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The Mayor of Casterbridge - Thomas Hardy - Part 1


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Thomas Hardy lived an extraordinary life. He was born into poverty and obscurity in rural Dorset in 1840, yet when he died in 1928, he was rich and world famous. His funeral at Westminster Abbey was a quasi-state occasion, with all the leading politicians and writers of the day attending, and thousands of people lining the streets of London in tribute. As a child, he remembered his grandmother recalling the French Revolution, yet he lived through the first world war into a world of motor cars, radio and television, and mass democracy. He was unhappily married to his first wife, Emma, yet when she died, he was consumed with grief and remorse, and the poetry he produced in the two years after her death is some of the finest love poetry ever written. In a two part episode of Book In, Charlie and Rupert look at one of his greatest novels, The Mayor of Casterbridge, the tragic story of Michael Henchard, who rose from rural obscurity to being the richest and most powerful man in the area. But his past catches up with him; the terrible thing he did when he was young comes back to haunt him, and his fall is public and complete. As in so many of his books, Hardy takes us back to the rural world of his youth, and shows us the lives that the people he knew as a young man were living. But even when he was writing the novel, it was a world that had passed; we see the emergence of new men, new ideas and new technologies, and the destructive effect these have on the old way of life. What is the role of the town of Casterbridge in the story? How is Henchard like Hardy? To what extent is Henchard brought down by his own actions, and to what extent is he a victim of the remorseless fate in which Hardy believed? And what on earth is a skimmity ride? Join Rupert and Charlie to find out. 

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Book InBy Rupert Fordham and Charlie Fordham