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Originally published in 1947 and presenting the famed poet-novelist
against the background of contemporary thought and society, Harvey
Curtis Webster shows that Hardy's later works give consistent
evidence of hope; that pervasive pessimism was by no means the
keynote of Hardy's thought. On a Darkling Plain traces the
evolution of Hardy's thought, from faith, through disillusionment,
to a cautious belief in the ultimate progress of man.
In this lucid book a distinguished scholar and critic measures
British fiction from World War I through the convulsive effects of
the Depression and World War II, and the importance of the writing
that has been done since Finnegan's Wake. Webster presents a moving
account of the shattering impact of the Great War upon British
writers, particularly Rose Macaulay, Aldous Huxley, Evelyn Waugh,
and Ivy Compton-Burnett. The cynicism and despair which afflicted
them also bore heavily on the novelists of the thirties and forties
-- Graham Greene, Joyce Cary, L. P. Hartley, C. P. Snow, who
endured the disorder and violence of the Depression and World War
II. Though all of these writers spoke with individual voices
ranging from pessimism to joyful affirmation, they were all marked
ineradicably by the turmoil of the period. The book closes with an
overview of the writers who have developed since World War II.
Penetrating, fresh, affirmative in its values, the book is an
important assessment of this protean group of writers.
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