 1894JUDE THE OBSCURE, 1895 - Jude, film adaptation in 1996, dir. by Michael Winterbottom, starring Christopher Eccleston, Kate Winslet, Liam Cunningham, Rachel Griffiths, June Whitfield WESSEX POEMS, 1898POEMS OF THE PAST AND THE PRESENT,1901 THE DYNASTS, 1903-08TIME'S LAUGHINGSTOCKS, 1909A CHANGED MAN AND OTHER TALES, 1913SATIRES OF CIRCUMSTANCE, 1914MOMENTS OF VISION, 1917THE PLAY OF ST. GEORGE, 1921Thomas_Hardy的英文简介LATE LYRICS AND EARLIER, 1922THE FAMOUS TRAGEDY OF THE QUEEN OF CORNWALL,1923 HUMAN SHOWS, FAR PHANTASIES, 1925 LIFE AND ART,1925COLLECTED POEMS, 1927WINTER WORDS, 1928LIFE OF THOMAS HARDY, 1928-30 (with Florence Hardy)AN INDISCRETION IN THE LIFE OF AN HEIRESS, 1934THE LETTERS OF THOMAS HARDY, 1954THOMASHARDY'S NOTEBOOKSAND SOMELETTERSFROMJULIA AUGUSTRA MARTIN, 1955"DEAREST EMMIE": THOMAS HARDY'S LETTERS TO HIS FIRST WIFE,1963 THE ARCHITECTURAL NOTEBOOKS OF THOMAS HARDY, 1966 THOMAS HARDY'S PERSONAL WRITINGS, 1972 THE LITERARY NOTES OF THOMAS HARDY, 1974 THENEWWESSEXEDITIONOFTHESTORIESOFTHOMASHARDY,1977 (3 vols.)cTHE COLLECTED LETTERS OF THOMAS HARDY, VOL. 1, 1840-1892, 1978 THE PERSONAL NOTEBOOKS OF THOMAS HARDY, 1979THE VARIORUM EDITION OF THE COMPLETE POEMS OF THOMAS HARDY, 1979 THE COLLECTED LETTERS OF THOMAS HARDY, VOL. 2, 1893-1901, 1980。

经典英语文章爱情

经典英语文章爱情

经典英语文章爱情Love has been a timeless and universal theme in literature, captivating the hearts and minds of readers across generations. In the rich tapestry of English literature, numerous classic works have explored the complexities and nuances of this profound human emotion. From the passionate sonnets of William Shakespeare to the sweeping romantic sagas of the Brontë sisters, these literary masterpieces have left an indelible mark on the collective consciousness of readers around the world.One of the most celebrated examples of classic English love literature is Shakespeare's sonnets. These 154 lyrical poems delve into the depths of love, examining its many facets with unparalleled insight and poetic brilliance. In Sonnet 18, the bard immortalizes the beauty of his beloved, declaring "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day? Thou art more lovely and more temperate." The use of vivid imagery and the underlying theme of the timelessness of love have resonated with readers for centuries, making this sonnet a timeless testament to the power of romantic affection.Another iconic work of English love literature is Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre. This captivating novel follows the journey of the titular protagonist, a strong-willed and intelligent woman, as she navigates the complexities of love and personal growth. The relationship between Jane and the brooding Mr. Rochester is a testament to the transformative power of love, overcoming societal barriers and personal challenges. Brontë's masterful storytelling and her ability to capture the emotional nuances of the human experience have cemented Jane Eyre as a beloved classic that continues to resonate with readers today.The Brontë sisters' influence on English love literature extends beyond Jane Eyre. Emily B rontë's Wuthering Heights, with its tempestuous and ill-fated romance between Heathcliff and Catherine, stands as a testament to the raw intensity of love and its ability to both elevate and consume the human spirit. The novel's haunting atmosphere and the tragic nature of the central relationship have made it a seminal work in the canon of English literature, exploring the depths of passion and the consequences of unrestrained emotions.Moving into the 20th century, the works of D.H. Lawrence have also left an indelible mark on the landscape of classic English love literature. In novels such as Lady Chatterley's Lover and Sons and Lovers, Lawrence delves into the complexities of human sexuality andthe transformative power of physical and emotional intimacy. His bold and often controversial explorations of love and desire have challenged societal norms and pushed the boundaries of literary expression, cementing his place as a pioneering figure in the exploration of love and relationships in English literature.Beyond the realms of fiction, the poetry of John Donne has also been widely celebrated for its profound and intricate exploration of love. Donne's metaphysical poems, such as "The Flea" and "A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning," employ intricate metaphors and intellectual conceits to delve into the spiritual and physical dimensions of love. The poet's ability to blend the sacred and the profane, the earthly and the divine, has made his work a cornerstone of English love literature, inspiring generations of readers and writers.The enduring legacy of classic English love literature is not limited to the works mentioned above. From the pastoral romances of Sir Philip Sidney to the tragic love stories of Thomas Hardy, the English literary tradition has consistently produced masterpieces that have captivated and inspired readers worldwide. These timeless works have not only entertained and moved audiences but have also provided profound insights into the human condition, the complexities of relationships, and the transformative power of love.As we delve into the rich tapestry of classic English love literature, weare reminded of the universal and timeless nature of this profound human emotion. The ability of these literary masterpieces to transcend time and culture, to speak to the hearts and minds of readers across generations, is a testament to the enduring power of love as a subject of artistic expression. Whether it is the lyrical beauty of Shakespeare's sonnets, the sweeping emotional landscapes of the Brontë sisters, or the bold explorations of D.H. Lawrence, the classics of English love literature continue to captivate, inspire, and challenge us, reminding us of the depth and complexity of the human experience.。

至纯至朴 且梦且幻——哈代《意中人》解读

至纯至朴 且梦且幻——哈代《意中人》解读

The pure The dreaming——share Thomas Hardy's
'The Well Beloved'
作者: 王敏
作者机构: 东北师范大学文学院,吉林长春130024
出版物刊名: 绥化学院学报
页码: 82-84页
主题词: 哈代;《意中人》;纯朴;梦幻;追寻
摘要:<意中人>是托马斯·哈代创作的一部风格迥异的中篇小说.这部小说充满了自然气息,描绘了纯朴的半岛风俗和富有生机的自然之子,表现了岛民们纯真的心灵.主人公皮儿斯通寻梦般的追求深受日神精神的影响,也表现了作家哈代对传统文明与现代文明之和谐的追求,对生命强有力的肯定.总之,哈代借这部小说探求了人物内心深层的隐秘,揭示了人性的深层哲理.。

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Thomas Hardy, TheWell-Belovedby Kevin McGowinI sometimes wonder how many peopleoutside of academia actually read Thomas Hardy these days. Probably not many, though I'd been out of grad school for years before I first picked up one of his books (Jude the Obscure). I found it a little difficult to get into Hardy's "world," but once I did, I was impressed by what I found to be a work of literary genius to which I could relate, at the same time as I noted the work's profound influence on later fiction.This piece is not intended to serve as a Hardy retrospective, overview, introduction, or overall critique, but any discussion of his work must be somehow contextualized. All 14 of his novels were written in late nineteenth-century England, and in 1872 Hardy was able to retire from his vocation as an architect to devote himself to writing full-time: a testament to both his success and popularity in his time (and after) and to the ability of a novelist to do so, and live well at that, during this period.Not all his novels were well-received, of course, most notably the aforementioned Jude (1895), which expressed mores and ideas concerning sex, marriage, class status and education that many of his readers found repulsive or shocking. And to this day, it is a wonderfully subversive novel. Yet Hardy himself (ironic how so many of us think of him as a rather boring old fart) affected to be shocked himself by this popular and critical response, and devoted himself to mostly forgettable retro-Victorian verse until his death at the age of 88 in 1928. In terms of his life, he wasn't exactly Oscar Wilde.Hardy's reputation today rests for the most part on the five or so books they teach in college. For me, I'd add The Woodlanders (1887) to Jude, The Mayor of Casterbridge (1886) and The Return of the Native (1878) as evidence of his secure place as a major English novelist. I also fancy A Pair of Blue Eyes and, to some degree, Two on a Tower much more than I do Tess of the d'Urbervilles, which I consider one of the most overrated "classic" novels ever penned.But it's with Return of the Native that we really see Hardy in full and mature form. From the famous opening section, the primeval landscapes (both external and internal) and English folklore present in almost all his work (even Tess) is brought to the fore. What we have here is a Victorian novelist who set his work in the semi-fictional area of "Wessex" (southwest England) and whose concerns in his depictions of "commonfolk" draw on a vital oral cultural tradition familiar to Hardy from the "living memory" stories and descriptions of the elderly relatives and others he had known in his youth. The descriptions of people and places are oftenpre-Elizabethan, and Hardy himself, in many of the novels, attests to customs and "superstitions" that were inculcated from at least the Roman Occupation (recorded history, in other words).The Well-Beloved deals with cultural behaviors and themes that go beyond even this. They are ancient. Set partially in the semi-fictional "Isle of the Slingers," Hardy juxtaposes the life of a sculptor who is up with the times (though he was born on the Isle, is captivated with it and its people, and is working on a sculpture of Aphrodite) with the strange and ancient pagan world these people inhabit, having never been much exposed to the Romanization of England, or at least not having been too affected by it.What the sculptor does in this short novel, much of which is left "between the lines," is revert to a paganism just about as complete as you want to imagine. The story itself is fairly unbelievable unless seen as a metaphor, which it is. So, until recently, most Hardy "scholars" just sort of... pretended itdidn't exist. What was once seen as a failure of plot can now be read as Hardy's most modernistic work梬hich is ironic, because it's all about pagan sex rituals under the nose of the late Victorian era! In many ways, the novel is, and I suspect was meant to be: a hoot.Regarding the oral tradition, the folklore, I hold that any serious student of English folklore must, at least, have a slight familiarity with Hardy. Is this book a masterpiece? I don't know. Probably not. At least not in the sense that Jude the Obscure is. But the issues The Well-Beloved raises makes it, quite possibly, the most interesting and potentially most rewarding work to study of anything Hardy ever wrote.Which brings me to my final point. Jude (1895) wasn't the final novel Thomas Hardy published. It was The Well-Beloved in 1897! Yes, most of it was originally composed for a three-part serial publication in 1892, between Tess and Jude, but both the Oxford and the Penguin editions have included the alternate chapters and endings梬ith quite enlightening notes and bibliographies梐nd if and when you read them, you'll see exactly why these passages were expunged, and why Hardy himself chose not to add fuel to the Jude fire by making a big deal of The Well-Beloved's first (amended) appearance in book form.But even if, having read the texts, you find the novel wanting, I feel sure you'll agree that, whatever its shortcomings (and all Thomas Hardy books have their fair share), The Well-Beloved stands as an indispensable document in the history of English folklore, if not the history of the English novel itself.。

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