Owing to the influences of Greek’s view of fate, Dorset peasant’s fatalism and Schopenhauer’ s pessimistic philosophy, Hardy showed more or less a pessimistic tendency in his early writings and this tendency illust...Owing to the influences of Greek’s view of fate, Dorset peasant’s fatalism and Schopenhauer’ s pessimistic philosophy, Hardy showed more or less a pessimistic tendency in his early writings and this tendency illustrated itself in his writing of Eustacia, heroine of The Return of the Native. He believed that Eustacia’ s tragedy resulted from the disagreement between her aspiration for a brilliant life outside Egdon Heath and the fate imposed on her by some mysterious force working at odds with her. This is what the paper attempts to prove.展开更多
文摘Owing to the influences of Greek’s view of fate, Dorset peasant’s fatalism and Schopenhauer’ s pessimistic philosophy, Hardy showed more or less a pessimistic tendency in his early writings and this tendency illustrated itself in his writing of Eustacia, heroine of The Return of the Native. He believed that Eustacia’ s tragedy resulted from the disagreement between her aspiration for a brilliant life outside Egdon Heath and the fate imposed on her by some mysterious force working at odds with her. This is what the paper attempts to prove.