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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:00,900 --> 00:00:04,780 ANNA: What is it, Angel? Have they come for me? 2 00:00:04,900 --> 00:00:06,900 It is as it should be. 3 00:00:07,500 --> 00:00:10,820 Angel, I am almost glad - yes, glad. 4 00:00:10,980 --> 00:00:14,940 This happiness could not have lasted. It was too much. 5 00:00:16,300 --> 00:00:18,260 I have had enough. 6 00:00:18,420 --> 00:00:20,460 And now I shall not live for you to despise me. 7 00:00:22,020 --> 00:00:23,980 I am ready. 8 00:00:40,780 --> 00:00:43,540 SAM: I am but a shape that stands here, 9 00:00:43,660 --> 00:00:45,580 A pulseless mould, 10 00:00:48,700 --> 00:00:51,380 A pale past picture, screening 11 00:00:51,500 --> 00:00:53,420 Ashes gone cold. 12 00:00:56,700 --> 00:00:59,820 And if when I died fully I cannot say, 13 00:00:59,980 --> 00:01:03,540 And changed into the corpse-thing I am to-day... 14 00:01:11,180 --> 00:01:13,220 'Peace upon earth!' was said. 15 00:01:13,380 --> 00:01:16,620 We sing it, and pay a million priests to bring it, 16 00:01:16,780 --> 00:01:21,900 after two thousand years of mass, we've got as far as poison-gas. 17 00:01:32,020 --> 00:01:35,060 Hardy's third novel is called A Pair Of Blue Eyes, 18 00:01:35,180 --> 00:01:37,740 and it's set in Cornwall. 19 00:01:38,780 --> 00:01:41,780 And in one of the episodes in it, 20 00:01:41,940 --> 00:01:47,700 one of the leading characters is left hanging on the edge of a cliff. 21 00:01:49,140 --> 00:01:51,220 'How much longer can you wait?' 22 00:01:51,380 --> 00:01:54,380 came from her pale lips along the wind to his position. 23 00:01:55,700 --> 00:01:59,300 'Four minutes,' said a weaker voice than her own. 24 00:02:00,860 --> 00:02:04,340 He now noticed that in her arms she bore a bundle of white linen, 25 00:02:04,500 --> 00:02:07,420 and that her form was singularly unattenuated. 26 00:02:11,500 --> 00:02:17,300 Elfride takes all her underwear off to make a rope to draw her friend 27 00:02:17,460 --> 00:02:22,380 who's half-fallen down a cliff - it's such a wonderful bit of imagination. 28 00:02:22,540 --> 00:02:27,540 There was so much for her to take off to knot into the rope 29 00:02:27,700 --> 00:02:32,100 to draw up her friend, and suddenly, she looked quite different. 30 00:02:32,220 --> 00:02:34,340 She looked very small. 31 00:02:34,500 --> 00:02:38,020 I always think that's a marvellous bit of Hardy's observation. 32 00:02:38,140 --> 00:02:40,740 And this is reputed to be 33 00:02:40,900 --> 00:02:43,540 one of the first cliffhangers in English literature 34 00:02:43,700 --> 00:02:47,100 because the moment at which she is left hanging on the end of a cliff 35 00:02:47,260 --> 00:02:52,100 is the last of one of the serialisation instalments. 36 00:02:52,260 --> 00:02:57,060 And Hardy's novels were, from that point on, published in instalments, 37 00:02:57,180 --> 00:02:59,740 either monthly or weekly. 38 00:02:59,900 --> 00:03:02,860 Thomas Hardy never looked back. The concept worked. 39 00:03:03,940 --> 00:03:07,300 Far From The Madding Crowd, which followed it, was a great success. 40 00:03:07,460 --> 00:03:10,780 I mean, he went on, his observation of Bathsheba, 41 00:03:10,940 --> 00:03:15,380 and her lying back on the horse and flirting with Troy, and her... 42 00:03:16,460 --> 00:03:20,020 ..all her behaviour is so lovingly and accurately... 43 00:03:20,180 --> 00:03:24,340 it seems, accurately - she seems like a real person, doesn't she? 44 00:03:24,500 --> 00:03:28,460 And that's partly why such good films have been made from that book 45 00:03:28,620 --> 00:03:31,300 because there is a sense of reality in it. 46 00:03:31,460 --> 00:03:34,980 What an extraordinary journey from a poor cottage in Dorset, 47 00:03:35,140 --> 00:03:38,460 to being buried twice, once in Westminster Abbey 48 00:03:38,620 --> 00:03:42,180 with his coffin held aloft by Rudyard Kipling, the Prime Minister, 49 00:03:42,340 --> 00:03:45,180 and once with his heart being buried in Dorset. 50 00:03:47,980 --> 00:03:50,220 Thomas Hardy was the son of a builder 51 00:03:50,380 --> 00:03:53,780 and a severe but well-read mother, who had been in service. 52 00:03:53,940 --> 00:03:57,100 Widely read in his youth, Hardy became an apprentice 53 00:03:57,260 --> 00:04:00,380 to the leading church architectural firm Blomfield. 54 00:04:00,500 --> 00:04:02,580 Hardy is irrevocably associated 55 00:04:02,740 --> 00:04:04,940 with his creation of the region of Wessex, 56 00:04:05,100 --> 00:04:08,580 an area that spans from Oxford in the north to Cornwall in the west, 57 00:04:08,740 --> 00:04:11,260 to Salisbury in the east and the sea in the south. 58 00:04:12,420 --> 00:04:14,700 When he was a young boy of about nine, 59 00:04:14,860 --> 00:04:17,660 he knew a shepherd boy his own age who died of hunger. 60 00:04:17,820 --> 00:04:23,580 He grew up with stories of Chartism, the Swing Riots, Tolpuddle Martyrs, 61 00:04:23,740 --> 00:04:27,020 stories of working-class resistance and rebellion. 62 00:04:28,380 --> 00:04:31,020 He grew up before the mechanisation of agriculture, 63 00:04:31,180 --> 00:04:33,580 before the railway, before the telegraph. 64 00:04:33,740 --> 00:04:37,420 He saw the changes that took place with the spread of urbanisation 65 00:04:37,580 --> 00:04:39,700 and the intrusion of the metropolis, and above all, 66 00:04:39,820 --> 00:04:42,300 the loss of centuries of rural life. 67 00:04:42,460 --> 00:04:46,660 In the Wessex landscape even now, you can sense Hardy's depiction. 68 00:04:47,740 --> 00:04:49,740 The final impression you have from Hardy 69 00:04:49,860 --> 00:04:51,980 is of a man who enjoyed the world, 70 00:04:52,140 --> 00:04:57,900 and who loved the landscape, the grass, the sea... 71 00:05:00,020 --> 00:05:05,420 ..and drew pleasure from his experience of life. 72 00:05:07,540 --> 00:05:10,820 When I set out for Lyonnesse, A hundred miles away... 73 00:05:11,940 --> 00:05:15,660 ..The rime was on the spray, And starlight lit my lonesomeness... 74 00:05:16,940 --> 00:05:18,900 When I set out for Lyonnesse 75 00:05:19,020 --> 00:05:21,300 A hundred miles away. 76 00:05:21,420 --> 00:05:23,700 When I came back from Lyonnesse 77 00:05:23,820 --> 00:05:25,940 With magic in my eyes, 78 00:05:26,060 --> 00:05:28,740 All marked with mute surmise 79 00:05:28,860 --> 00:05:31,740 My radiance rare and fathomless... 80 00:05:33,260 --> 00:05:36,740 So one way of thinking about that quality of landscape in Hardy 81 00:05:36,900 --> 00:05:40,980 is to start from where he grew up, the cottage in Bockhampton, 82 00:05:41,140 --> 00:05:45,300 and just walk out of the back of that house onto the heath. 83 00:05:45,460 --> 00:05:50,140 It backs on to an expanse of heathland, which to some extent 84 00:05:50,300 --> 00:05:53,740 has been planted since the Second World War with pines, 85 00:05:53,860 --> 00:05:56,540 but in Hardy's day was... 86 00:05:58,020 --> 00:06:01,700 ..much, much larger and much more barren. 87 00:06:01,860 --> 00:06:06,620 Also, it was raised above the valleys and Dorchester scenes 88 00:06:06,740 --> 00:06:10,020 going to the south and to the west. 89 00:06:11,140 --> 00:06:15,540 It was, at present, a place perfectly accordant with man's nature... 90 00:06:17,020 --> 00:06:19,740 ..neither ghastly, hateful, nor ugly... 91 00:06:20,820 --> 00:06:23,540 ..neither commonplace, unmeaning, nor tame... 92 00:06:24,740 --> 00:06:28,700 ..but, like man, slighted and enduring. 93 00:06:28,860 --> 00:06:33,140 BIRCH: Hardy's unforgettable evocation of heath 94 00:06:33,300 --> 00:06:37,500 and what the heath embodies is one of the most enduring, 95 00:06:37,660 --> 00:06:41,180 one of the most powerful images in his writing. 96 00:06:41,340 --> 00:06:44,580 It's very specific. It really is a place. 97 00:06:44,740 --> 00:06:47,300 You feel that in reading the description - 98 00:06:47,460 --> 00:06:52,100 of course, we know that he did have a specific place in mind. 99 00:06:52,220 --> 00:06:56,820 It is a deeply mythical landscape 100 00:06:56,980 --> 00:07:00,980 against which his character's lives are played. 101 00:07:01,140 --> 00:07:06,900 It is a landscape that predates our modern world, 102 00:07:07,020 --> 00:07:10,660 and Hardy suggests, will outlive it. 103 00:07:10,820 --> 00:07:14,700 The Froom waters were clear as the pure River of Life 104 00:07:14,860 --> 00:07:19,300 shown to the Evangelist, rapid as the shadow of a cloud, 105 00:07:19,460 --> 00:07:23,500 with pebbly shallows that prattled to the sky all day long. 106 00:07:23,660 --> 00:07:26,060 There the water-flower was the lily... 107 00:07:27,100 --> 00:07:29,060 ..the crow-foot here. 108 00:07:32,100 --> 00:07:35,460 Another element in Hardy's childhood landscape 109 00:07:35,580 --> 00:07:39,820 is visible from the heath. 110 00:07:39,980 --> 00:07:42,820 If you go to the edge of the heath and look south, 111 00:07:42,940 --> 00:07:47,420 you see the valley of the Froom, 112 00:07:47,580 --> 00:07:51,620 along which the railway came in his early youth. 113 00:07:51,780 --> 00:07:54,620 And often, if you go to Higher Bockhampton all the way, 114 00:07:54,780 --> 00:07:57,740 you can still hear the trains from his doorstep. 115 00:07:57,900 --> 00:08:01,780 One of the things about his later life, when he lived at Max Gate - 116 00:08:01,940 --> 00:08:05,140 every weekend he would walk from Max Gate to his childhood home 117 00:08:05,260 --> 00:08:07,180 in order to visit his parents. 118 00:08:07,340 --> 00:08:10,500 And that would take him across the valley of the Froom, 119 00:08:10,660 --> 00:08:16,420 week-by-week, a valley which was, by contrast with the heath, 120 00:08:16,580 --> 00:08:22,140 full of fertile farmland, which might be seen as correlated with 121 00:08:22,300 --> 00:08:25,180 his own sense of success and achievement. 122 00:08:25,340 --> 00:08:29,140 When Hardy, as a child, travelled day-by-day 123 00:08:29,300 --> 00:08:32,620 from his home in Higher Bockhampton into Dorchester, 124 00:08:32,780 --> 00:08:35,340 he wasn't only going from one community to another, 125 00:08:35,460 --> 00:08:37,860 one kind of society to another, 126 00:08:38,020 --> 00:08:40,780 he was, in some ways, going from one period of time to another - 127 00:08:40,940 --> 00:08:45,980 from something that had been the same from time immemorial, 128 00:08:46,140 --> 00:08:50,150 to a world which was changing rapidly around him. 129 00:08:50,150 --> 00:08:50,270 It is as it should be. 130 00:08:50,910 --> 00:08:54,310 Hardy in 1870, whilst still working as an architect, 131 00:08:54,470 --> 00:08:57,430 met his first wife Emma whilst restoring St Juliot - 132 00:08:57,590 --> 00:09:00,710 the parish church of St Juliot near Boscastle, Cornwall. 133 00:09:04,670 --> 00:09:08,950 O the opal and the sapphire of that wandering western sea... 134 00:09:10,030 --> 00:09:14,310 ..And the woman riding high above with bright hair flapping free... 135 00:09:15,550 --> 00:09:19,950 ..The woman whom I loved so, and who loyally loved me. 136 00:09:21,190 --> 00:09:24,230 There she is, she has her little horse. 137 00:09:24,390 --> 00:09:30,150 And she rides wildly along the cliff edges, seeming extremely independent 138 00:09:30,270 --> 00:09:33,030 and adventurous and dashing. 139 00:09:33,190 --> 00:09:35,950 And he falls immediately in love with her. 140 00:09:37,910 --> 00:09:39,990 The woman he falls in love with, Emma, 141 00:09:40,190 --> 00:09:42,990 he falls in love with her genuinely and profoundly... 142 00:09:44,070 --> 00:09:47,030 ..and one of the things which draws them together 143 00:09:47,150 --> 00:09:49,670 is a shared love of literature, 144 00:09:49,830 --> 00:09:54,030 and of the belief in Hardy as a writer, 145 00:09:54,190 --> 00:09:56,870 which his family, as I say, didn't really share. 146 00:09:57,030 --> 00:10:01,150 And she supported him as an aspiring writer right from the beginning. 147 00:10:01,310 --> 00:10:03,190 She writes out his manuscripts for him, 148 00:10:03,350 --> 00:10:07,430 she becomes his secretarial help, she collaborates with him 149 00:10:07,590 --> 00:10:10,870 in his programme of self-education and reading, 150 00:10:11,030 --> 00:10:16,470 which he undertook in the 1870s in his late 30s. 151 00:10:16,630 --> 00:10:21,190 Quite late on, she still feels that she should, and can, 152 00:10:21,310 --> 00:10:23,990 be his helpmate as a writer. 153 00:10:25,990 --> 00:10:29,670 For a while, it was very happy, and they had that wonderful two years 154 00:10:29,830 --> 00:10:33,350 in Sturminster Newton when he wrote The Return Of The Native, 155 00:10:33,510 --> 00:10:35,950 which was, I think, one of his best novels. 156 00:10:38,070 --> 00:10:41,270 And they had this lovely house looking out over the Blackmoor Vale 157 00:10:41,390 --> 00:10:43,310 at the edge of the town. 158 00:10:47,510 --> 00:10:51,110 His writing career takes him away from her into quite a... 159 00:10:51,270 --> 00:10:56,110 masculine world of, you know, clubs and fellow authors 160 00:10:56,230 --> 00:10:58,150 from which she's excluded. 161 00:10:58,310 --> 00:11:01,870 And I think that that exclusion from his writing world 162 00:11:02,030 --> 00:11:04,990 became a source of great hostility and resentment, 163 00:11:05,150 --> 00:11:09,710 and a sense of unfair exclusion on her side. 164 00:11:09,870 --> 00:11:13,070 The sale of Henchard's wife in The Mayor Of Casterbridge 165 00:11:13,230 --> 00:11:16,870 may express more than a little of Hardy's frustration with Emma. 166 00:11:17,030 --> 00:11:19,750 I'll sell her for five guineas to any man that'll pay me the money 167 00:11:19,870 --> 00:11:21,710 and treat her well. 168 00:11:21,870 --> 00:11:24,550 And he shall have her for ever, and never hear aught o' me. 169 00:11:24,710 --> 00:11:28,830 Now, then, five guineas, she's yours. Susan, you agree? 170 00:11:30,470 --> 00:11:33,390 Aye. Five guineas, or she'll be withdrawn. 171 00:11:34,510 --> 00:11:36,310 Anybody? 172 00:11:37,990 --> 00:11:41,190 The last time. Yes or no? 173 00:11:47,390 --> 00:11:48,870 MAN: Yes. 174 00:11:50,710 --> 00:11:53,390 You say you do? I say so. 175 00:11:54,470 --> 00:11:58,230 Saying one thing, paying's another. Where's the money? 176 00:11:58,390 --> 00:12:00,590 Hardy writes like no other novelist - 177 00:12:00,750 --> 00:12:03,870 there's a real ease about the writing, and he surprises us. 178 00:12:04,030 --> 00:12:07,790 He'll give us a moment of beauty, of illumination or joy, 179 00:12:07,950 --> 00:12:10,310 and there's so much in a single phrase. 180 00:12:10,470 --> 00:12:13,430 For example, in The Mayor Of Casterbridge he talks about 181 00:12:13,590 --> 00:12:16,430 those households whose crime it was to be poor. 182 00:12:16,550 --> 00:12:19,190 What he's doing there is refuting 183 00:12:19,350 --> 00:12:23,750 the idea that need or poverty was somehow a crime, 184 00:12:23,910 --> 00:12:27,990 the criminalisation of poverty that was happening at the time. 185 00:12:28,110 --> 00:12:30,150 ANNA: Emma Hardy wrote that Hardy 186 00:12:30,350 --> 00:12:34,350 'only understands the women he invents - the others not at all. 187 00:12:34,510 --> 00:12:37,070 With these extraordinary creatures, and particularly 188 00:12:37,230 --> 00:12:39,710 in the case of Tess, he was in love.' 189 00:12:39,870 --> 00:12:43,230 Emma Hardy wrote both of her husband, and husbands in general, 190 00:12:43,390 --> 00:12:48,150 to expect neither gratitude nor attentions, love nor justice. 191 00:12:48,310 --> 00:12:50,470 Of course, she wanted to be a writer herself. 192 00:12:50,630 --> 00:12:54,390 And she was hurt when Hardy stopped showing her the books 193 00:12:54,550 --> 00:12:57,710 and showed them to other people to read - understandably. 194 00:12:59,030 --> 00:13:02,110 He did treat her badly, he did. 195 00:13:02,270 --> 00:13:07,710 And her reaction to Jude The Obscure was extremely hostile. 196 00:13:07,870 --> 00:13:12,630 Because she felt that in it, he was attacking not just the church, 197 00:13:12,790 --> 00:13:15,910 but his wife, who was very religious. 198 00:13:16,070 --> 00:13:20,430 So that... She also noticed that inside Jude, 199 00:13:20,590 --> 00:13:24,470 there's a representation of Florence Henniker, 200 00:13:24,630 --> 00:13:30,030 an aspiring and successful author who was well-born, 201 00:13:30,190 --> 00:13:35,190 and with whom Hardy had been conducting a platonic liaison - 202 00:13:35,350 --> 00:13:40,390 a friendship which was also under the mask of friendship, 203 00:13:40,550 --> 00:13:44,110 for Hardy at least, filled with sexual desire. 204 00:13:44,270 --> 00:13:48,870 He was a man with a very powerful sexual drive, 205 00:13:49,030 --> 00:13:54,790 and there is no evidence that those flirtations, 206 00:13:54,950 --> 00:14:00,470 those quasi-affairs that he embarked on, 207 00:14:00,590 --> 00:14:05,590 ever resulted in sexual relations. 208 00:14:05,750 --> 00:14:10,710 So there was always that element of being thwarted 209 00:14:10,870 --> 00:14:15,990 alongside enjoying those new opportunities. 210 00:14:16,150 --> 00:14:20,830 Some of those relations were, or might have been, 211 00:14:20,950 --> 00:14:24,070 a real threat to the marriage. 212 00:14:24,230 --> 00:14:28,430 The relation with Florence Henniker would probably be 213 00:14:28,590 --> 00:14:32,350 the most powerful example of an infatuation 214 00:14:32,510 --> 00:14:36,070 that could very readily have become something else. 215 00:14:36,190 --> 00:14:38,630 He did fall in love with her. 216 00:14:38,790 --> 00:14:43,430 She did, apparently, encourage him because she liked flirting with him. 217 00:14:43,590 --> 00:14:47,070 But then he thought she would become his mistress, 218 00:14:47,230 --> 00:14:49,830 and she absolutely made it clear that she wouldn't. 219 00:14:49,990 --> 00:14:53,190 They retained a real friendship to the end, 220 00:14:53,350 --> 00:14:57,830 and she was an interesting, very interesting, and lively woman. 221 00:14:59,870 --> 00:15:03,390 SAM: 'I've been offended with you for some time for what you said, 222 00:15:03,510 --> 00:15:05,910 that I was an advocate of free love. 223 00:15:06,990 --> 00:15:09,510 I hold no theory whatever on the subject 224 00:15:09,670 --> 00:15:13,190 except by way of experimental remarks at tea parties. 225 00:15:13,350 --> 00:15:16,350 And seriously, I don't see any possible scheme 226 00:15:16,510 --> 00:15:19,750 for the union of the sexes that would be satisfactory.' 227 00:15:24,350 --> 00:15:28,430 But what happened was that Emma saw that in Sue Bridehead, 228 00:15:28,590 --> 00:15:31,270 he was presenting of idealised picture of Florence Henniker, 229 00:15:31,430 --> 00:15:34,630 somebody who Hardy was attached to, and she knew he was, 230 00:15:34,790 --> 00:15:38,910 and realised he was actually not only attacking 231 00:15:39,030 --> 00:15:40,950 lots of the things she loved, 232 00:15:41,110 --> 00:15:44,830 but was now writing not for her but for Florence. 233 00:15:46,110 --> 00:15:49,150 There is a sense in which Hardy, perhaps as compensation 234 00:15:49,310 --> 00:15:52,790 for his inner losses, possesses the characters in his novels. 235 00:15:52,950 --> 00:15:56,190 The novels depict intense relationships with women, 236 00:15:56,350 --> 00:15:59,750 though in his actual life, none led to any meaningful physical 237 00:15:59,910 --> 00:16:03,910 or sexual outcomes. In the novels, there is intense sexual observation 238 00:16:04,030 --> 00:16:06,230 and continuous physical attraction. 239 00:16:06,390 --> 00:16:08,790 There is more than a hint of voyeurism and identification 240 00:16:08,910 --> 00:16:10,910 in his depiction of women. 241 00:16:11,070 --> 00:16:15,150 Throughout his life, Hardy desired close contact with beautiful women. 242 00:16:15,310 --> 00:16:18,270 He was rebuffed by many of the women he greatly admired. 243 00:16:19,390 --> 00:16:21,350 You love not me, 244 00:16:21,510 --> 00:16:23,510 And love alone can lend you loyalty... 245 00:16:24,590 --> 00:16:27,430 ..I know and knew it. But, unto the store 246 00:16:27,590 --> 00:16:29,990 Of human deeds divine in all but name, 247 00:16:30,150 --> 00:16:33,110 Was it not worth a little hour or more 248 00:16:33,270 --> 00:16:36,670 To add yet this: Once you, a woman, came 249 00:16:36,830 --> 00:16:41,150 To soothe a time-torn man; even though it be 250 00:16:41,270 --> 00:16:43,190 You love not me? 251 00:16:44,710 --> 00:16:47,430 For himself, he asked once, mournfully, 252 00:16:47,550 --> 00:16:49,670 'Who marries these beautiful women? 253 00:16:50,830 --> 00:16:52,990 Alas, not Thomas Hardy.' 254 00:16:54,230 --> 00:16:57,950 As a novelist, he wrote, 'If the true artist ever weeps, 255 00:16:58,110 --> 00:17:01,030 it probably is when he first discovers the fearful price 256 00:17:01,190 --> 00:17:04,790 he has to pay for the privilege of writing in the English language.' 257 00:17:06,350 --> 00:17:08,310 Oh. 258 00:17:08,430 --> 00:17:10,790 (STAMMERS) 259 00:17:10,910 --> 00:17:12,910 Finish thanking me in a day or two. 260 00:17:15,390 --> 00:17:17,430 Laban Tall, will you stay with us? 261 00:17:17,590 --> 00:17:20,630 You, or anyone else who pays me well, ma'am. The man must live. 262 00:17:20,790 --> 00:17:23,870 Bathsheba says, 'I'm going to astonish you all.' 263 00:17:24,030 --> 00:17:27,710 She says, 'If you serve me well, so shall I serve you.' 264 00:17:27,870 --> 00:17:30,670 But she also says it is very difficult for a woman 265 00:17:30,830 --> 00:17:35,390 to define her feelings in a language which is chiefly made by men 266 00:17:35,510 --> 00:17:37,470 to express theirs. 267 00:17:37,630 --> 00:17:41,190 He took you by force. I was compelled. 268 00:17:41,350 --> 00:17:43,350 You said it was against your wishes. It was. 269 00:17:44,430 --> 00:17:47,070 I was young and confused. And he seduced you? 270 00:17:47,230 --> 00:17:50,830 I didn't understand. You allowed yourself to be seduced. 271 00:17:50,990 --> 00:17:53,270 I felt beholden to him for the help he had given to my family. 272 00:17:53,430 --> 00:17:56,390 And your virtue was his reward, his payment? No! 273 00:17:56,550 --> 00:17:58,470 Why are you twisting my words like this? 274 00:17:58,590 --> 00:18:01,470 It wasn't like that. Not at all. 275 00:18:01,630 --> 00:18:04,790 Hardy, titled...subtitled Tess Of The D'Urbervilles 'A Pure Woman', 276 00:18:04,950 --> 00:18:08,030 not least because he was describing a fallen woman, 277 00:18:08,190 --> 00:18:10,270 and he wanted to make a very powerful point 278 00:18:10,430 --> 00:18:15,270 about the purity of people who are viewed as impure. 279 00:18:15,430 --> 00:18:20,070 Tess is kind of a polemic against self-righteousness 280 00:18:20,190 --> 00:18:22,630 and against the taboo on chastity. 281 00:18:22,790 --> 00:18:26,270 Angel, please, say you forgive me, as I have forgiven. 282 00:18:27,510 --> 00:18:29,470 I forgive you. 283 00:18:29,630 --> 00:18:33,030 Hardy has a succession of relationships, 284 00:18:33,190 --> 00:18:38,110 putative relationships with younger women in the course of his 50s. 285 00:18:38,230 --> 00:18:41,510 And then when he's about 65, 286 00:18:41,670 --> 00:18:45,510 he is approached by another aspiring writer... 287 00:18:47,110 --> 00:18:50,870 ..Florence Dugdale, and she becomes a friend. 288 00:18:50,990 --> 00:18:53,230 She comes to visit Max Gate. 289 00:18:53,350 --> 00:18:55,590 She becomes known to Emma. 290 00:18:55,710 --> 00:18:59,990 And...the relationship between them 291 00:19:00,110 --> 00:19:03,270 seems to have been... 292 00:19:03,430 --> 00:19:07,630 almost accepted by Emma at some point. 293 00:19:07,790 --> 00:19:10,830 And it was certainly known to the family, which was quite different 294 00:19:10,990 --> 00:19:13,950 from the relationships that Hardy pursued with Henniker. 295 00:19:14,110 --> 00:19:16,950 Though Henniker became a friend of Emma and Hardy, 296 00:19:17,110 --> 00:19:22,870 this new person, Florence, went on holiday with Hardy, 297 00:19:23,950 --> 00:19:26,390 and also with Hardy's brother. 298 00:19:26,550 --> 00:19:31,790 So, there's a sense that she's being incorporated into the Hardy network 299 00:19:31,950 --> 00:19:33,870 in a way which had never happened before. 300 00:19:34,030 --> 00:19:37,790 And this is happening in the last years of Emma's life... 301 00:19:37,950 --> 00:19:42,310 over quite a protracted period of time. 302 00:19:42,470 --> 00:19:44,750 The relationship lasts much longer than had been the case 303 00:19:44,870 --> 00:19:47,270 with any of the previous ones. 304 00:19:47,430 --> 00:19:52,390 Emma's relationship to it is initially, I think, quite accepting, 305 00:19:52,550 --> 00:19:55,310 but then she becomes suspicious, and there's kind of... 306 00:19:55,470 --> 00:19:58,470 there's ructions, and she tries to both... 307 00:19:58,630 --> 00:20:02,990 suborn or kind of take over Florence. 308 00:20:03,150 --> 00:20:06,830 Then when Florence won't play, she just gets very hostile. 309 00:20:06,990 --> 00:20:09,830 So there's quite a lot of argy-bargy going on there, 310 00:20:09,990 --> 00:20:13,790 and you sense that that indicates that she knew something was up. 311 00:20:13,950 --> 00:20:16,670 As far as we know, the relationships that Hardy had, 312 00:20:16,830 --> 00:20:20,390 the flirtatious relationships with literary ladies in his 50s 313 00:20:20,510 --> 00:20:23,190 never became sexual. 314 00:20:24,390 --> 00:20:27,830 Whereas with Florence Dugdale, whom he met in his 60s, 315 00:20:27,990 --> 00:20:30,710 and who was at the time in her late 20s, 316 00:20:30,870 --> 00:20:34,590 it seems fairly likely that they became sexually intimate 317 00:20:34,750 --> 00:20:38,070 before Emma died, and that certainly when they were married, 318 00:20:38,230 --> 00:20:40,110 it was a sexually passionate relationship. 319 00:20:40,270 --> 00:20:46,030 And I think...partly because of Jude, partly because of Florence, 320 00:20:46,190 --> 00:20:51,870 partly because of her illness, the marriage... 321 00:20:52,030 --> 00:20:56,630 pretty much disintegrated entirely, I would say, in the last ten years. 322 00:20:56,790 --> 00:21:01,550 There was an emptiness in her life, and emptiness breeds resentment. 323 00:21:01,670 --> 00:21:04,630 It breeds bitterness. 324 00:21:04,790 --> 00:21:09,070 Hardy had withdrawn into his writing. 325 00:21:09,190 --> 00:21:14,990 She withdrew into those attic rooms 326 00:21:15,110 --> 00:21:18,350 that, in the end, 327 00:21:18,510 --> 00:21:23,830 became where she led a sort of alternative life. 328 00:21:23,990 --> 00:21:28,310 And Emma became isolated and unhappy 329 00:21:28,430 --> 00:21:30,910 and angry in her own way. 330 00:21:31,070 --> 00:21:34,310 So there was a lot of anger boiling in Max Gate 331 00:21:34,470 --> 00:21:40,230 beneath that respectable routine that everyone describes. 332 00:21:40,390 --> 00:21:45,550 And then in the summer of 1912, she started to go into a decline, 333 00:21:45,710 --> 00:21:49,430 Hardy didn't really take much notice, I think, initially... 334 00:21:50,510 --> 00:21:54,590 ..and then, actually quite suddenly really, she died in November. 335 00:21:54,710 --> 00:21:56,830 And that seems... 336 00:21:56,990 --> 00:22:00,110 it seems to me unsurprising that he was taken by surprise - 337 00:22:00,270 --> 00:22:02,270 partly because they weren't very close, 338 00:22:02,430 --> 00:22:04,950 but also because she died quite suddenly, really. 339 00:22:06,190 --> 00:22:08,470 SAM: Why did you give no hint that night 340 00:22:08,590 --> 00:22:11,470 That quickly after the morrow's dawn, 341 00:22:11,590 --> 00:22:14,750 And calmly, as if indifferent quite, 342 00:22:14,910 --> 00:22:18,550 You would close your term here, up and be gone 343 00:22:18,670 --> 00:22:20,590 Where I could not follow... 344 00:22:22,430 --> 00:22:25,830 Emma's death in 1912 had a traumatic effect on him. 345 00:22:25,990 --> 00:22:28,590 And after her death, Hardy made a trip to Cornwall 346 00:22:28,750 --> 00:22:31,190 to revisit places linked with their courtship. 347 00:22:32,270 --> 00:22:36,030 The poems, particularly those written between 1912 and 1913 348 00:22:36,190 --> 00:22:38,910 and subsequently, reflect upon her death. 349 00:22:40,030 --> 00:22:42,550 And as he planted never a rose 350 00:22:42,670 --> 00:22:44,830 That bears the flower of love, 351 00:22:44,950 --> 00:22:47,590 Though other flowers throve 352 00:22:47,750 --> 00:22:51,590 Some heart-bane moved our souls to sever 353 00:22:51,710 --> 00:22:55,270 Since he had planted never a rose... 354 00:22:57,110 --> 00:23:00,870 The marriage wasn't happy in the long term, 355 00:23:01,030 --> 00:23:03,670 though I've never subscribed to the belief 356 00:23:03,830 --> 00:23:08,390 that it was an entire failure, even in those later years. 357 00:23:08,550 --> 00:23:11,630 I think that there was a mutual dependence, 358 00:23:11,790 --> 00:23:16,030 a strong bond between the two people, which, of course, 359 00:23:16,190 --> 00:23:20,510 then emerged with real creative drama 360 00:23:20,630 --> 00:23:23,630 after Emma's death in 1912, 361 00:23:23,790 --> 00:23:28,110 and the great flowering of Hardy's work as a poet. 362 00:23:28,230 --> 00:23:31,430 But his best poems, which he wrote - 363 00:23:31,590 --> 00:23:37,350 and he describes how he had to write them - are about Emma. 364 00:23:37,470 --> 00:23:39,670 And they are Emma. 365 00:23:39,790 --> 00:23:42,550 And it's a rare tribute, I think, 366 00:23:42,710 --> 00:23:45,230 for a writer to leave something like that. 367 00:23:47,150 --> 00:23:50,630 Why did Heaven warrant, in its whim, 368 00:23:50,750 --> 00:23:53,470 A twain mismated should bedim 369 00:23:53,590 --> 00:23:55,990 The courts of their encompassment, 370 00:23:56,110 --> 00:23:59,150 With bleeding loves and discontent! 371 00:24:00,390 --> 00:24:06,190 What if still in chasmal beauty looms that wild weird western shore, 372 00:24:06,350 --> 00:24:11,110 The woman now is - elsewhere - whom the ambling pony bore... 373 00:24:12,190 --> 00:24:16,550 ..And nor knows nor cares for Beeny, and will laugh there never more. 374 00:24:25,180 --> 00:24:28,460 Beautiful city, so venerable, so lovely, 375 00:24:28,620 --> 00:24:32,260 so unravaged by the fierce intellectual life of our century. 376 00:24:32,420 --> 00:24:36,900 So serene, her ineffable charm keeps ever calling us 377 00:24:37,020 --> 00:24:39,060 to the true goal of all of us - 378 00:24:39,180 --> 00:24:41,740 to the ideal, to perfection. 379 00:24:42,900 --> 00:24:47,420 Only a wall divided him from those happy young contemporaries of his 380 00:24:47,580 --> 00:24:50,660 with whom who he shared a common mental life - 381 00:24:50,820 --> 00:24:54,340 men who had nothing to do from morning till night but to read, 382 00:24:54,460 --> 00:24:58,420 mark, learn, and inwardly digest. 383 00:24:58,540 --> 00:25:01,900 Only a wall - but what a wall! 384 00:25:05,220 --> 00:25:09,700 Hardy faced huge social prejudice because of his radical views. 385 00:25:09,860 --> 00:25:13,940 The rejection by some of the public of Jude The Obscure 386 00:25:14,100 --> 00:25:18,460 was an example of this, and it was a senseless reception 387 00:25:18,620 --> 00:25:22,500 because it was a senseless misunderstanding 388 00:25:22,660 --> 00:25:25,540 as far as Hardy could see, because what he had written 389 00:25:25,700 --> 00:25:29,460 was a moral story about a man who could not go to Oxford, 390 00:25:29,620 --> 00:25:33,260 who was elbowed off the pavement by millionaire's sons. 391 00:25:33,420 --> 00:25:38,220 Hardy's final completed novel, Jude The Obscure, seems to be, 392 00:25:38,380 --> 00:25:43,500 at one level, a...very thoroughgoing assault 393 00:25:43,660 --> 00:25:47,340 on the oppressive forces within his society. 394 00:25:47,460 --> 00:25:49,700 Whether that's forces of class, 395 00:25:49,860 --> 00:25:53,220 an education system which is biased in favour of, you know, 396 00:25:53,380 --> 00:25:58,420 the elites, the closing off of all sorts of routes to fulfilment 397 00:25:58,540 --> 00:26:01,620 by class interest. 398 00:26:01,740 --> 00:26:04,580 The way in which gender relations 399 00:26:04,740 --> 00:26:08,060 are similarly oppressive and unequal. 400 00:26:08,220 --> 00:26:14,020 The way in which religion confines people within highly normalising 401 00:26:14,180 --> 00:26:19,180 and restrictive roles at the expense of love. 402 00:26:20,260 --> 00:26:24,740 So, it does all of these things, and it seems no surprise, I think, 403 00:26:24,900 --> 00:26:28,340 that the book receives such hostility from its community 404 00:26:28,500 --> 00:26:33,500 because it was assaulting all sorts of sacred cows of Hardy's day. 405 00:26:33,660 --> 00:26:36,820 At the same time, Hardy seems to think that what's going on 406 00:26:36,980 --> 00:26:42,740 in that particular moment of 1890s Britain is not so unusual. 407 00:26:42,900 --> 00:26:47,580 This is, in a way, the nature of human experience - 408 00:26:47,740 --> 00:26:51,700 that we're caught between aspiration and possibility. 409 00:26:51,860 --> 00:26:57,140 What we seek to achieve is thwarted by forces beyond our control... 410 00:26:58,500 --> 00:27:02,380 ..which can be identified, 411 00:27:02,540 --> 00:27:05,020 and whose injustice can be anatomised 412 00:27:05,140 --> 00:27:07,620 but can't necessarily be removed. 413 00:27:07,780 --> 00:27:11,140 One reviewer said that that is the voice of the working class 414 00:27:11,300 --> 00:27:14,740 speaking more distinctly than ever before in literature, 415 00:27:14,900 --> 00:27:19,260 and that there is no other novelist alive with this breadth of sympathy. 416 00:27:20,940 --> 00:27:24,900 Hardy wrote in his final, desolate novel, Jude The Obscure... 417 00:27:26,140 --> 00:27:29,020 ..'Then another silence, till she was seized with another 418 00:27:29,140 --> 00:27:31,060 uncontrollable fit of grief. 419 00:27:32,820 --> 00:27:35,740 "There is something external to us which says, 'You shan't!' 420 00:27:35,860 --> 00:27:38,500 First it said, 'You shan't learn!' 421 00:27:38,660 --> 00:27:43,260 Then it said, 'You shan't labour!' Now it says, 'You shan't love!'" 422 00:27:43,420 --> 00:27:47,660 He tried to soothe her by saying, "That's bitter of you, darling." 423 00:27:47,780 --> 00:27:49,700 "But it's true!"' 424 00:27:52,340 --> 00:27:55,820 Dominated by a sense of being between classes, 425 00:27:55,980 --> 00:27:59,020 he loved London society, yet never felt part of it. 426 00:28:00,220 --> 00:28:03,860 Neglectful of his first wife, dominated by a troubled inner life, 427 00:28:04,020 --> 00:28:08,060 this public man lived in what is called a malignant universe. 428 00:28:09,140 --> 00:28:11,420 Hardy, like the prophet Job in the Old Testament, 429 00:28:11,580 --> 00:28:14,700 challenged the cruelty of the God he no longer believed in. 430 00:28:14,860 --> 00:28:17,700 He found the cruelty of the world unbearable. 431 00:28:18,900 --> 00:28:21,980 Bishops were to burn his books, and his views, 432 00:28:22,180 --> 00:28:24,660 particularly his views on the destructive effects of religion, 433 00:28:24,820 --> 00:28:27,780 were to turn his first wife, Emma, against him. 434 00:28:27,940 --> 00:28:31,060 And then, finally, to force Hardy himself to forsake the novel 435 00:28:31,220 --> 00:28:33,820 and return to the poetry he had always loved more. 436 00:28:35,260 --> 00:28:37,620 But deep in his inner self, 437 00:28:37,780 --> 00:28:40,700 Thomas Hardy remained that raging, wounded self 438 00:28:40,860 --> 00:28:43,580 who chastised the values of the world he inhabited. 439 00:28:50,180 --> 00:28:53,580 After Emma's lonely death in the attic of Max Gate, 440 00:28:53,740 --> 00:28:56,620 Hardy suddenly fell in love again with the wife 441 00:28:56,780 --> 00:28:59,900 he had ignored and neglected for so much of their marriage. 442 00:29:00,060 --> 00:29:03,740 He kept Emma's coffin at the end of his bed for three days. 443 00:29:04,980 --> 00:29:09,220 He sought to possess her as he had done with his great heroines. 444 00:29:10,300 --> 00:29:13,060 Hardy was to write no more about other women. 445 00:29:14,260 --> 00:29:17,220 He remembered his own past through an outpouring of passion 446 00:29:17,340 --> 00:29:19,620 and wonderful poetry. 447 00:29:19,780 --> 00:29:23,100 So, after her death, the poems he initially wrote 448 00:29:23,260 --> 00:29:27,980 were full of praise and celebration of the love that they'd enjoyed 449 00:29:28,100 --> 00:29:30,100 as a young couple. 450 00:29:30,220 --> 00:29:32,580 In years defaced and lost, 451 00:29:32,700 --> 00:29:35,900 Two sat here, transport-tossed, 452 00:29:36,020 --> 00:29:37,940 Lit by a living love 453 00:29:38,060 --> 00:29:40,100 The wilted world knew nothing of... 454 00:29:41,140 --> 00:29:43,100 'O not again 455 00:29:43,220 --> 00:29:45,300 Till Earth outwears 456 00:29:45,420 --> 00:29:47,340 Shall love like theirs 457 00:29:47,460 --> 00:29:49,380 Suffuse this glen!' 458 00:29:50,460 --> 00:29:52,900 What is also interesting, however, is that... 459 00:29:53,060 --> 00:29:55,300 subsequently to that, he writes a number of poems 460 00:29:55,460 --> 00:30:01,220 in which he acknowledges the cruelty that started to arise between them, 461 00:30:01,380 --> 00:30:04,300 and cruelties which he himself perpetrated. 462 00:30:04,460 --> 00:30:07,060 And this is something - a side of him which... 463 00:30:08,140 --> 00:30:10,220 ..does seem remarkable in the extent 464 00:30:10,380 --> 00:30:12,540 to which he's willing to acknowledge remorse... 465 00:30:12,700 --> 00:30:16,580 ADRIAN: Now I am dead you sing to me The songs we used to know, 466 00:30:16,740 --> 00:30:20,700 But while I lived you had no wish Or care for doing so. 467 00:30:21,780 --> 00:30:24,940 Now I am dead you come to me In the moonlight, comfortless; 468 00:30:25,100 --> 00:30:29,820 Ah, what would I have given alive To win such tenderness! 469 00:30:29,980 --> 00:30:34,140 ..but also seems to correlate with, and to be based in, 470 00:30:34,300 --> 00:30:38,380 acts of genuine cruelty, which he performed. 471 00:30:38,500 --> 00:30:40,460 It was but a little thing, 472 00:30:40,580 --> 00:30:42,660 Yet I knew it meant to me 473 00:30:42,780 --> 00:30:45,420 Ease from what had given a sting... 474 00:30:45,540 --> 00:30:47,620 But I would not welcome it; 475 00:30:47,740 --> 00:30:49,660 And for all I then declined... 476 00:30:50,700 --> 00:30:52,820 ..O the regrettings infinite 477 00:30:52,940 --> 00:30:55,180 When the night-processions flit 478 00:30:55,300 --> 00:30:57,220 Through the mind! 479 00:30:57,380 --> 00:30:59,980 For example, in the early 20th century, 480 00:31:00,100 --> 00:31:02,260 he was awarded the Order of Merit. 481 00:31:02,420 --> 00:31:06,860 The story goes, and there seems to be some evidence for it, 482 00:31:07,020 --> 00:31:09,900 that he was awarded the Order of Merit instead of a knighthood, 483 00:31:10,060 --> 00:31:11,940 and that he had turned down a knighthood. 484 00:31:12,100 --> 00:31:14,140 And one of his reasons for turning down a knighthood 485 00:31:14,300 --> 00:31:16,740 was that Emma would have been honoured by it - 486 00:31:16,900 --> 00:31:21,700 she would have been made a Lady, and he had no truck with that. 487 00:31:21,860 --> 00:31:26,020 So that his behaviour towards her was, 488 00:31:26,180 --> 00:31:28,860 as he became increasingly aware after her death - 489 00:31:29,020 --> 00:31:31,020 and perhaps aware only after her death - 490 00:31:31,180 --> 00:31:33,740 his behaviour towards her had been, in many ways, 491 00:31:33,860 --> 00:31:36,100 reprehensible and cruel and harsh. 492 00:31:36,260 --> 00:31:41,220 Had you wept; had you but neared me with a frail uncertain ray, 493 00:31:41,380 --> 00:31:46,180 Dewy as the face of the dawn, in your large and luminous eye, 494 00:31:46,340 --> 00:31:51,580 Then would have come back all the joys the tidings had slain that day, 495 00:31:51,740 --> 00:31:54,660 And a new beginning, a fresh fair heaven, 496 00:31:54,780 --> 00:31:57,900 have smoothed the things awry. 497 00:31:58,020 --> 00:31:59,940 What he then writes, though, 498 00:32:00,100 --> 00:32:04,460 are a number of other poems in that same volume of 1914, 499 00:32:04,580 --> 00:32:06,580 and then in his subsequent volumes, 500 00:32:06,740 --> 00:32:12,500 in which the more difficult side of this experience come to the surface, 501 00:32:12,660 --> 00:32:17,780 poems in which he asks himself what went wrong - why did it go wrong? 502 00:32:17,900 --> 00:32:20,140 What did I do that made it go wrong? 503 00:32:21,220 --> 00:32:24,380 What kind of torture did I inflict on this woman 504 00:32:24,500 --> 00:32:26,940 in the course of our married life? 505 00:32:27,100 --> 00:32:29,660 Unwittingly, perhaps, unconsciously, not deliberately, 506 00:32:29,820 --> 00:32:35,380 but nonetheless, actually. And to what extent, actually, 507 00:32:35,540 --> 00:32:38,060 in ways that I don't necessarily want to acknowledge, 508 00:32:38,220 --> 00:32:40,660 to what extent was she responsible for this? 509 00:32:40,820 --> 00:32:46,140 'I wounded one who's there, and now know well I wounded her; 510 00:32:46,300 --> 00:32:50,820 But, ah, she does not know that she wounded me!' 511 00:32:51,860 --> 00:32:53,740 And not an air stirred... 512 00:32:54,820 --> 00:33:00,140 ..Nor a bill of any bird, and no response accorded she. 513 00:33:00,300 --> 00:33:03,260 So there are really remarkable poems in those later volumes, 514 00:33:03,420 --> 00:33:06,420 in which all those really difficult questions 515 00:33:06,580 --> 00:33:10,540 when you look back at a failed or unsuccessful relationship, 516 00:33:10,700 --> 00:33:13,140 those questions are allowed to come to the surface. 517 00:33:13,300 --> 00:33:17,340 So, it seems to me that the experience of... 518 00:33:17,500 --> 00:33:20,100 I mean, I think he was a great poet before Emma died, 519 00:33:20,260 --> 00:33:24,900 but I think that the experience of her death produced in him, 520 00:33:25,060 --> 00:33:30,820 in some ways, both one of the most successful and profound moments 521 00:33:30,940 --> 00:33:34,220 of conventional elegy in 1912-1913. 522 00:33:34,380 --> 00:33:39,420 And then a succession of poems which are acutely difficult 523 00:33:39,540 --> 00:33:41,580 in their emotional register... 524 00:33:43,020 --> 00:33:45,300 SAM: O the doom by someone spoken - 525 00:33:45,460 --> 00:33:47,660 Who shall unseal the years, the years! - 526 00:33:47,780 --> 00:33:50,020 O the doom that gave no token, 527 00:33:50,140 --> 00:33:52,100 When nothing of bale saw we... 528 00:33:54,100 --> 00:33:57,380 ADRIAN ..O the doom by someone spoken, 529 00:33:57,500 --> 00:34:00,780 O the heart by someone broken, 530 00:34:00,940 --> 00:34:06,700 The heart whose sweet reverberances are all time leaves to me. 531 00:34:08,300 --> 00:34:14,100 ..and profoundly insightful, and also self-critical, actually. 532 00:34:16,180 --> 00:34:20,620 He won't let go of the sense that...he was at fault, 533 00:34:20,780 --> 00:34:24,580 that she was at fault. Why can it not be rectified? 534 00:34:24,740 --> 00:34:27,540 Why didn't they rectify it while they had the chance? 535 00:34:28,580 --> 00:34:30,900 What stopped him? What stopped them? 536 00:34:31,060 --> 00:34:33,220 And those, I think, are really great poems. 537 00:34:34,740 --> 00:34:39,820 SAM: Woman much missed, how you call to me, call to me, 538 00:34:39,980 --> 00:34:43,260 Saying that now you are not as you were 539 00:34:43,420 --> 00:34:46,740 When you had changed from the one who was all to me, 540 00:34:46,900 --> 00:34:50,070 But as at first, when our day was fair. 541 00:34:50,070 --> 00:34:50,190 It is as it should be. 542 00:34:53,070 --> 00:34:55,670 Thomas Hardy was also a great war poet. 543 00:34:55,790 --> 00:34:57,990 Young Hodge the Drummer never knew - 544 00:34:58,110 --> 00:35:00,750 Fresh from his Wessex home - 545 00:35:00,870 --> 00:35:02,830 The meaning of the broad Karoo, 546 00:35:02,950 --> 00:35:04,910 The Bush, the dusty loam, 547 00:35:05,030 --> 00:35:07,830 And why uprose to nightly view 548 00:35:07,950 --> 00:35:10,510 Strange stars amid the gloam. 549 00:35:10,630 --> 00:35:12,750 Yet portion of that unknown plain 550 00:35:12,870 --> 00:35:14,870 Will Hodge for ever be; 551 00:35:14,990 --> 00:35:17,270 His homely Northern breast and brain 552 00:35:17,390 --> 00:35:19,310 Grow up a Southern tree, 553 00:35:19,430 --> 00:35:22,270 And strange-eyed constellations reign 554 00:35:22,390 --> 00:35:24,510 His stars eternally. 555 00:35:24,670 --> 00:35:28,550 BIRCH: Hardy's sympathies when it came to global conflicts, 556 00:35:28,710 --> 00:35:31,190 international conflicts - war, in short - 557 00:35:31,350 --> 00:35:37,190 were always with the soldier and the sufferings of the soldier. 558 00:35:37,350 --> 00:35:43,110 So, his poem in response to the Boer War, Drummer Hodge, for instance, 559 00:35:43,270 --> 00:35:49,030 is not a grandiose celebration, nor indeed a grandiose elegy. 560 00:35:50,510 --> 00:35:55,070 It's a very simple poem about that homely - 561 00:35:55,190 --> 00:35:57,390 he uses that word, 'homely' - 562 00:35:57,550 --> 00:36:02,510 northern breast that is buried there in South Africa. 563 00:36:02,670 --> 00:36:06,630 And it's that perspective, the perspective of the soldier, 564 00:36:06,790 --> 00:36:12,550 that subsequent soldiers, some of them themselves poets, found moving. 565 00:36:14,150 --> 00:36:16,750 Had he and I but met By some old ancient inn, 566 00:36:16,910 --> 00:36:20,910 We should have sat us down to wet Right many a nipperkin! 567 00:36:21,990 --> 00:36:26,670 But ranged as infantry, And staring face to face, 568 00:36:26,830 --> 00:36:31,350 I shot at him as he at me, And killed him in his place. 569 00:36:32,430 --> 00:36:36,870 Yes; quaint and curious war is! You shoot a fellow down 570 00:36:37,030 --> 00:36:41,230 You'd treat if met where any bar is, Or help to half-a-crown. 571 00:36:41,390 --> 00:36:45,310 The evidence from Hardy's letters and from his poems, 572 00:36:45,470 --> 00:36:48,630 and from his introductions to his post-war poems, 573 00:36:48,790 --> 00:36:52,390 all of that together makes it clear that, for him, 574 00:36:52,550 --> 00:36:57,190 the First World War was... a devastating moment. 575 00:36:57,350 --> 00:37:02,190 Catastrophic in its...in the fact that it happened, really. 576 00:37:02,350 --> 00:37:08,030 Firstly, that the investment he'd made in the idea of human progress, 577 00:37:08,190 --> 00:37:12,910 in civilisation moving forward gradually, incrementally, 578 00:37:13,070 --> 00:37:16,950 but nonetheless steadi... you know, genuinely. 579 00:37:17,110 --> 00:37:20,870 All of that was thrown into question when the First World War broke out 580 00:37:21,030 --> 00:37:26,510 and the nations of Europe went back to their internecine struggles, 581 00:37:26,670 --> 00:37:30,310 but now with, you know, the added bonus of machine guns. 582 00:37:31,430 --> 00:37:34,350 So that part of him retreated from the war completely. 583 00:37:34,470 --> 00:37:39,550 On the other hand, he wrote poems 584 00:37:39,670 --> 00:37:43,190 in support of, and to encourage, 585 00:37:43,350 --> 00:37:46,310 people in their struggles in the war. 586 00:37:46,470 --> 00:37:49,670 He wrote a wonderful poem early on called Men Who March Away. 587 00:37:50,790 --> 00:37:54,830 In our heart of hearts believing Victory crowns the just, 588 00:37:54,990 --> 00:37:58,030 And that braggarts must Surely bite the dust, 589 00:37:58,150 --> 00:38:01,030 Press we to the field ungrieving, 590 00:38:01,190 --> 00:38:04,310 In our heart of hearts believing Victory crowns the just. 591 00:38:05,390 --> 00:38:09,630 And that's very typical of him in the sense that he had of... 592 00:38:10,790 --> 00:38:14,310 ..the value and impressiveness of military heroism, 593 00:38:14,470 --> 00:38:16,910 that's something that runs right across his career. 594 00:38:17,070 --> 00:38:20,390 And at the same time, his sense that, you know, war is hell, 595 00:38:20,550 --> 00:38:24,750 war is horrible, war is just a hideous... 596 00:38:25,830 --> 00:38:30,870 ..you know, intolerable...historical event. 597 00:38:31,990 --> 00:38:37,230 This is an aspect of Hardy which is often muffled by his reception, 598 00:38:37,390 --> 00:38:41,150 by the image he presents himself in life 599 00:38:41,310 --> 00:38:46,470 of the mellow and insightful wise man, 600 00:38:46,590 --> 00:38:49,470 the respectable country gentleman. 601 00:38:49,630 --> 00:38:52,950 With all of those attributes, which are unmistakably present in him, 602 00:38:53,110 --> 00:38:57,910 co-exist with a furious indignation at the injustice of the world. 603 00:38:58,830 --> 00:39:02,470 The death of the children in Jude is, I think, 604 00:39:02,630 --> 00:39:07,030 the most painful episode in Hardy's fiction. 605 00:39:07,190 --> 00:39:09,590 Hardy's long-standing friend Edmund Gosse, 606 00:39:09,750 --> 00:39:15,510 even he found Jude inexplicable in its rage and wrote about it. 607 00:39:16,990 --> 00:39:19,350 I am slightly paraphrasing, 608 00:39:19,510 --> 00:39:21,830 'What has moved Thomas Hardy to stand up in Dorset 609 00:39:21,950 --> 00:39:23,870 and shake his fist at the creator?' 610 00:39:28,670 --> 00:39:31,350 Hardy was, all his life, afraid of being touched. 611 00:39:32,510 --> 00:39:36,430 It is through his eyes that Hardy touches the world. 612 00:39:36,590 --> 00:39:39,110 This may account for the vividness of the visual impressions 613 00:39:39,230 --> 00:39:41,150 he makes in every part of his work. 614 00:39:42,670 --> 00:39:45,870 The sadness surrounding not wanting to be touched is mirrored by 615 00:39:46,030 --> 00:39:49,630 his inability to touch the beautiful women that he desired so much. 616 00:39:51,830 --> 00:39:53,950 Beneath the sense of a great man, 617 00:39:54,110 --> 00:39:57,310 it is impossible not to notice the cross-classing voyeur... 618 00:39:58,590 --> 00:40:02,190 ..the man who, in today's money, made six million pounds - 619 00:40:02,350 --> 00:40:06,670 so much money he was able to turn to poetry without any restriction. 620 00:40:08,110 --> 00:40:10,710 He had had enough of the need for permanent cliffhangers 621 00:40:10,830 --> 00:40:12,750 required in his novel writing. 622 00:40:14,910 --> 00:40:18,270 On his death bed, Hardy himself felt he had achieved everything 623 00:40:18,390 --> 00:40:20,590 he had wanted to achieve in life. 624 00:40:20,710 --> 00:40:23,190 Almost uniquely for a dying man, 625 00:40:23,350 --> 00:40:27,390 Hardy also asked for God's forgiveness, not of himself, 626 00:40:27,550 --> 00:40:31,710 but for the very God himself to be forgiven by Thomas Hardy. 627 00:40:33,990 --> 00:40:36,510 Hardy felt that he was a dead man walking - 628 00:40:36,670 --> 00:40:39,710 he only had life when he could see and feel his own work. 629 00:40:40,990 --> 00:40:44,870 That Elizabeth-Jane Farfrae be not told of my death 630 00:40:44,990 --> 00:40:47,350 or made to grieve on account of me, 631 00:40:47,510 --> 00:40:50,950 and that I be not buried in consecrated ground. 632 00:40:52,030 --> 00:40:54,950 And that no sexton will be asked to toll the bell. 633 00:40:56,030 --> 00:40:59,190 And that nobody is wished to see my dead body, 634 00:40:59,350 --> 00:41:02,910 and that no mourners walk behind me at my funeral. 635 00:41:04,030 --> 00:41:06,630 And that no flowers be planted on my grave... 636 00:41:07,990 --> 00:41:10,390 ..and that no man remember me. 637 00:41:10,510 --> 00:41:12,430 To this I put my name. 638 00:41:16,470 --> 00:41:20,550 One of the things which most annoyed Hardy about the way he was reviewed 639 00:41:20,710 --> 00:41:26,070 was the habit critics had of imposing upon his work 640 00:41:26,230 --> 00:41:29,950 something consistent by way of a philosophy or something systematic. 641 00:41:30,110 --> 00:41:34,830 So, his sense that life is sometimes full of great things 642 00:41:34,990 --> 00:41:38,950 co-exists with his absolutely equivalent sense 643 00:41:39,110 --> 00:41:42,910 that life is often remarkable in its nastiness, 644 00:41:43,070 --> 00:41:45,830 in its injustice, in its cruelty and its pain. 645 00:41:46,870 --> 00:41:50,070 Now all these specimens of man, 646 00:41:50,190 --> 00:41:52,790 So various in their pith and plan, 647 00:41:52,950 --> 00:41:56,430 Curious to say Were one man. Yea, 648 00:41:56,550 --> 00:41:59,150 I was all they. 649 00:41:59,310 --> 00:42:04,070 Hardy was capable of great ruefulness, great wistfulness 650 00:42:04,230 --> 00:42:07,430 and a sense of human loss and tragedy. 651 00:42:07,590 --> 00:42:10,350 But at the same time you notice, and again, 652 00:42:10,510 --> 00:42:14,630 it's something I think which his reputation has somehow hidden, 653 00:42:14,790 --> 00:42:18,390 you can see in his writing, both in prose and poetry, 654 00:42:18,550 --> 00:42:24,310 an enormous capacity to enjoy, to cherish, to welcome life. 655 00:42:24,470 --> 00:42:26,550 There's a wonderful poem called Great Things, 656 00:42:26,670 --> 00:42:30,350 which he publishes as late as 1917, 657 00:42:30,510 --> 00:42:34,630 which says cider is a great thing, dancing is a great thing, 658 00:42:34,790 --> 00:42:37,550 music is a great thing, riding on a horse. 659 00:42:37,710 --> 00:42:41,950 He lists all the sources of ecstatic, excited, 660 00:42:42,110 --> 00:42:44,510 delightful pleasure which he takes in life. 661 00:42:44,670 --> 00:42:47,190 There's another poem he writes in the same volume called... 662 00:42:47,350 --> 00:42:51,510 Lines Written To A Movement In Mozart's E-Flat Symphony, 663 00:42:51,670 --> 00:42:56,390 which again, is all about the way life draws you on, takes you up, 664 00:42:56,550 --> 00:43:00,910 instils in you energy, dynamism, pleasure, delight. 665 00:43:01,070 --> 00:43:05,190 And I think one of the things I most regret about Hardy's reputation 666 00:43:05,350 --> 00:43:08,230 is the extent to which that aspect of him, 667 00:43:08,390 --> 00:43:13,350 that simple and pure and dynamic pleasure 668 00:43:13,510 --> 00:43:17,030 he takes in being alive - how frequently that's been lost. 669 00:43:19,630 --> 00:43:21,910 ADRIAN: Hardy never succumbed to despair 670 00:43:22,070 --> 00:43:24,470 but acknowledged it and interrogated it. 671 00:43:24,590 --> 00:43:27,390 He was not only a dead man walking, 672 00:43:27,550 --> 00:43:32,030 Hardy's greatness as a man allowed him to actually walk beside 673 00:43:32,190 --> 00:43:36,190 his own dead self - the 'corpse-thing I am to-day' - 674 00:43:36,350 --> 00:43:39,270 to have two inner lives, lived together. 675 00:43:40,430 --> 00:43:44,750 Hardy's self-interrogation was undertaken with the same force 676 00:43:44,910 --> 00:43:48,030 with which he had looked so carefully and honestly 677 00:43:48,190 --> 00:43:50,830 at his behaviour towards his wife Emma. 678 00:43:52,310 --> 00:43:55,470 After the First World War, Max Gate, Hardy's home, 679 00:43:55,630 --> 00:44:01,070 became a focus of pilgrimage for many different young writers, 680 00:44:01,230 --> 00:44:03,030 many of them who had fought in the war. 681 00:44:03,190 --> 00:44:08,510 And it's sort of peculiar, they also write great celebratory verses 682 00:44:08,670 --> 00:44:12,390 for his birthday, they kind of revere him, they elevate him. 683 00:44:12,550 --> 00:44:17,990 One wonders why, and it seems to me that the explanation lies in 684 00:44:18,150 --> 00:44:22,230 the extent to which Hardy was able to convey... 685 00:44:23,310 --> 00:44:26,470 ..stability, steadiness under fire, 686 00:44:26,630 --> 00:44:30,070 and also the value of continuing to write 687 00:44:30,230 --> 00:44:32,750 even when the world seems to be falling apart around you. 688 00:44:32,910 --> 00:44:37,270 So, the transformation of Hardy from pariah to establishment figure, 689 00:44:37,430 --> 00:44:41,830 in the latter part of his life, carried on after his death 690 00:44:41,990 --> 00:44:45,710 in the sense that his funeral in 1928 691 00:44:45,830 --> 00:44:49,030 was a civic and national moment, 692 00:44:49,190 --> 00:44:54,910 with politicians - leading politicians - carrying the coffin. 693 00:44:55,070 --> 00:44:59,830 The leading writers of the day assembled around to honour him. 694 00:44:59,950 --> 00:45:02,870 At the same time, however, he was... 695 00:45:05,310 --> 00:45:08,110 ..although he was buried in Westminster Abbey, 696 00:45:08,270 --> 00:45:13,950 his heart was buried right next door to him in Stinsford churchyard. 697 00:45:14,110 --> 00:45:19,550 And his younger sister, Catherine, who outlived him, 698 00:45:19,710 --> 00:45:24,190 wrote about that funeral with touching simplicity, actually, 699 00:45:24,350 --> 00:45:27,590 and said that this was where he really was - 700 00:45:27,750 --> 00:45:32,830 that the civic, the national occasion had seemed to take him over 701 00:45:32,990 --> 00:45:38,750 and consumed him, and made him into this emblem of national achievement. 702 00:45:38,910 --> 00:45:42,670 But for her and, I think, for Hardy himself, 703 00:45:42,790 --> 00:45:45,790 he remained in this place of Dorset 704 00:45:45,950 --> 00:45:48,830 where he'd grown-up and where he'd lived all his life. 705 00:45:51,750 --> 00:45:55,630 Thomas Hardy had lived from 1840 to 1928, 706 00:45:55,790 --> 00:45:57,670 through a period of enormous political, 707 00:45:57,790 --> 00:46:00,070 technical and scientific change. 708 00:46:00,230 --> 00:46:04,110 He had supported women's suffrage, opposed empire and racism, 709 00:46:04,270 --> 00:46:07,230 and stood behind the poor and disenfranchised. 710 00:46:07,390 --> 00:46:09,950 Thomas Hardy's heart was a radical heart. 711 00:46:11,110 --> 00:46:13,550 Hardy's return to Cornwall after the death of Emma 712 00:46:13,710 --> 00:46:17,870 is the most remarkable attempt at rebirth by a 73-year-old man. 713 00:46:18,030 --> 00:46:21,670 His memory of what he felt for two wonderful years returns to him 714 00:46:21,830 --> 00:46:25,150 in an extraordinary mixture of ecstasy and regret. 715 00:46:25,310 --> 00:46:29,950 Hardy relives feelings of love and possibility which re-elevated him 716 00:46:30,110 --> 00:46:32,590 and acted to increase the quality of his poetry 717 00:46:32,750 --> 00:46:35,350 in a further fifteen years of powerful work, 718 00:46:35,510 --> 00:46:37,990 this poetry being the finest that he wrote. 719 00:46:39,070 --> 00:46:42,630 To the outer world, Hardy's persona included being a bicyclist, 720 00:46:42,790 --> 00:46:45,630 a Justice of the Peace, a lover of nature 721 00:46:45,790 --> 00:46:48,950 and an enthusiastic participant in London society. 722 00:46:50,070 --> 00:46:53,150 Hardy emphasised kindness and mercy above all things 723 00:46:53,310 --> 00:46:55,710 in personal and social relationships. 724 00:46:55,870 --> 00:46:58,670 He had a permanent horror of cruelty to animals. 725 00:47:00,110 --> 00:47:02,950 A haunted man living in a haunted self, 726 00:47:03,110 --> 00:47:06,710 Thomas Hardy lived to a great age. He married two women - 727 00:47:06,870 --> 00:47:09,310 the second, 39 years younger than himself. 728 00:47:09,430 --> 00:47:11,350 He had no children. 729 00:47:12,510 --> 00:47:14,470 'We have been made to enter the shade 730 00:47:14,630 --> 00:47:19,030 of a sorrowful and brooding spirit which, even in its saddest mood, 731 00:47:19,190 --> 00:47:22,150 bore itself with a grave uprightness and never, 732 00:47:22,270 --> 00:47:24,430 even when most moved to anger, 733 00:47:24,590 --> 00:47:27,950 lost its deep compassion for the sufferings of men and women.' 734 00:47:29,110 --> 00:47:31,630 Hardy's is a vision of the world and of man's lot 735 00:47:31,790 --> 00:47:34,710 as they revealed themselves to a powerful imagination - 736 00:47:34,870 --> 00:47:38,910 a profound and poetic genius, a gentle and humane soul. 64526

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