This Research Seeks to Prove Thomas Hardy's Pessimism By Analyzing His Biography And
Illustrating How Three of His Novelsfar from the Madding Crowd, Tess of the D'urbervilles, and Jude The
Obscurereflect Real-World Events, Relationships, and Societal Difficulties In Hardy's Own Life. Thomas
Hardy Was an Emotional Author Who Admired Strong, Self-Reliant Women. Hardy's Final Work Demonstrates
His Keen Awareness of the World at the End of the Victorian Era, Including the Struggles of Women As They
Adapted from the Traditional Role of Wives to That of New Women and Suffragette Activists Who Challenged
Victorian Norms In Their Quest For Equality and Recognition. Hardy's Pessimism Had Its Origins In His Early
Years, When He Realized That His Existence Was the Consequence of an Unwanted Birth, and Continued
Throughout His Adolescence and Young Adulthood When He Realized That His Family Could Not Afford To
Provide Him With a Formal Education. Hardy Became More Aware of the Social Divide Between Him And
Individuals from More Privileged Backgrounds As He Entered Adulthood. When It Came to Imagining The
Future Role of Women In Marriage and Society, Hardy Was Decades Ahead of His Time.The Hopeless
Storylines of These Three Books Were Inspired By His Hopeless Relationships With Two Women His Cousin
Tryphena Sparks and His First Wife Emma Lavinia Gifford. Thomas Hardy, a Writer and Poet of The
Nineteenth Century, Became Known As a Gloomy Figure Due to His Experiences In Life, Including the ...