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TYPICAL PESSIMISTIC ATTITUDES IN ENGLISH LITERATURE 1880-1895
BY
LENA JOSEPHINE MYERS A.B. , University A.M., University
of Illinois , of Illinois ,
1913 1918
LIBRARY OF THE
JNIVERSITY OF
CALIFORNIA
EXCHANGE 1928 NOV
AN ABSTRACT OF A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIRE MENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN ENGLISH IN THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLNOIS , 1926
URBANA , ILLINOIS 1928
22
3
}
TYPICAL PESSIMISTIC ATTITUDES IN ENGLISH LITERATURE 1880-1895
MY
BY
LENA JOSEPHINE MYERS A.B. , University of Illinois , A.M. , University of Illinois ,
1913 1918
AN ABSTRACT OF A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIRE MENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN ENGLISH IN THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLNOIS , 1926
URBANA , ILLINOIS 1928
EXCHANGE
of
the
this
TYPICAL PESSIMISTIC ATTITUDES IN ENGLISH LITERATURE 1880-1895 is
of
,
,
of
)
V.
B.
.
-
to
of
of
,
a
(
,
in
by
thesis English
in
thought
to
present niair cutlines literature between 1880 and studying 1895 detail the pessimistic attitude three rep George Gissing resentative authors James Thomson Hardy projected against background and Thomas the sur vey the general pessimistic field and the special aspects the pessimism Time Spirit that were congenial
The purpose of
the pessimistic
,
,
,
in
of
,
in
,
,
pessimism The terms optimism meliorism and pejorism were developed very late long after the attitudes which they describe were well known the term optimism first appearing the nineteenth first half the eighteenth century pessimism
;
by
of ,
.
are absolute and relative pessimism are absolute and relative
;
accidental and habitual ,
subdivided into egotistic and cosmic temperamen moral
intellectual
,
authentic and genteel
,
environmental
,
and
and
,
which may
according
optimism
according rational Likewise important types
,
idealistic
,
determined
types
to
as
The principal
degree
be
of
to
,
.
to
human ideals origin are naïve
tal
be
;
of
as
improved the exercise intelligence pejorism human will and the belief that con ditions are steadily and inevitably becoming more antagonistic ism
the belief that conditions may
;
is
,
is
,
is
as
as
,
is
.
be
,
,
century meliorism the last half and pejorism during the last two may Optimism defined the belief that the world essentially good and therefore highly desirable pessimism essentially bad that existence the belief that the world system infinitely miserable and that annihilation preferable melior
decades
as
,
or
is
or
,
.
as
is
.
,
social
on
,
and religious The standard for the summum optimism pessimism usually based bonum which pleasure although goodness beauty may truth serve well happiness for the criterion aesthetic
knowledge
a
is
to
]
3
[
,
of
as
of
of
.
or
of
of
of
A
pessimism necessary the history study pessimism any particular for the the period individual Buddhism postulated suffering the core presented humanity bound the universe the wheel ex
background
by the chains of causation and the persistence of Karma , and recommended renunciation and quietism . Omar Khayyam in the Rubaiyat, overcome by a sense of futility of knowledge , in his pessimism materialism , atheism , fatalism , and combined epäcureanism . Jewish literature , for the most part saturated istence
with , tržbal optimism , shows two important exceptions in Job which attacked the conventional apologetics on the problem of evil but attained to no new insight , and Ecclesiastes which grew out of a degenerate
age and hence expressed the boredom of the
satiated and a sense of the vanity of every thing , knowledge , pleasure , love, and works. The Greeks , on the whole , repre sented a healthy optimism based on animal spirits , perfection of body and mind , intellectual sanity , and objectivity , but their litera Theognis , Pindar , Herodotus , and the dramatists embalms much of the saddest of pessimistic utterance . There are pessimistic elements also in Greek philos ophy : Heraclitus, the weeping philosopher , postulates whirling all
ture from Homer through Hesiod
,
of
a
by
of
.
of
;
an
,
of
as
a
;
by
;
is
things Plato's idealism constructed over postulating ab terrestrial pessimism the Socratic dialogues solute knowledge the sole justifiable aim life prepared for the intellectual pessimism the Sophists and later Epicureanism epidemic and Stoicism Hagesias precipitated suicide The Greek Anthology presented like Ecclesiastes the pessimism flux as the law of
The Romans were nature like the Jews and fresh vigorous practical race but when evil times de they took refuge scended upon them two contrasting faiths Epicureanism Stoicism and that are bottom both pessimistic Stoicism was evasion life and ended logically Seneca's justification Epicureanism suicide the ancient type meant
,
.
, .
as a
.
life's activities Lucretius release from supersti materialism
,
scientific faith
in
the gods
a
tious fear
of
in
also retirement and careful pruning De Rerum Natura recommended
of
.
of
in
of ,
an
of
at
,
in
,
,
Greeks
age
a
degenerate
but the
an
.
is
materialism
of
.
a
; it
a
of
with pessimism obvious Mediaeval combined relative pessimism with absolute opti mism erected upon terrestrial pessimism celestial optimism The Imitation Christ and the Divine Comedy both reveal this affinity
Christianity
]
[
4
of
.
to
by
in
.
,
the need
,
of
The account human depravity the vanity the for renunciation found mediaeval Christianity Schopenhauer were utilized reenforce his own position dualism
world
The Renaissance was a period of optimism because of widened horizons , varied activity , new discoveries and hopes , and saner living ; but in developing self - consciousness it prepared for much the suffering of the modern world . In the early part of the eighteenth century optimism and pessimism waged a strenuous battle , the chief optimists being Leibnitz with his Theodicée and
on
his
of
,
.
,
.
be
its -
of
of
of
tury which was also stimulated The pseudo pessimism
choly
the last part the cen the English school melan this cosmopolitan epidemic can
Weltschmerz by
the mal du siècle
of
or
to
an
of
,
Pope with Essay Man the pessimists Voltaire with his Candide and Mandeville with his Fable theBees Rousseau although optimist himself gave impetus through Rousseauism
of
,
,
,
a
,
,
.
In
A
of
,
,
of
of
,
of
,
,
in
understood various aspects through the study the Sturm und Drang movement Goethe's Werther Foscolo's Letters Jacopo Ortis Senancour's Obermann Chateaubriand's René Constant's Adolphe Byronism Musset's Confession Child Vigny's Century Eugene Oneguine the Chatterton Pushkin's and Lermontov's Hero Our Time the nineteenth century pessimism became more clearly
of
,
,
;
,
of
,
of
,
in
,
of
,
of
.
,
,
in
Leopardi
by
of
Leopardi Schopenhauer and Hartmann physical weakness failure love and poverty com nature the disillusion the harshness the cruelty Italy and materialism insignificance man the decadence the modern progressive world neither philosophical indifference defined
defeated plained
by
is
nature sophical formulation ,
a
,
irony satisfied him Schopenhauer misanthrope important for attempting the first complete philo .
nor Socratic
he
in -
.
of
;
to
of
of
be
to
The Thing itself con surged through ceived blind Will which the universe and caused the widespread suffering creation only through indi vidual renunciation the Will Live that would lead forward pessimism
in
to
.
to
World Suicide would the Will ever find release for itself Hartmann transformed Schopenhauer's Will Live into the Unconscious which finds its manifestation the external world of
a
of
to
it
In
all
If
.
.
in
and human history man had somehow attained con sciousness men would become aware the misery existence they would prepare for simultaneous Race Suicide
[ 5 ]
its
to
.
of
it
by
its
it of
which would destroy the world and would put the Unconscious misery sending original condition be out back creating the world fore made the mistake
Turning from
of the history of , pessimism to the English we remember that the French have considered the English as melancholy as a result of the preva | lence of rain and fog in England . But the English , a practical people , as a rule keep their melancholy rather well in hand . Through the whole course of English literature one hears a minor undertone in the naturalistic fatalism of Anglo - Saxon poetry , in the romantic melancholy of the Faery Queene, or Jacques , the pessimism of Hamlet , the melancholy of Burton and the seven century in Swift's mis teenth century Puritans, the eighteenth anthropical pessimism , Dr. Johnson's religious sadness, Romanti The
(
be a
,
,
of by
,
of
of
as
,
,
of
.
of
.
,
of
actuality disillusionment Ruskin the withdrawal from Newman and the Preraphaelites Thomson takes his point departure from the attitude Arnold's Grand Chartreuse ,
,
Victorian optimism be
questioned the reality scientific invention the efficacy manitarian schemes the future education the position necessity finding woman the for war and the possibility ligious consolation pessimistic When the technical literature of
,
of
,
of
of ;
.
,
,
,
this criticism
,
more pronounced progress the benefits came
.
,
,
is
,
,
is
attempt
and Omar read with great avidity the period extending
Buddhism
of
To
Hartmann introduced into England
it
Schopenhauer
,
Leopardi Khayyam
of re of hu of
slight minority
of
a
the part
of
on In
the late Sixties and through the Seventies the criticism
first
at
to
shown
be
and Byronism . whole nineteenth century could Pessimist's Progress from the temporary pessi through Byron's transitional pessimism mism Wordsworth Tennyson Arnold the religious agony the Victorians such Carlyle and the and Clough the misanthropical pessimism
cism
a
of
is
-
Nineties isolated eddy
studies have been made
but these latter are
false
for
the Eighties
emphasizing
.
,
the
an as
the fact that
in
no
;
of
for for
of it
go
to
be
to
a
all ,
1895 would
,
at
to
describe the threads too far afield since not age great welter but transitional period cross purposes survivals from Mid Victorianism brushing elbows with anticipations the Twentieth Century therein lies the reason from 1880 an
]
6
[
.
of
of
is
of
pessimistic literature around 1880 The accumulation many appalling the works having waited for discovery since beginning the the century The current movement exhibited
,
|
general background
the
of
in
he in
in
in a
in
:
a
in
of
in
A its
bringing forth work like James Sully's Pessimism Leopardi whose work had 1877. Criticism Italy been published the second decade the century was England until the article 1848 and Fraser's not noticed Gladstone's famous Quarterly article 1850 but was still vitality
History and
.
a
of
until the late Sixties when James Thomson published Memoir Charles Ed the Operette Morali and
neglected
translations
in
Will
as
in his .
;
,
in
on
'
of
wardes translation the essays and dialogues appeared 1882 and after 1880 magazine articles him are numerous Schopen Germany hauer suffered the same fate even World
he
it
appeared and Idea had been neglected when 1819 and edition did not come out until 1844. After 1850 Germany because became more popular the widespread dis the
by
the influence
West
as
in
of
.
John Oxenford Helen notice his history interested reception for Haldane
1853 written
1876 and Sully's
1877 prepared
and Kemp's
to
the turn
an
pessimism
in
minster Review article Zimmern's biography
of
He attributed in
.
illusionment
of
in
of
the second
(
.
of
of
Hartmann's Philosophy translated into English Schopenhauer tention
in
an
of
)
.
as
of
translation the World Will and Idea 1883 1886 He became popularly recognized and was acclaimed one Schopenhauer's the great intellectual forces the century popularity prepared Germany for enthusiastic reception
as
)
(
as
, in
Unconscious 1869 which was Hartmann received much at drawing his disciples more largely from the
1884.
by
had been made
in
of
.
at
.
-
as
Schopenhauer was pre Darwinian Buddhism and Occidental pessimism played into each other's hands Eastern quietism had been introduced into Germany the beginning the century and the pioneer work Oriental study the scientists
Sir William Jones
on
,
of
of
-
in
1884 illustrated Elihu last the Time Spirit was
of
.
,
1872 and 1879 and the edition Vedder became very popular since accord with Omar Khayyam the pessimistic The centering
by
1859 and 1869 but the third and fourth
of
of
its
earlier editions
at
of
in
of
.
of
in
the 1880's
a
In
and Colebrooke between 1770 important manuals number Budd England besides the translation hism and Buddha appeared The Sacred Books the East FitzGerald's translation the Rubaiyat had been neglected
and 1810.
]
7
[
.
literature about the late Sev enties indicates the trend for the next decade
In
James Thomson temperamental possibilities for optimism were so evenly balanced that environment was the
or pessimism
force , on one side inherited melancholia and dipso mania , on the other a rich lyric delight in life . The environmental pessimism were the death factors of his fiancée literary obscurity and chronic poverty Leopardi whose His interest ,
in
A
.
in
of
,
he of
.
of
,
of
:
of
Sorrow the purifying beneficence sorrow nobly born scepticism and mockery doubt and resignation and longing for oblivion One after another the resources life failed Thom of
Lady
Thomson his pessimism pessimistic development
cause
a
translated was not outlined the three periods
his
essays
of
he
.
,
of
his
determining
of
After
to
of
to
he to
Gissing
.
Hardy
or
.
of
he
in
;
,
of
,
in
of
a
.
in
to
of
he
.
of
genius disguised the ac son Under the tragedy which presented the failure count his own fate art artistic ex pression being sign him frustration thwarted activity supernatural religion active life Also failed him the re ligious development the century stood midway between He was too near the Matthew Arnold and Samuel Butler religious agony religious indifference attain the Victorian had liberated himself
from
the strict
;
at of
:
.
a
of
he
Presbyterianism his childhood became defiant and arrogant like youthful sceptics His emancipation left him void heaven emptiness but his atheism that oppressed him with the sense provided one doubtful consolation least human misery was not
to
as
to
.
, of
by
his
,
of
to
superseded orthodox
.
.
to a
be
to
malignant God With him fatalism and deter supernaturalism minism This necessita pessimism denying rianism contributed most man the expression his will Thomson's his personality the exercise quietism necessitarianism led inevitably which was based imputed
In
.
no
,
he
,
A
.
of
he
all
of
of
human action the futility well upon his recognition turn attacked the contemporary movements that stood for progress the Christian philanthropists and the the apotheosis pure relativist meliorists saw method for determining what was advisable and hence believed that inaction was much ,
,
,
.
all
]
8
in
[
of
.
be
by
the Positivists
is
of
.
of
existence But his chief argument against and Utilitarians was that the curse existence primal and can not expedients simply reached human The natural result the belief necessitarianism and quietism for
of
the monotony
he
less harmful than action Moreover philosophically consid change illusion and cursed with anhedonia complained ered
he his
one of his temper was stoical pessimism . He denied that hope as to the outcome is necessary for putting up a good fight and in
he
a
in
,
no
.
own life showed much moral valiancy against odds Although considered that there were valid arguments against suicide this stoical pessimism kept him for many years stern battle with his inherited enemies until they finally triumphed and
if
he
.
.
in
by
a
in
a
in
be
to
,
in
to
in
be
of
deliberately took the method indirect suicide But Thomson regard regard could stoical himself others was compassionate and combined man's Promethean defiance Schopenhauerian pity and practice violated his the half with ory engaging many liberating and revolutionary movements as
;
,
to
,
is
.
so ,
But with intellectual pessimism Thomson passed beyond the last Philosophy like art failed him first fortification artistic ex pression confusion intellectual activity leads unnatural
of
to
no
.
of
to
.
,
of
and futility Life does not bear thinking about and much contemporary misery Thomson believed due the modern mal ady thought the worth credence He could give
of
.
be
to
no
by
of
by
in
of
Durer's Melan and the interpretation cholia reached even Nihilism through the belief that Melancholia's despair was caused not the limitation human faculty but the recognition that there was secret behind the veil the universe discovered This scepticism left Thomson subject philosophical systems
of
in
he
of
,
"
of
the
"
to
;
he
by
it
to
of
the shifting moods which found ample play his dual dog personality but did preserve him from the weakness matism therefore although was compelled reason his experience contemplate midnight the truth himself
he
of
.
”
of
or
to
doubt
his friends
;
.
no
be
there can
of
have
attitude because
it
necessarily the more profound As the sincerity
has pierced illusion
his
pessimism
is
.
he
of
or
He
“
the of
noonday for others could not deny the validity truth Tenny satirized unmercifully timid false optimism son the average Englishman but for reasoned optimism admitted his respect Nor did hold with the sophomore that his own pessimism left many poignant .
of
it
by
a
he
,
a
.
a
9 ]
.
ment and circumstance
poignant clash between tempera possessing But such discordant per [
to
the Hellenic world
Gissing again there
is a
In
solation
.
a
at
it
drawings that reveal how appearance affected His pessi mism was first mood and then fostered misfortune be philosophy gleam came Like Gissing turned for con
all
to
of
,
a
he
his
sonality Gissing could hardly have found happiness , under any circumstances , certainly not in the nineteenth century . In him protagonists represented self and in modern type the idealist out touch with reality and sensitive the aspects
his
an
to
-
of
,
,
a
of
a
of
,
a
of
improbable dreams and unbalanced situation victim exaggerated self consciousness and morbid con inability scientiousness irresolution and act sanely and ambition
practically
to
.
-
of
;
,
,
,
,
,
.
The chief environmental factors that deepened were poverty uncongenial surroundings enforced and excessive literary activity matrimonial misfortunes and literary obscurity besides these personal circumstances the incongruity his scholastic ideals with the Time Spirit did much embit ter his lot
pessimism
approach was empirical and sociological logical while Thomson's was and philosophical the light quiet study his ideals leisure and association with beauty contemporary criticized tendencies which viewed the present menacing Gissing revolted degenerate and for the future
he of ,
In
in
.
as
as
he
,
,
of
.
of
Gissing's method
.
on
In
.
of
or
of
so
is
of
against the present economy society which money based No idealist has uncovered the degrading effect upon human money character the lack the possession character
it
of
.
of
its
all
of
or
of
in
he
after character revealed the tragedy arising this particular through the chance birth and the power circumstance He pictured the degrading effect money upon the lack ,
,
,
.
to
,
.
of
,
of
,
is
-
, in
grades society character effect upon the affections His favorite type self respect intellect and creative ability hero the disinherited the exile the alien who has ability and desires that are condemned continual frustration The indus
,
,
lot ,
of
,
by
.
of
,
of
its
of
,
of
,
of
trial scheme the day the growing mechanization life the struggle for existence that even penetrated the sanctuary art with taint commercialism filled him with dread horror and hate The slavery men the injustice their the re
.
a
,
in
to
of
morseless wresting each individual his daily bread from He could discover no society rage hostile aroused him becoming progress more drab and was modern life which
to
'
,
of
]
10
-
[
.
.
of
of
He had only
to
compare the color and pic turesqueness Dickens London with the dullness and medioc rity the London his own day realize the disheartening prison truth Great like tenement houses monotonous domestic ugly every day
architecture , smoking factories country districts were violated
what could redeem them ? The progress ; even the
,
by intruding
summer resorts and the sea places were becoming ruined by the influx of democracy and commercialism . Aristocratic by nature and education , Gissing was supercilious to the mob as a whole , for he thought them intended by nature " to propagate their own insignificance , " and " to keep the world a- rolling .” With the rise of the average man he feared the rule of the average man's ideal , gross utilitarian power , and the loss of culture , grace , and learn a saving remnant accomplish against the ig brutality norance and of mob rule ? Nor was universal education The extension of education had created immense a panacea . suffering by arousing desires whose satisfaction lack of position
ing .
off
What could
,
in
.
of of
of
.
.
,
,
a
superficiality for genuine thwart , and by passing culture The newspapers cheap magazines libraries and insti domestic tutes were responsible for untold tragedies Likewise life the preservation domestic affection under modern condi Gissing's idea tions was becoming more precarious the curse would
an
to
he
he
his
.
by
.
to
of
be
.
,
of
of
passion was much like that Schopen sex and the hold hauer aspired But unlike Schopenhauer ideal love which should the crown life but which tragically was pos deplored sible only the few From own experience early marriage precipitated Modern restless blind passion materialism were undermining the home politics feared saw looming large dangers imperialism the horizon two socialism and From the growth the athletic spirit the militaristic spirit the im perialistic spirit prophesied early European the Nineties
on
he
In
) a
in
,
of (
he
,
.
-
of
of
he
,
,
and
.
education whose passing
ness
journalism
all
he
.
in
In of
power
of
;
the growing
of
and the improvement preparing for the crisis methods warfare would aid contemporary morality and religion divined chaos and con war
;
of
;
all
of
as a
.
to
spiritual values characterized fusion Indifference classes Christianity vitality faith had lost and the people's un consciousness their empty lives was the culmination the
of a
.
in
the keynote
of
is
"
Misery
.
antidote
11 ]
feeble
[
and Light
is a
.
,
so
or
;
of
.
to
tragedy for him He himself had nothing offer for substi Beauty tute for himself Religion Woman and Religion partially filled the gap happier circum would have done stances But such religions are for the rare the few Sweetness
mod
ern life . ” As for the future , it appeared to Gissing as even more menacing than the present ; he could trust in the efficacy of no humanitarian scheme . Forces were loose and running rampant in the world , whose future path would be a path of bitterness .
Every day
all
he lived he believed something that he loved died out .
.
a
his
.
.
of
to
of
Hellenic culture accentuate his sense the decay present pessimist the He was social and his final position pejorism was
of
glimpses
he
.
,
of
of
contemporary His survey of the important movements society confirmed his opinion that the progress degeneration was inevitable Like Thomson would catch momentary
.
is
to
Hardy's pessimism almost wholly due stitution The environmental influences have only
mental con
deepened
the
derived from natural inclination and the literary pessimism but merely given pre fluences have not caused cision outline and supplied terminology his later poems and The characteristics which are responsible for his the Dynasts
of
.
in
of
,
his
in
philosophy
to
,
,
:
,
pessimism are brooding over ultimate problems fearlessness pain outlook intuition into the sinister and ironic sensitiveness .
.
in
of
,
an
inherited tendency toward fatalism and suffering and Hardy combines the methods Gissing and Thomson Viewing contemporary society externally considering pessimism he
agreed with Gissing's pejorism but viewing existence philo agreed partly with Thomson's Necessitarianism Hardy's presentation Stoicism and Quietism the contem porary scene supplements Gissing's For the most part his novels
of
.
.
,
,
he
sophically
called the movement racket Wherever the Revised Code
of
he
."
in
"
"
restlessness and noise upon every opportunity the progress the world without
of
hatred the artificiality Babylon the Second and satirizes ",
of
.
has the countryman's
of
Hardy
the past
, of
in
-w
,
of to
-
of -
ay picturesque hamlets that appealed deal with the out the Gissing but even there church restoration and the passing the church choir the new forces are destroying the charm
,
In
.
to
of
of
,
education has entered notes the tragedy Gissing pointed out the tragedy aims aroused that were doomed frustration slight education produces the country districts the difference
]
12
[
his
a
.
of
a
Hardy like gap two centuries between parent and child whirling Gissing considers sexual passion blind force but conception resembles Schopenhauer's more closely than Gissing's
did .
Happiness in marriage is rendered doubtful by the ironical
mistiming in the appearance of the perfect lovers upon the scene . His objection to a civil marriage is largely based on romantic
grounds : such an alliance makes the mistake of founding a per manent contract on a transitory instinct ; furthermore legal com pulsion kills passion whose essence is gratuitousness . In Jude the Obscure he considers , seemingly with some favor , matriarchy as a possible arrangement for the future . But the tragedy of sex can never be avoided ; men and women are both victims
of
" the
sly vulpiness of Dame Nature . " Like Gissing , Hardy preaches pacifism and thinks even war capable of degenerating in lack of fairness and in increase of deadliness . Christianity he finds as much of a dead encumbrance in country districts as Gissing had in the city . His peasants discuss the Almighty with great free dom .
Christianity
once
served the world well but that time is
The increase in melancholy Hardy discerns everywhere ; thinks the time will come when the sadness of human life will
past . he
develop a new type of face and when only the barren wastes on the earth's surface are congenial to man's spirit . Hardy's social pejorism does not possess the bitterness of Gissing's nor is it the
The Spirit Ironic Hardy's fatalism Pities the character the Wessex scenery and Wyrd This carries over the Saxon idea
,
of
again
.
”
to
.
“
,
he
;
he
to
particularly
and The Spirit
partially due his inheritance gives now fatalism
is
Agents
of
and
,
Will
The Spirit Sinister
of
Immanent
Its
characteristic portion of his pessimism . The philosophical aspect of Hardy's pessimism centers around fatalism , determinism , and irrationality which he attempts to weave into a coherent whole through the symbolism of the
of
a
.
*
the
the
as
.
.
is
of
,
a
,
a
Puritan and finally His determinism the most convincing part Hardy pessimism Heredity his has for much the same deter ministic quality the Karma Buddhism He exhibits how Teutonic
Greek shape
is
It
;
the
depths
of
blind
,
and
in
.
13 ]
whirling
[
covers this irrationality
,
is
a
of
of
,
in
.
is
.
a
of to
in
tragic flaw character otherwise appealing tends inevitable catastrophe But the most distinctive element his pessimism his emphasis upon irrationality the irrational life that makes existence seem petty mean and farcical the needlessness the disaster more disheartening than the cold Everywhere Hardy dis mechanism determined tragedy
human nature , in external nature , in the satires of circumstances and time's laughing stocks . It is The Spirit Ironic that arranges
as
is
of .
It
its
for delayed letters , lapsed leases , faulty marriage licenses , mis meetings of lovers , ironical situations between characters . The Spirit Sinister lacks this impishness but impresses victims responsible for the Lisbon earth malignant and aggressive
of
.
Will
the Immanent
,
of
these spirits are merely agents
its
;
of
is
of
on
of
.
quake and the period Terror during the French Revolution Spirit points The Pities the pessimism the action con eternally futile humanity All the side stant protest merely the
on
,
,
of
to
,
at
is
,
to
he ;
in to
.
of
do at , ? it
its
.
to
be
Should the Will ever arrive con immediately will doom creation annihilation the ghastliness the universe Meanwhile what Hardy's wisest characters resort resignation
sciousness to
to
of
figures the coming may able contribute shocked man
is a
to
of
man's conscious the presence problem but perhaps coming pre which man the Will consciousness its
world
is a
.
The accounting
such
a
ness
in
wittingly
or
,
,
to
.
,
the actions
in
of
indifferent Omnipotence assume human eyes Hartmann's The Uncon The Immanent Will closer scious than Schopenhauer's The Will Live blind somno lent forgetful unconscious Automaton who weaves un aspects
of
,
to
to
;
at
at
.
of
of
of
.
of
good fortune they expect little But the world notices the growing strength the wish not live the denial the pride life There are those who like the Thracians mourn births and rejoice funerals mothers question their right
fearful
to
of
of
,
,
,
.
to
;
of
in
.
a
bring children presumptuously into such world The doctor prematurely old children traces the growing number the fluence the new ideas they are the beginning the generation who will wish not live Thus we find the three authors Thomson Gissing and
.
; of
in
,
in
Hardy agree the main outlines although they view the con temporary scene Gissing the light different backgrounds Hardy for the most part and represents personal pessimism
Gissing and Hardy reasoned pessimism pejorism standpoint social one from the urban life the other from the standpoint rural life Thomson and Hardy agree Hardy Fatalism Determinism and Stoicism emphasis Irrationality differs from the other two his slight bitter tincture his ironic sense which Thomson had
of
.
in ,
a
14 ]
[
,
on
in
of
,
.
,
,
to
as
.
of
,
to
,
altogether
,
agree
as
Thomson
in his much wider acquaintance with pessimistic literature . Pessimism is only one of the cross - currents of this period of transition from Late Victorianism to the Twentieth Century ; it and
in
of
.
)
(
of
de
of fin
persists in the Nineties in the Romantic pseudo - pessimism of the siècle exhaustion the decadents But Gissing's Crown tendency Life 1899 reveals the new the thought the
.
15
]
[
,
of
,
,
,
,
of
in
.
However
,
Nietzsche Shaw Wells the mature Kipling and Chesterton may disagree among themselves they are one pessimism accord their rejection time
VITA Lena Josephine Myers was born in Macomb , McDonough County , Illinois , March 2 , 1890. She was graduated from the
High School in
1907 and from the Western Illinois State Normal School in 1909. From 1909 to 1911 she taught in the public schools . In 1913 she received the degree of A.B. from
Macomb
University of Illinois . From 1913 to 1917 she was an in structor in an Illinois Township High School . In 1918 she re ceived the degree of A.M. from the University of Illinois . Since the
that time she has been an assistant in English
and a graduate student at the University of Illinois with the exception of the year 1920-1921 which she spent as a graduate student at Rad cliffe College .
[ 16 ]
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