Hardy Himself Says
Hardy Himself Says
Hardy Himself Says
world is going to the dogs … On the contrary my practical philosophy is distinctly Melioristic.”
• What is Hardy's philosophy of life in "the return of the native"? Why can't the main characters
of return of the native be called "rustic characters"?
• What are the themes of "the return of the native" by Thomas Hardy?
• Q: discuss hardy’s concept of tragedy.
• Q: Hardy is known as a great tragic writer his “the return of the native” presents an illustrious
picture of tragedy, comment.
• Q: Hardy is known as a pessimist. Do you agree? Q: discuss hardy’s fatalism?
Ans: Expressions like pessimism and fatalism have unreservedly been used by critics and readers to
describe Hardy’s philosophy of life, and there is no doubt these labels do largely convey his outlook
and his stance. He is deemed pessimist because he considers that man is born to suffer and he is called
fatalist because he thinks that destiny is antagonistic to man and that it governs human life, allowing
very little free will to human creatures and often inflicting undeserved sufferings upon them.
Hardy, however, is not a cynic because he does not regard man as essentially mean and wicked. There,
certainly, are villains in his novels but he believes on the whole that there is more goodness and
nobleness in human nature than evil, and that man is capable of a heroic endurance of misfortune.
Further wise, it is possible to call Hardy a determinist instead of fatalist, because, while fatalism implies
a blind and arbitrary working of some supernatural power, determinism implies the logic of cause and
effect. In Hardy’s novels the logic of cause and effect is as much at work as an arbitrary supernatural
power. Hardy’s conception of life is essentially tragic. As Austin never wrote a tragedy, Hardy never
attempted a comedy. He holds an opinion:
“Happiness is an occasional episode in the general drama of pain”.
Hardy feels that “man is born to suffer” and the glory of man lies in his power of bearing his
catastrophe. It appears that his mind is trained in the Greek literature, which was the first attempt to
project a mighty clash between man’s dreams and realization. Hardy also portrays this conflict, but
with a slight difference. In Greek tragedy, Fate is some of supernatural power holds responsible of the
catastrophe, while in Shakespearean tragedy, man is solely responsible for his actions their consequent
disaster. Hardy combines both these concepts to carve his own view of tragedy. In his stories, destiny
is as much responsible for the disaster, as a character himself.
“The Return of the Native” fully illustrates Hardy’s conception of tragedy.
Aristotle defines ‘a tragedy is a story of a conspicuous man, who falls from prosperity to adversity,
because of his error of judgment i.e. his hamartia and his sufferings, downfall arouses a feeling of pity
and fear in us, thus becomes a source of catharsis’. As it is clear from the statement as well as from the
historical facts, that Greek tragedy was the story of a conspicuous man, related to country life, and
almost same is the case with Shakespearean tragedy. But Hardy sets his tragedy in the rural background.
His story brings forth the downfall of a common man, yet noble. As Clym is a noble man, his innate
kind and loving nature, residing at the Egdon Heath. He is surrounded by the intense figures of common
life, rustics. His mind is a kingdom, filled with his noble aims of educating the rustics, in the true sense
of the word, as author comments:
“He had a conviction that the want of most men was knowledge of a sort which brings wisdom rather
than affluence”.
But striving after high thinking, he still likes his plain living. He struggles selflessly to achieve his high
aims, but he is somewhat unpractical rather, too simple to plan properly for his goals. And his flaw lies
in the fact he goes too far, selflessly but unplanned, for his aims, and thus injures himself, both
physically and spiritually, causing poor eye sight in the first case and tension through disharmony with
his mother and wife, in the second case.
His unpractical nature also comes out when he ‘decides to marry Eustacia’ though she warns him that
she would not make “a good home spun wife” and his mother pronounces her as “an idle voluptuous
woman”. Clym thinks that Eustacia would help in his educational prospects, but she proves to be
exactly the opposite. It’s said, that Eustacia holds the “greatest responsibility” for the tragedy in “The
Return of the Native”, then it would not be wrong.
Hardy also shows the weak power of decision of Clym that he fails to strike a balance between his
duties (to his mother), his ambition (for teaching) and his love (for Eustacia). As the author states:
“Three antagonistic growths had to be kept alive: his mother’s trust in him, his plan for becoming a
teacher, and Eustacia’s happiness”.
And he fails to maintain them, at a time, first inclining totally towards Eustacia and then towards his
mother, and in adjusting his educational plans between them.
According to Hardy, Fate and destiny have always an essential part to play in bringing a catastrophic
end. In the novel under discussion, destiny is disguised in the cloak of “nature” and “co-incidences”.
Chances and Coincidences occur, in Hardy’s novels, too frequently that they become almost unrealistic.
In this novel, the story leads to ultimate tragedy, with the death of Mrs. Yeobright, which is caused by
a number of ironic accidents and co-incidences. It is also the role of chance that the letter of Clym fails
to reach Eustacia, which becomes the cause of her fatal ending death. Thus, Hardy feels:
“Human will is not free but fettered”.
Nature is always considered as a “living agent”, by Hardy, which is always so strong and influential,
that his human characters can never escape from its clutches. “Egdon Heath” also depicts such qualities.
It contrasts with the human existence. Eustacia feels the heath, as her “cross”, her “shame”, and
eventually it becomes a potential cause and the place of her death. Nature is also hostile to Mrs.
Yeobright, as Heath kills her by a venomous creature from its own bosom.