Jump to content

Wessex Tales

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from The Withered Arm)

First edition title page

Wessex Tales is an 1888 collection of tales written by English novelist and poet Thomas Hardy, many of which are set before Hardy's birth in 1840.

In the various short stories, Hardy writes of the true nature of nineteenth-century marriage and its inherent restrictions, the use of grammar as a diluted form of thought, the disparities created by the role of class status in determining societal rank, the stance of women in society and the severity of even minor diseases causing the rapid onset of fatal symptoms prior to the introduction of sufficient medicinal practices. A focal point of all the short stories is that of social constraints acting to diminish one's contentment in life, necessitating unwanted marriages, repression of true emotion and succumbing to melancholia due to constriction within the confines of 19th-century perceived normalcy.[1]

Contents

[edit]

Initially, in 1888, the collection contained five stories, all previously published in periodicals:

For the 1896 reprinting, Hardy added a sixth...

  • "An Imaginative Woman" (1894)

However, in 1912 he reversed that decision, moving "An Imaginative Woman" to another collection, Life's Little Ironies (1894), while at the same time transferring two of the latter collection's stories, "A Tradition of Eighteen Hundred and Four" (1882) and "The Melancholy Hussar of the German Legion" (1890) to Wessex Tales,[2] for a final total of seven stories.

Dramatic adaptations

[edit]

Six of the short stories were adapted as television dramas, forming the BBC2 anthology series Wessex Tales:

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "AQA - Anthology Zone - Thomas Hardy". anthology.aqa.org.uk. Retrieved 2016-05-03.
  2. ^ Malcolm, Cheryl Alexander; Malcolm, David (2008). "Thomas Hardy: Wessex Tales : A Companion to the British and Irish Short Story : Blackwell Reference Online". Blackwell Publishing Inc. Retrieved 2014-05-21.
  3. ^ "Wessex Tales". December 12, 1973. p. 57 – via BBC Genome.
[edit]