Introduction to Literature Lesson fourteen: Hardy and frost Life Choices Margarette Connor.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
A.
Advertisements

By, Rebecca Klett. TWO roads diverged in a yellow wood, And sorry I could not travel both And be one traveler, long I stood And looked down one as far.
Robert Frost was born in San Francisco, California on the 26 th of March 1874 to Isabelle Moodie and William Prescott Frost Jr. Both his parents were.
Good Morning. THIS SEMESTER Fiction II Unit IV Thomas Hardy Tess of the d’Urbervilles.
r. Seuss (Theodor Seuss Geisel) By: Kristen De La Rosa.
Robert Frost( ) ※ 4 Pulitzer Prizes ※ read poetry at a presidential inauguration. ※ received honorary degrees from 44 colleges ※ unofficial poet.
Robert Frost
Robert Frost 一年仁班26號許嘉琪.
Thomas Hardy “Some blessed Hope, whereof he knew And I was unaware.”
CP ENGLISH 10 Please have out your note-taking notebooks. Emily Dickinson will serve as a final inspiration for your poems which are due this Friday. TODAY.
Copyright Jeanna Harnisch 2003 The Life and Poetry of Thomas Hardy Designed for UD junior poets interested in Thomas Hardy, or simply for those interested.
“With malice toward none, with charity for all.”
Sylvia Plath “The blood jet is poetry / there is no stopping it.”
By: Morgan Chhima 7h2 March 3, 2010
By Emma Valade
 Born March 26, 1874 in San Francisco  Father was journalist  Mother was a teacher  Named after Robert E. Lee (famous Southern general)
W.B.YEATS Poet, author AND dramatist BY PETER FEGAN.
E. A. Robinson AMERICA’S FIRST 20 TH CENTURY POET.
THOMAS HARDY Biography.
Robert Frost The American Bard
November 11, 1922-April 11, appraisal-kurt-vonnegut-release-his-second-p/
Thomas Hardy By: Tiffani Ray. Introduction Thesis: Thomas Hardy was an important British writer and poet for the late 1800s and early 1900s. He changed.
ROBERT FROST By Alex Gilkey. EARLY LIFE  Born on March 26, 1874 to journalist William Prescott Frost, Jr., and Isabelle Moodie  Father died on May 5,
Robert Frost The American Voice…. Background Born March 26, 1874 Grew up in San Francisco, California Favorite pass time as a child was playing baseball.
‘The Voice’ by Thomas Hardy ( ) Love and death.
Emily Dickinson December 10, 1830 – May 15, 1886
In 1885 Robert and his family moved to Lawrence, Massachusetts after his father died. There, he was enrolled in high school where he began writing poems,
Thomas Hardy Nikki Fanelli. Background Born June 2 nd, 1840 in Dorchester, England Father was a mason Mother was a house wife.
Sight Words.
ROBERT BURNS ( ). Robert Burns was the most democratic poet of the 18 th century. His birthday is celebrated in Scotland as a national holiday.
James Russell Lowell Early Life Lowell’s family was of Scottish descent. Lowell’s father was a minister. By the time he was born, his family.
Robert Frost “The Road Not Taken”.
Emily Dickinson and Walt Whitman Founders of a uniquely American poetic voice “Tell the truth, but tell it slant.” “I sound my barbaric yawp over the roofs.
F. SCOTT FITZGERALD THE GREAT GATSBY English III.
Charles Dickens 1812–1870. Charles John Huffam Dickens 7 February 1812 – 9 June 1870 pen-name “Boz” the most popular English novelist of the Victorian.
Robert Frost Was one of the major American poets of the 20th century Educated at Dartmouth College and Harvard University After graduation.
To be or not to be That is the question.
By: Carson Joyce. The Younger Days  Robert Frost was born in San Francisco, California.  His father died when Frost was eleven years old on May 5, 1885.
Emily Dickinson By: Ashton McWhirter. Early Life  Emily Dickinson was born December 10, 1830 in Amherst, Massachusetts. She was born into a very strong,
BY: Thomas Hardy.  Thomas Hardy, who was unusual in being both a great novelist and a great poet, was born in Dorset, a region of southwest England on.
Thomas Hardy( ) Life Works Tess of the D'Urbervilles
Elizabeth Bishop
By: Shakeric Fennell Ms. Sasser 1 st block American Studies/Adv. English 11.
Sight Words.
High Frequency Words.
Frost’s mini anthology Robert Frost Jarod Oliver Pd. 5 English
Biography By Shay Roberson. Date of Birth Robert Frost was born March 26, He was born in San Francisco, California. His father was a journalist.
The Road Not Taken By Robert Frost. Background Information  Born March 26, 1874  Died January 29, 1963  Modernist Poet  Most well known for realistic.
Who Wants to be a Millionaire ?                $ 100 $ 200 $ 300 $ 500 $ 2,000 $ 1,000 $ 4,000 $ 8,000 $ 16,000 $ 32,000 $ 64,000 $ 125,000.
A Mango Shaped Space By Rachel Gilotti and Rose Sebastian.
The Autobiography of an Ex-Coloured Man Presented by Reed Wolonsky
Poetry The Road Not Taken Mrs. Elliott. Essential Questions? What affects the choices we make? Does every choice we make have a cost? What can we learn.
ORT Greenberg K Tivon1 Robert Frost (1875 – 1963) Biography Irena Tseitlin Based on: “The Academic American Encyclopedia, copyright 1995 Grolier Electronic.
English 11 Literature #22 Mr. Rinka Robert Frost American Literature
Created By Sherri Desseau Click to begin TACOMA SCREENING INSTRUMENT FIRST GRADE.
{ A Wrinkle in Time “You have to write the book that wants to be written. And if the book will be too difficult for grown-ups, then you write it for children.”
Great American Poet Eva Sheppard 09/06/14 6 th period.
Carlos Rivas KOSY NWANKWO Period 3/ English The Road Not Taken Robert Frost.
The Poetry of Robert Frost Ms .De La O English 9
Robert Frost
ROBERT FROST RUTU BHATT ROLL NO-43 CLASS-9A ST.XAVIER’S HIGH SCHOOL.
Thomas Hardy.
Thomas Hardy By Mallori Lesh.
Poet Context When We Two Parted Lord Byron
“Ah, Are You Digging on My Grave?”, by Thomas HArdy
Tess of the D’Urbervilles
Thomas hardy 2 June 1840 – 11 January 1928.
ROBERT LEE FROST AMERICAN POET.
The Road Not Taken By: Robert Frost.
Presentation transcript:

Introduction to Literature Lesson fourteen: Hardy and frost Life Choices Margarette Connor

Contents: Thomas Hardy’s life Serialization Bowdlerization “The Ruined Maid” discussion Robert Frost’s life “The Road Not Taken” discussion

Introduction Today we’re starting another theme, life decisions, and in the works we’ll be reading in the next few lessons, we’ll be looking at how different authors write about how we make the decisions we do in life, and how the decisions we make impact on our life.

Thomas Hardy “Foot in both camps” Victorian writer and a Modernist writer. Full career as a novelist followed by a full career as a poet.

Hardy and his topics He is associated with the English county of Dorset, which he fictionalized into "Wessex”. His view of fate and his criticism of society, especially in its treatment of women, always drew criticism

Many Honors : Awarded the Order of Merit, having previously refused a knighthood, Receives the Freedom of the Borough of Dorchester, 1910 Gold Medal of the Royal Society of Literature, 1912 Numerous honorary degrees.

Parents Born June 2, 1840, in a cottage in Higher Bockhampton, Dorset, near the regional market town of Dorchester. Eldest of four children of Thomas Hardy and Jemima Hand Hardy’s parents

Schooling 1848 Begins lower school in Stinsford Continues schooling in Dorchester.

Apprenticeship Through he was apprenticed to Dorchester architect John Hicks. Hardy later becomes his assistant. During this period, he begins friendship with Horace Moule, who becomes his intellectual mentor, and encourages his study of Latin and Greek. A young Hardy

Move to London Moves to London in 1862 to work for architect Arthur Blomfield. This is the beginning of a lot of back and forth between Dorchester and London for Hardy. –They aren’t too far apart in terms of distance, but they are a world apart in terms of lifestyle.

First publication "How I Built Myself a House", appears in Chambers's Journal, Begins to write poetry though none is published A young, if fuzzy, Hardy.

Finally a successful novel Far from the Madding Crowd serialized in Cornhill Magazine and published in two volumes by Smith, Elder, It is Hardy's first substantial literary success and his fourth novel. After this he begins to have more and more success as a writer, and he is eventually able to give up architecture and become a full-time writer.

Serialization Very common for authors to publish their novels a section at a time in magazines. “Serial novels” very popular with readers, hence very popular with publishers--they helped sales. If a novel popular, often published as one volume after the magazine. Often author would revise between the time it was written for the magazine, often under extreme time constraints, and the time it came out as one volume.

Marriage In 1874, Hardy marries Emma Gifford whom he’d met in The two rent a house in London Emma and Hardy around the time of their marriage.

1878, a busy year The Return of the Native, previously serialized in Belgravia Magazine, published in three volumes by Smith, Elder. The Hardy's move to Tooting, London. An Indiscretion in the Life of an Heiress (a version of part of The Poor Man and the Lady) serialized in New Quarterly Magazine and Harper's Weekly, New York.

Tess Tess of the d'Urbervilles, previously serialized (in bowdlerized form) in The Graphic, published in three volumes by Osgood, McIlvaine.

Bowdlerized form When Dr. Thomas Bowdler edited The Family Shakespeare in 1818, he cut out all the sexy bits, or as he put it “whatever is unfit to be read by a gentleman in the presence of ladies”. So nowadays, we used this form of his name to mean a prudish cutting of a literary work in the name of “decency”.

Jude the Obscure Previously serialized in Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Jude is published in one volume by Osgood, McIlvaine in The novel was both praised and violently attacked, the extremity of negative response contributing to Hardy's decision to abandon novel writing. One of the other reasons was his own continuing anxieties about the literary value of the novel form,

Turns to poetry Wessex Poems and Other Verses, Hardy's first collection of poetry, published by Harper and Brothers, 1898.

Second marriage 1914 Hardy marries Florence Dugdale, who has been his secretary since 1905.

World War I Outbreak of First World War and its brutality "destroyed all Hardy's belief in the gradual ennoblement of man" and "gave the coup de grâce to any conception he may have nourished of a fundamental ultimate Wisdom at the back of things”. –From Young Hardy.

Preparing for the end In 1917 Hardy begins sorting his papers, destroying many of them, in preparation for his posthumously published "autobiography."

Birthday honors On his 80th birthday in 1920, Hardy receives messages of congratulations from King George V and the Prime Minister He is visited at Max Gate by a deputation from the Incorporated Society of Authors.

Death January 11, 1928 Thomas Hardy dies. His heart is removed and buried in Emma Hardy's grave in Stinsford Churchyard. His body is cremated and the ashes buried in Poet's Corner, Westminster Abbey. Winter Words, his last volume of poetry, published posthumously.

“The Ruined Maid” Originally published in Poems of the Past and the Present in 1902 though it was written This is interesting for while the poem seems quite modern on the one hand, it is firmly set in Victorian values.

A look at the poem Look at Hardy’s use of irony. Being ruined was the saving of Amelia. –What does this say about women’s choices? Look at Hardy’s use of ordinary, country language.

The use of language in the poem When it comes to the country girl’s lines, the meter is very forced and false. –What is Hardy doing with this? We don’t hear from Amelia much. She’s become a “fine lady” and probably doesn’t like the reminder of her past. –She calls her former friend “a raw country girl”.

Robert Frost ( ) One of America’s favorite poets. –Regional in voice yet national in scope.

Frost on poetry “Poetry provides the one permissible way of saying one thing and meaning another. People say, “Why don’t you say what you mean?” We never do that, do we, being all of us too much poets. We like to talk in parables and in hinds and in indirections--whether from diffidence or some other instinct.”

Many honors inlude: First person to win four Pulitzer Prizes, National Institute of Arts and Letters member, American Academy of Arts and Letters member, Gold Medal from the National Institute of Arts and Letters, Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress Emerson-Thoreau Medal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Bollingen Prize for Poetry.

University teacher After his career as a poet took off, he taught poetry at a number of schools including Amherst College, the University of Michigan, Harvard, Dartmouth, and Middlebury College

Parents Born on March 26, 1874 in San Francisco, first child of Isabelle Moodie and William Prescott Frost Jr. Both his parents were old New Englanders, but his father worked for a newspaper in San Francisco.

Father’s death When he was 11 in 1885, Father dies of tuberculosis on May 5, leaving family with only $8 after expenses are paid. Family moves to Lawrence, Mass. to live with grandparents. –Robert and Jeanie, his sister, dislike grandparents' sternness and rigorous discipline.

High school After a tricky start with education graduates high school in 1892 as the co- valedictorian of his class. The other Elinor White, whom he’d fallen in love with the year before. After graduation, he became engaged to her.

University Was accepted to Harvard University. Dependent upon grandparents for financial support, enters Dartmouth College instead of Harvard because it is cheaper, and because grandparents blame Harvard for his father's bad habits. Bored by college life and restless, leaves Dartmouth at the end of December.

School teacher After he leaves Dartmouth, he starts teaching, something he does on and off until he goes to England in Back in those days, teachers in lower schools did not need to have a college education.

Marriage In 1895, at the age of 21, he marries Elinor White. The marriage, which lasts until her death in 1938, is sometimes quite turbulent. Robert and Elinor Frost, 1911

Children In 1896 their son Elliott is born. He’s the first of six children: –Elliot, Lesley, Elinor, Carol, Marjorie, Irma Four will die young, Elliot died when he was four, Elinor only lived a few days, Marjorie died of complications from giving birth and TB and his son, Carol, committed suicide.

Harvard In 1897 he passes Harvard College entrance examinations Borrows money from grandfather and enters Harvard as a freshman. But in 1899 he withdraws.

Grandfather’s legacy In 1901, Grandfather William Prescott Frost dies. His will gives Frost a $500 annuity and use of his Derry poultry farm for ten years, after which the annuity is to be increased to $800 and Frost is to be given ownership of the farm.

Move to England In 1912 he decides to live in England for a few years and devote himself to writing full time. Sails with family on August 23. Stays in London briefly before renting a cottage in Beaconsfield, Buckinghamshire, 20 miles north of London.

Publishing success A Boy's Will is published April 1. Meets numerous literary figures, including Ezra Pound, Hilda Doolittle (H.D.), Ford Hermann Hueffer (Ford Madox Ford), and William Butler Yeats

Literary encouragement Yeats tells Pound that A Boy's Will is "the best poetry written in America for a long time". Friendship with Pound becomes strained –"He says I must write something much more like vers libre or he will let me perish by neglect. He really threatens.”

Second book soon follows In 1914, North of Boston is published Favorably reviewed in The Nation, The Outlook, The Times Literary Supplement, Pall Mall Gazette, The English Review, The Bookman, and The Daily News.

War breaks out Amused by local concern that he may be a spy when war breaks out in August. Learns that Henry Holt and Company will publish his books in the US. Helps him decide to return to America. –Concerned that review by Pound may cause Americans to consider him to be one of Pound's "party of American literary refugees."

Life as a professional poet From 1916 he is either teaching poetry or acting as writer in residence. He makes a good living at poetry.

Elinor’s death In March 1938 Elinor dies of heart failure in Gainesville, Florida. Frost collapses and is unable to attend cremation. Shortly after she dies, he asks another woman, Kathleen Morrison, to marry him, but she declines, instead becoming his secretary for the rest of his life.

Erratic behavior He is increasingly erratic during this period. This worries people as his sister ended her life in a mental institution. Two of his children also fought mental illness, his son killing himself in part from the depression over Elinor’s death.

75th birthday honors In 1950 the US Senate adopts resolution honoring Frost on his 75th birthday (actually his 76th). Frost thought he was born in 1875 until he was 79 years old!

Congressional recognition In 1960 Congress passes a bill awarding Frost a gold medal in recognition of his poetry. An elderly Frost scratching his dog during an interview.

Presidential honor In 1961 he is invited by the new president, John F. Kennedy, to be a part of his inauguration. Writes new poem for inauguration, but is unable to read it in glare of bright sunlight. Recites "The Gift Outright.”

The End Plagued by ill health for the rest of his life, he dies shortly after midnight on January 29, 1963.

Frost on “The Road Not Taken” "I'll bet not half a dozen people can tell you who was hit and where he was hit in my Road Not Taken." He characterized himself in that poem particularly as "fooling my way along." He’d tell audiences that it was a “tricky” poem.

Really a sly tease for his friend According to Frost, it was really about his friend Edward Thomas, (an English poet) who when they walked together always sighed for not having taken another path than the one they took.

“The fun of the thing” When Frost sent "The Road Not Taken" to Thomas he was disappointed that Thomas failed to understand it was a poem about himself. Thomas on the poem: –"I doubt if you can get anybody to see the fun of the thing without showing them and advising them which kind of laugh they are to turn on."

Another fun use of irony Frost gives the poem it’s twist and fun by the irony of the final stanza. He knows that in the future he’ll make his decision look more dramatic than it was in reality. It becomes grandiose in retrospect. –What could he be saying about human nature?

Common symbol Frost took the common symbol, road, but then played with it. He was insistent upon the word “road” and not the more common “path”. He wanted to play up the mundane aspects of the work.

Regular rhyme scheme In the first stanza, Frost sets up a regular rhyme scheme set up as abaab, that is repeated, using a fresh set of rhymes, throughout the poem. But to keep the rhyme in the final line, we have to force it. What is Frost doing there?