24
APPENDIX I ON the morning of Thursday, January u, the Dean of Westminster readily gave his consent to a proposal that Hardy should be buried in Westminster Abbey; and news of this proposal and its acceptance was sent to Max Gate. There it was well known that Hardy's own wish was to be buried at Stinsford, amid the graves of his ancestors and of his first wife. After much consideration a compromise was found between this definite personal wish and the nation's claim to the ashes of the great poet. On Friday, January I3, his heart was taken out of his body and placed by itself in a casket. On Saturday, January 14, the body was sent to Woking for cremation, and thence the ashes were taken the same day to Westminster Abbey and placed in the Chapel of St. Faith to await interment. On Sunday, January I 5, the casket containing the heart was taken to the church at Stinsford, where it was laid on the altar steps. At two o'clock on Monday, January I 6, there were three services in three different churches. In Westminster Abbey the poet's wife and sister were the chief mourners, while in the presence of a great crowd, which included representatives of the King and other members of the Royal Family, and of many learned and other societies, the ashes of Thomas Hardy were buried with stately ceremonial in Poets' Comer. The pall-bearers were the Prime Minister (Mr. Stanley Baldwin) and Mr. Ramsay MacDonald, representing the Government and Parliament; Sir James Barrie, Mr. John Galsworthy, Sir Edmund Gosse, Professor A. E. Housman, Mr. Rudyard Kipling, and Mr. Bernard Shaw, representing literature; and the Master of Magdalene College, Cambridge (Mr. A. S. Ramsey), and the Pro-Provost of Queen's College, Oxford (Dr. E. M. Walker), representing the Colleges of which Hardy was an honorary Fellow. A spadeful of Dorset earth, sent by a Dorset farm labourer, Mr. Christopher Corbin, was sprinkled on the casket. In spite of the cold and wet the streets about the Abbey were full of people who had been unable to obtain admissiop to the service, but came as near as they might to taking part in it. At the same hour at Stinsford, where Hardy was baptized, and where as boy and man he had often worshipped, his brother, 447

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Page 1: APPENDIX I978-1-349-00286...wish was to be buried at Stinsford, amid the graves of his ancestors and of his first wife. After much consideration a compromise was found between this

APPENDIX I

ON the morning of Thursday, January u, the Dean of Westminster readily gave his consent to a proposal that Hardy should be buried in Westminster Abbey; and news of this proposal and its acceptance was sent to Max Gate. There it was well known that Hardy's own wish was to be buried at Stinsford, amid the graves of his ancestors and of his first wife. After much consideration a compromise was found between this definite personal wish and the nation's claim to the ashes of the great poet. On Friday, January I3, his heart was taken out of his body and placed by itself in a casket. On Saturday, January 14, the body was sent to Woking for cremation, and thence the ashes were taken the same day to Westminster Abbey and placed in the Chapel of St. Faith to await interment. On Sunday, January I 5, the casket containing the heart was taken to the church at Stinsford, where it was laid on the altar steps.

At two o'clock on Monday, January I 6, there were three services in three different churches. In Westminster Abbey the poet's wife and sister were the chief mourners, while in the presence of a great crowd, which included representatives of the King and other members of the Royal Family, and of many learned and other societies, the ashes of Thomas Hardy were buried with stately ceremonial in Poets' Comer. The pall-bearers were the Prime Minister (Mr. Stanley Baldwin) and Mr. Ramsay MacDonald, representing the Government and Parliament; Sir James Barrie, Mr. John Galsworthy, Sir Edmund Gosse, Professor A. E. Housman, Mr. Rudyard Kipling, and Mr. Bernard Shaw, representing literature; and the Master of Magdalene College, Cambridge (Mr. A. S. Ramsey), and the Pro-Provost of Queen's College, Oxford (Dr. E. M. Walker), representing the Colleges of which Hardy was an honorary Fellow. A spadeful of Dorset earth, sent by a Dorset farm labourer, Mr. Christopher Corbin, was sprinkled on the casket. In spite of the cold and wet the streets about the Abbey were full of people who had been unable to obtain admissiop to the service, but came as near as they might to taking part in it. At the same hour at Stinsford, where Hardy was baptized, and where as boy and man he had often worshipped, his brother,

447

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APPENDIX I

Mr. Henry Hardy, was the chief mourner, while, in the presence of a rural population, the heart of this lover of rural Wessex was buried in the grave of his first wife among the Hardy tombs under the great yew-tree in the corner of the churchyard. And in Dorchester all business was suspended for an hour, while at St. Peter's Church the Mayor and Corporation and many other dignitaries and societies attended a memorial service in which the whole neighbourhood joined. H. C.

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APPENDIX II

LETTERS FROM THOMAS HARDY TO DR. CALEB SALEEBY

DEAR SIR,

MAx GATE, DoRCHESTER, Dec. 21, 1914.

I have read with much interest the lecture on The Longest Price of War that you kindly send : and its perusal does not diminish the gloom with which this ghastly business on the Continent fills me, as it fills so many. The argument would seem to favour Conscription, since the inert, if not the unhealthy, would be taken, I imagine.

Your visits to The Dynasts show that, as Granville-Barker fore­told, thoughtful people would care about it. My own opinion when I saw it was that it was the only sort of thing likely to take persons of musing tum into a theatre at this time.

I have not read M. Bergson's book, and if you should not find it troublesome to send your copy as you suggest, please do.

The theory of the Prime Force that I used in The Dynasts was published in Jan. 1904. The nature of the determination embraced in the theory is that of a collective will ; so that there is a proportion of the total will in each part of the whole, and each part has therefore, in strictness, some freedom, which would, in fact, be operative as such whenever the remaining great mass of will in the universe should happen to be in equilibrium.

However, as the work is intended to be a poetic drama and not a philosophic treatise I did not feel bound to develop this.

The assumption of unconsciousness in the driving force is, of course, not new. But I think the view of the unconscious force as gradually becoming conscious : i.e. that consciousness is creeping further and further back towards th<! origin of force, had never (so far as I know) been advanced before The Dynasts appeared. But being only a mere impressionist I must not pretend to be a philosopher in a letter, and ask you to believe me,

Sincerely yours, THOMAS HARDY.

Dr. Saleeby. 449

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4SO

DEAR DR. SALEEBY,

APPENDIX II

MAx GATE, DoRCHESTER, Feh. 2, 191 5·

Your activities are unlimited. I should like to hear your address on 'Our War for International Law'. Personally I feel rather dis­heartened when I think it probable that the war will end by sheer exhaustion of the combatants, and that things will be left much as they were before. But I hope not.

I have been now and then dipping into your Bergson, and shall be returning the volume soon. I suppose I may assume that you are more or less disciple, or fellow-philosopher, of his. Therefore you may be rather shocked by some views I hold about his teachings -if I may say I hold any views about anything whatever, which I hardly do.

His theories are certainly much more delightful than those they contest, and I for one would gladly believe them, but I cannot help feeling all the time that he is rather an imaginative and poetical writer than a reasoner, and that for his attractive assertions he does not adduce any proofs whatever. His use of the word 'creation' seems loose to me. Then, as to 'conduct'. I fail to see how, if it is not mechanism, it can be other than Caprice, though he denies it (p. so). And he says that Mechanism and Finalism (I agree with him as to

Finalism) are only external views of our conduct. 'Our conduct extends between them, and slips much further.'

Well, I hope it may, but he nowhere shows that it does. And again: 'a mechanistic conception . . . treats the living as the inert. . . . Let us, on the contrary, trace a line of demarcation between the inert and the living (.lo8).' Well, let us, to our great pleasure, if we can see why we should introduce an inconsistent rupture of order into uniform and consistent laws of the same.

You will see how much I want to be a Bergsonian (indeed I have for many years). But I fear that his philosophy is, in the bulk, only our old friend Dualism in a new suit of clothes - an ingenious fancy without real foundation, and more complicated, and therefore less likely than the determinist fancy and others that he endeavours to overthrow.

You must not think me a hard-hearted rationalist for all this. Half my time (particularly when I write verse) I believe- in the modem use of the word - not only in things that Bergson does,

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APPENDIX II

but in spectres, mysterious voices, intuitions, omens, dreams, haunted places, etc., etc.

But then, I do not believe in these in the old sense of belief any more for that ; and in arguing against Bergsonism I have, of course, meant belief in its old sense when I aver myself incredulous.

DEAR DR. SALEEBY'

Sincerely yours,

3

THOMAS HARDY.1

MAx GATE, DoRCHESTER, I6.J.I9IS·

My thanks for the revised form of The Longest Price of War, which I am reading.

I am returning, or shall be in a day or two, your volume of Berg­son. It is most interesting reading, and one likes to give way to its views and assurances without criticizing them.

If, however, we ask for reasons and proof (which I don't care to do) I am afraid we do not get them.

An elan vital- by which I understand him to mean a sort of additional and spiritual force, beyond the merely unconscious push of life- the 'will' of other philosophers that propels growth and development- seems much less probable than single and simple determinism, or what he calls mechanism, because it is more complex: and where proof is impossible probability must be our guide. His partly mechanistic and partly creative theory seems to me clumsy and confused.

He speaks of • the enormous gap that separates even the lowest form of life from the inorganic world'. Here again it is more probable that organic and inorganic modulate into each other, one nature and law operating throughout. But the most fatal objection to his view of creation plus propulsion seems to me to lie in the existence of pain. If nature were creative she would have created painlessness, or be

1 A great part of this letter will be found in a slightly different form on pp. 369-70 of this volume. Both versions are printed in order to illustrate Hardy's artistic inability to rest content with anything that he wrote ur.til he had brought the expression as near to his thought as language would allow. He would, for instance, often go on revising his poems for his own satisfaction after their publication in book form.-F. E. H.

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APPENDIX II

in process of creating it - pain being the first thing we instinctively fly from. If on the other hand we cannot introduce into life what is not already there, and are bound to mere recombination of old materials, the persistence of pain is intelligible.

Sincerely yours, THOMAS HARDY.

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MY DEAR CLODD,

APPENDIX III

LETTERS ON 'THE DYNASTS'

MAx GATE, DoRCHESTER, New Year's Eve, 1907.

I write a line to thank you for that nice little copy of Munro's Lucretius, and to wish you a happy New Year. I am familiar with two translations of the poet, but not with this one, so the book is not wasted.

I have been thinking what a happy man you must be at this time of the year, in having to write your name 8ooo times. Nobody wants me to write mine once!

In two or three days I shall have done with the proofs of Dynasts III. It is well that the business should be over, for I have been living in Wellington's campaigns so much lately that, like George IV, I am almost positive that I took part in the battle of Waterloo, and have written of it from memory.

What new side of science are you writing about at present? Yours sincerely,

MY DEAR CLODD,

THOMAS HARDY.

MAX GATE, 20:2:1908.

I must send a line or two in answer to your letter. What you remind me of- the lyrical account of the fauna of Waterloo field on the eve of the battle is, curiously enough, the page (p. 282) that struck me, in looking back over the book, as being the most original in it. Though, of course, a thing may be original v. ithout being good. However, it does happen that (so far as I know) in the many treat­ments of Waterloo in literature, those particular personages who were present have never been alluded to before.

L.T.H.-2. G2. 453

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-454 APPENDIX III

Yes : I left off on a note of hope. It was just as well that the Pities should have the last word, since, like Paradise Lost, The Dynasts proves nothing.

Always yours sincerely, THOMAS HARDY.

P.S.-The idea of the Unconscious Will becoming conscious with flux of time, is also new, I think, whatever it may be worth. At any rate I have never met with it anywhere.-T. H.

MY DEAR CLO})D,

MAx GATE, DoRCHESTER, 28:8:1914.

I fear we cannot take advantage of your kind invitation, and pay you a visit just now - much as in some respects we should like to. With the Germans (apparently) only a week from Paris, the native hue of resolution is sicklied o'er with the pale cast of thought. We shall hope to come when things look brighter.

Trifling incidents here bring home to us the condition of affairs not far off- as I daresay they do to you still more- sentries with gleaming bayonets at unexpected places as we motor along, the steady flow of soldiers through here to Weymouth, and their dis­appearance across the Channel in the silence of night, and the rooo prisoners whom we get glimpses of through chinks, mark these fine days. The prisoners, they say, have already mustered enough broken English to say 'Shoot Kaiser!' and oblige us by playing 'God Save the King' on their concertinas and fiddles. Whether this is 'meant sarcastic', as Artemus Ward used to say, I cannot tell.

I was pleased to know that you were so comfortable, when I was picturing you in your shirt sleeves with a lot of other robust Aide­burghers digging a huge trench from Aldeburgh church to the top of those steps we go down to your house, streaming with sweat, and drinking pots of beer between the shovellings (English beer of course).

Sincerely yours, THOMAS HARDY.

P.S.-Yes : everybody seems to be reading The Dynasts just now - at least, so a writer in the Daily News who called here this morning tells me.-T. H.

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INDEX

'Abbey Mason, The' (poem), 357 Abbotsbuty, 367 Abercorn, Duchess of, ~4S Aberdeen University, p3-4, 4~8 'Absolute Explains, The' (poem), 4~7 Academy and Literature, the, 314, 344 'According to the Mighty Working'

(poem), 388 Adelaide, Queen, ~07 Adelphi Terrace (No. 8), 37, 38, 39, 4~,

SJ, ~49. 377, 404 Aeneid, the, ~8, 30, 3~, 58, 59, 188 Aerial warfare, protest against (1911), 356 Affpuddle, 6 'Afternoon Service at Mellstock' (poem),

18 Agamemnon, the, 33 Agricultural labourers of Dorsetshire,

Hardy on, 312-14 Aide, Hamilton, ~s6 Airlie, Lady, ~~ Aix-les-Bains, 187 Aldeburgh, Suffolk, ~64, 32·7, 346, 347,

3SO, 4S4 Alexandra, Queen, 347 Allbutt, Sir T. Clifford, ~36, ~s4, 336, 34z,

363 Allen, Grant, z64 Allhusen, Elizabeth, 418 Allhusen, Henry, z81 Allhusen, Mrs. Henry, 386, 418 Allingham, Mrs., 101 Alma-Tadema,SirLaurence, 1z1, 138,164

166, Z07, Zl9 Almack's (Willis's Rooms), 4~-3, z74 Alpine Club, 36 Ambulance Society lectures, 157 American copyright, 140 American National Red Cross Society,

3o6-7 Amiens, 138 'And there was a great calm' (poem), 407 Antwerp, no-n 'Apology' (preface to Late Lyrics and

Earlier), 333, 376, 40z, 41 S 'Appeal to America, An' (poem), 368 'Arabella', original of, zo6

4SS

Arch, Joseph, 178 Argyle Rooms, 34, 43, 123 Arlington Manor, z6o, z68, 324 Arnold, Matthew, 109, 134, 135, 146-7,

167, ~OI 0 ~07, ~IS, 3I6, 4:13 Art, Hardy on, uS-9, ~35. ~6I, 3IO, 374 Ashley, Hon. Evelyn, I u, zp-3 Ashley Gardens, Westminster, ~68 Askerswell, ~I7 Asquith, Anthony, 4~S Asquith, H. H., JZ3, 358, J6z Asquith, Mrs., ~6s, 362 Astor, Mr., z63 'At a Seaside Town' (poem), 63 'At Mayfair Lodgings' (poem), ~67 'At Middle-Field Gate in February'

(poem), u3 'At the Entering of the New Year'

(poem), 4II 'At the Word "Farewell"' (poem), 75 Athemzum, the, 84, 89, 163, I83, ~~J, 3u,

345, 350, 388, 4n Athenaeum Club, uS, ~34, ~37, 324 Atlantic Monthly, ISI, 154 Austin, Alfred, 346 Axminster, ISJ-4, 367

Bacon, Lady Charlotte, I31-~ Baden, no, uo Bagber Bridge, I u Baldwin, Stanley, 447 Balestier, Miss (Mrs. Rudyard Kipling),

n6 Balfour, A. J., (Earl Balfour), ~oo, :145,

zn-4, ~6o, 3~s. 3ss, 404 Balfour, Colonel Eustace, 331 Balfour, Miss, z4s, 358 Balliol Players, the, at Max Gate, 4~5-6,

43~. 437 Bankes, Mrs., 433 Barnes, Rev. William, z8, 3~, In, u3,

154, 161-~, 175-6, 18J, 188, ns, 341 Barnes Theatre, Tess at the, 4~8 ; The

Mayor o( Casterhridge at the, 43~ Barrie,]. M., ~s6-7, ~79, 334,366,374,377,

388, 389,404, 4o6, 412, 41S, 445, 447 Barrie, Mrs. J. M., 3 34

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INDEX

'Barthelemon at Vauxhall' (sonnet), 4I4 Basingstoke, 2.92.

Bastow, Henry Robert (fellow pupil of Hardy), 2.7-31, 43, 443

Bath, 72., 9I, 93, 94, u6, 3I7, 439-40; the Abbey, 355

Baxter, Lucy ('Leader Scott'), I88, I91 Bayard, T. F. (American Ambassador),

2.85 Bayswater (Monmouth Road), 2.I8, 2.2.I Bedford Street, 89 Beerbohm, Max, 346, 4I9; Mrs., 4I9 Beesly, Professor, I68 'Belgian Expatriation, On the' (sonnet),

367 Belgravia (magazine), I 17 Bellini, I77 Bennett, Arnold, 366 Benson, A. C., 36I, 363, 366, 376 Benson, Monsignor R. H., 366 Bentley, John (Waterloo veteran), 106 Ben Venue, I 50 Bere Regis, I 40, 2. 3 I, J2.6 Beresford, Miss, 2.54 Bergerat, Emile, 3 H Bergson, Hardy on, 369-70, 449, 450-I Bernard, Dr., Archbishop of Dublin, 388 Berne, 2.92.

Bernhardt, Sarah, 2.65, 308 Bertolini's restaurant, St. Martin's Street,

42. Besant, Sir Walter, I32. Bincombe Down, u6 Birmingham, 356 Birrell, Augustine, 405 Black Forest, visit to the, uo Blackmore, R. D., I02. Blackmore, Vale of, 6, I75, 2.I4, 416, 432. Blackwood's Magarine, 2.04 Blanche, Jacques, 33I, 334; Mme., 334 Blandford, I07, 362, 388; tune, 337 Blomfield, Sir Arthur, 36-8, 44-9, 51, 53,

76, 77, 89, I07, 249. 256, 2.68, 305, 364, 384, 404

Blomfield, Dr. C. J. (Bishop of London), 36,44

Blomfield Court, Maida Vale, 350 Blunden, Edmund, 417 Bockhampton, 3, 6, 8, 12, 25, 2.8, 35, 84,

9I-2., 95, 96, 99, I2.5, I63, I65, 2.02., 2.I7, 259, 262, 297, 309, J26, 394-5, 407, 412, 4I 5, 420, 433, 44I, 442, 443, 444; lady of the manor of ('Julia Augusta'), I8-2o, 4I ; village school, I8

Boldini, 120

Bolingbroke Grove, 120 Bonington, R. P., I85 Book of Homage to Shakespeare, A, 372. Bookman, the, 240 Boscastle, 65, 7I, 73, 75, I 56, 36I, 373 Bossiney, 7 I Botticelli, 2.I7 Boughton, Rutland, 425, 42.6 Bournemouth, I07, u5, I75 Bow Church, Cheapside, 2I8 Box Hill, 263 Bradd on, Miss, I J2. Bradlaugh, Charles, I78, 22.8 Bradley, Miss, 304 Braille type, portions of Hardy's works in,

362 Brandon, David, 76 Brandon, Raphael, 76-8, u6 'Breaking of Nations, The', 372, 378 'Bride-night Fire, The' (poem), I07, 302 Bridehead (tune), 337 Bridges, Robert, 342, 366, 398 Bridport, I 53-4, 367, 370, 373; tune, 337 Brighton, visit to, 276 Brine, Dr. and Mrs., I 53 Bristol, 27, 36, 46, 93, I u, I I4, Is;, 2.98,

317; Cathedral, 355; University con­fers degree on Hardy, 428

British Museum, 43, I79, I83, 206, 2.2.0, 2.36, 298, 306, 322, 3JI, J56

Broadmayne, I64, 221 Broadwindsor, 367 Bronson, Mrs., I94 Brooke, Rupert; 342 Brookfield, Mrs., I9I Broughton, Rhoda, I 59 Browning, Elizabeth Barrett, 87, I92 Browning, Robert, 49, 57, 87, I 3 5, I 59,

IOO, 171-2, I82., 192, I94, I99, 200, 2.0I, 22.2-3, 383, 388, 445; (quoted) 195, (Sordello) 378

Bruges, visit to, 2.82. Brussels, Io6, I 10, 2.82, 2.84 Bruton Street, 41 Bryce, Lord, 385, 404 Bubb Down, 214 Buckstone, J. B., 42, 54 Bude, 7I 'Building a New Street in the Ancient

Quarter, Rome' (poem), 189 Buller, Sir Redvers, 262 Bunty pulls the Strings, 358, 359 Burghclere, Lady, see Herbert, Lady

Winifred Burke, T. H., 2.55

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INDEX 457 Burne-Jones, Sir Edward, t66 Burney, Frances, Jjl-:1. Bury, Professor, J:l.J,, 350, 363; Mrs., 363 Bushrod, James, u6 Butcher, S. H., 343 Butler, Dr. (Master of Trinity), J:l.S, 361;

Mrs., 361 Byron, Lady, :1.34, J:l.S, 3:1.9 Byron, Lord, 131-:1., 19:1., 194, :1.07, :1.37,

::.70, 300, 316, 3:1.4, 325, 370

'Call to National Service, A' (poem), 375 Cambridge, 93, 96, I4I, I48, :1.o8, :1.:1.6, 331-

33:1., 343, 363-4; University confers hon. degree on Hardy, 361, 4:1.8

Cambridge, Duke of, p, 199 Cambridge Maga{ine, the, 370 Cambridge Review, the, 363 Camelford, 72, 373 Campbell, Mrs. Patrick, :1.65, :1.74 Campbell-Bannerman, Sir H., I78 Campden Hill Road, 199 Camperdown, Lady, 181 Canadian Bookman, the, 389 Canford Manor, 151 ' Cannibal Club', 4:1. Canterbury Cathedral, 33:1. Capital punishment, Hardy on, 317 Carlisle Cathedral, 3H Carlsnthe, uo Carlyle, Thomas, ss, 6o, ut, 137, 148, :1.30,

:1.33, 330, 34S ; Mrs., UI Carnarvon, Lady, 171, 184, I85, :~.oo, :1.64 Carnarvon, Lord, 17:1., I 85, :1.:1.7-8 Carnegie, Andrew, 3 31 Carr, J. Comyns, Ip, 348 'Casterbridge' and Dorchester, 35 1 Catholic Apostolic Church, Gordon

Square, 77 Cave, Sir Charles, :1.40 Cavendish, Lady Dorothy (afterwards

Lady Dorothy Macmillan), 404 Cavendish, Lord Frederick, :~.ss Cerne Abbas, :1.1 5 Cervesato, Dr. Arnaldo, letter to, 310 Chamberlain, Joseph, 177-8, :1.76; Mrs.,

:1.49 Chamberlain, Mrs. Richard, :l.SJ Chambers, Dr. (Queen Adelaide's doctor),

:1.07 Chambers's journal, 47 'Channel Firing' (poem), 365 Channel Islands, visit to, 168 Chantrey, Sir Francis, I 36 Chapman, Frederick, 59, 6o

' Chapman and Hall, Messrs., s9-61, 76 Charborough Park, :1.67, 44I Charing Cross Bridge, 37 Charmouth, ISJ-4; tune, 337 Chattaway, Dr., 420 Chatteris, Mrs., II7 Chatto and Windus, Messrs., II7 Chelsea Hospital, 78, to6, III, u3 Cheltenham, :1.98 Chepstow, 93 Cherbourg, I 54-5 Chesil, us Chester Cathedral, 3 55 Chichester Cathedral, 347 Child, Harold, 4:1.:1. Child, Josiah (founder of Child's Bank),

:1.3 I Childhay, 6 Child-Okeford, 6, 107 Childs ( Childses, Chiles), maternal ances-

tors of Hardy, 6, :1.3 1 Childs, Mr. and Mrs. Borlase, :1.3 I Childs, Christopher, 7, :1.31 Childs, Dr. Ci)ristopher (cousin), :1.3I Childs, Maria, 7 Chilfrome, 6 Chislehurst, uS Choate, J. H. (American Ambassador), 3:1.5 Christian, Princess, 264 Christie, Miss Mary, letter to, IS 9 'Christmas Ghost-Story, A', 305 'Christmas in the Elgin Room' (poem),

444 'Church Romance, A' (poem), I4 Churchill, Lord Randolph, 178, :1.30 Cider Cellars, the, 41 'Circus-Rider to Ringmaster' (poem),

166 Clare (smith), :I. I 3 Clarendon Press, the, 34 I Clarke, Sir Edward, 178 Clement's Inn, 77 Cliffe, A. L., 4:1.5 Clifton, 93 Clodd, Edward, :1.30, :1.64, 306, 3:1.0, 3:1.7,

4B-4 Closeworth, 109 Coal Hole, the, 41 Cockerell, Sydney, 356, 36:1., 363, 374, 386;

Mrs., 363 Coe (stage-manager), 54 Colbourne, Maurice, 39:1.-3 Coleridge, H., II4 Coleridge, Lord, 167, :1.51 Coleridge, S. T., 1p, :1.03, 310

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INDEX

Collins, Lottie, :t46 Cologne Cathedral, 110 Colquhoun, Sir Patrick, 1 JZ, 100 Colvin, Sir Sidney, 181 Comedie Fran~aise, the, u6 Comedy in Chapters, A, see Hand of Etlael-

herta, Tlae Como, 196 'Compassion' (poem), 4ZS Comte, Auguste, 98, 146, 179 Connecticut, U.S. battleship, 3D Conrad, Joseph, 334 'Convergence of the Twain, The' (poem),

H7 Conygar Hill, 173 Cook, Douglas, 7S Copyright, questions of, 1o6 ; American,

140 Corbin, Christopher, 447 Corfe Mullen, I s8 Com Law agitation, :tl Corn/ail/ Maga,ine, 9S, 96, 97, toz, I OJ,

U7, JOS, 318, JZ3, 38S 'Cornwall, Barry', 100, 13S Cosmopolis, 173 Courtney, W. L., 37S Coutts, Francis (Lord Latymer), 3:t:t Covent Garden, 38, 41, :tlo; the Opera

House, 43, S4 Coventry, zh Crabbe, George, z84. 3:t7 Crackanthorpe, Mr. and Mrs. Montagu,

:t76 Craigenputtock Moor, Ul Craigie, Mrs. ('John Oliver Hobbes'),

:tS6, :t6o, :t6S, JJI, 34:l Crawford-Dilke case, 183 Cremome, 34, 43, n3 Crichton-Browne, Sir James, ZH, zs9,

3J6, 388 Crickmay, G. R.,6J-s, 69, 7z, 75, 76, 84,8S Criterion Restaurant, us Crivelli, 177 Croft, Dr. W., 8, sz Cross, Mrs., 1 S7 Cross, Sir R., 178 Cross Keys, Clerkenwell, 17, 131 Crystal Palace, 137 Culliford Tree, 173 Cumberland Gate, Hyde Park, 17 Curtis, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel, 194 Curzon, Lord, z6o, z6z, 34:t

Daily Chronicle, the, JOS Daily News, the, 454

Daily Telegraph, the, 331 Daly, Augustin, uS Darners, the, 17s-6, 137 'Darkling Thrush, The' (poem), 307 Darling, Mr. Justice, J9:l Dartmoor, 17S d 'Arville, Miss, 91 Darwin, Charles, 1 SJ, zot, zos, :t59, J:ll Dashwood, Mr. and Mrs., 117, 119 'Dawn after the Dance, The' (poem), 64 Dawson of Penn, Lord, 4:t4 'Dead and the Living One, The' (poem),

J7:l 'Dead Drummer, The' (poem), 305 'Dead Quire, The' (poem), 92 'Dead "Wessex ", the Dog to the House-

hold' (poem), 435 Deadman's Bay, 108 Defoe, 61, 105, 391 de Grey, Lady, z66 de Ia Mare, Walter, 413, 419, 442, 44S ;

Mrs., 419 de Lesseps, Ferdinand, u6 d'Erlanger, Baron Fredc!ric, H, 347 de Robeck, Sir John and Lady, 419 de Ros, Lady, 255 Desperate Remedies, 63-5, 75, 84-5, 88, 91,

417; dramatized, 398, 40:t Dessoir, Dr. Max, 347 Destinn, Mme., 347 de Vere, Aubrey, 17S Devonshire, 8th Duke of, z6o ; 9th

Duke, 404 Dickens, Charles, 41, SJ, 76 Dictionary of National Biography, Ul Dillon, E. J., 178 Disraeli, Benjamin, 1o6, 148 'Distracted Preacher, The' (story

dramatized), 357 'Ditty' (poem), 76 Dobson, Austin, 251 'Domicilium' (Hardy's earliest poem),

4.33 Donald, Robert, letter to, 341-2 Donaldson, Dr., 361 Donaldson, Lady Albinia\ 361 Donovan, Dr. (phrenologist), 41 'Doom and She' (poem), 310 Dorchester, s, 26, 27, z8, 32, 33, 34, 35, 54,

56, 59, 63, 94, l:lS-6, ISJ, 161, 163, 167, 173, 174, 17S, 179, 183, 18S, 186, 193, 213, no, 221, :t47, 249, 257, 2S8, z6z, 265,266, :t67, :t74, 281, 304, JOS, JIS-17, 323. 326, 341, 344. 346, 347. 355. 364, 374, 386, 398, 401, 414, 4U, 423, 426,

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INDEX 459

44I, 448; freedom presented (I9IO), 3SI-3; Hardy's schools at, IS, n-s

Dorchester Debating and Dramatic So­ciety, the, 34I, 347, 3S3, JS6-7, 3S9·00, 363, 407, 4:16

Dorchester Grammar School, s, 24-s, 343, 4I8, 43 I, 437"9> 440

'Dorchester Hornpipe, The' (tune), 336 Dorslt County Chronicle, 33, I6I, 3IS·I6 Dorset County Hospital, 4I4 Dorset County Museum, I7o, 3S7 Dorset Field Club, I63 Dorsetshire Regiment, marching tune for,

336 Douglas, Frank, 386 Douglas, Sir George, ns, 239, :as9, 304,

J86, 393 Dover, visit to, :ab Dreadnought, battleship, 3S4 'Dream or No, A' (poem), I04 Drew, John, :an Drinkwater, John, 432-3 'Druid Stone' at Max Gate, 233, 387 Drury Lane Theatre, 9, S3 Dublin, visit to, :IS.oj-6 Dufferin, Lord, :as9 Dulce's Reappearance, The (short story),

6 Dumas, Alexandre (pere), 24 Du Maurier, George, IJ8, I4S, I67, :aoi Dundas, Mr. (A.D.C. at Dublin I893),

:ass Durham, 239; Cathedral, 347 Durlstone Head, Io8 Duse, Eleanora, :as7, :a6s Dynasts, The, I7, I9, so, Io6, no, 114, 128,

I46, I48, I p, I62, I74, I77, I8J, I9S, 20J, 22I, us, 234. 247. 2f9, 284, 298, JIO, 3I7·I8, JI9•20, )22, )27, J29> J3I, 332, 333-7, 344, JS6, 362, 368, 372, 37S·6, 39I, 409, 4I3, 4I6, 4I7·I8, 449, 4S3·4; dramatic versions, J4I, 367-8; Granville­Barker, 367-8; O.U.D.S., 392-3, 397-403; Wessex Scenes, 372-3

Eastern Question, Conference on the (I876), II2•IJ

Eastlake, Sir Charles, 7 Ecclesiastes, in Spenserian stanzas, 47 Edinburgh Cathedral, 347 Edinburgh Revi1w, the, 3S9 Edward VII, King, 3so, 433 'Egdon' Heath, 117, 247, 42s, 439 Eggesford, I70 Eighty Club, the, 278

'Eifride', original of, 74 Eliot, George, 98, I46, I48 Eliot, ~rs. R., :ass Elton, Godfrey, 420 Ely Cathedral, 3JI Emerson, R. W., I6o Emery, Winifred, 234 Empire Music Hall, the, :as I 'England to Germany' (poem), 367 English Art Club, :an English Review, the, 337 Epsom, on Derby Day, I38 Ermitage, L' (of Paris), :ass Ervine, St. John, 412 Etretat, I 3S-9 Europien, L', JIB • Eustacia', source of name, 117 Ev;~ns, A. H., 347, 3SJ, 3S7 Evans's supper-rooms, 4I Evershot, 2I4 Evil eye in Dorset, :104-s Exeter, as, I7S, 364, 370, 4o6; Cathedral,

3 S6, 370, 404 Exeter, Bishop of, 7S

Facey, Dick, :II3 Far from the Madding Crowd, 74, 9S, 96,

97, 98, IOI, IO:I, 103, I08, 123, 298, JSS ; dramatized, I p, 347-8

Farrer, A. A., 42S Faucit, Miss Helen, 336 Fawley, Berks. ('Marygreen'), :aso, 420 Fellow-Townsmen (short story), I36 F~rrey, Benjamin, 3S-6, 37, 42 FrdJ/er of the Reels, The (short story) :as 2 Fielding, Hardy on, 98, 273, 298 ' Fiesole, I9I-:a 'Figure in the Scene, The' (poem), 79 'Fire at Tranter Sweatley's, The' (poem),

I07, 302 Fisher, Admiral W. W., 4I9 Fiske, Mr., :ass Fitch, Sir Joshua, :IJS Fitzgerald, Sir Gerald and Lady, :as6 Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, 3S6 'Five Students, The' (poem), 40S Flanders, 28:1-3 Fletcher, Walter, I s 8 Florence, I88, 190-:1 Flower, Newman, 4I7, 424 Floyer, Mr. (of West Stafford), 113 Floyer, Rev. Mr. (vicar of Stinsford), Io Forbes-Robertson, Johnston, 274 Ford Abbey, In Fordington, Dorchester, 96, :a6I, :a66, 391

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INDEX Fordington Field, I6J, I66; see also Max

Gate Fordington Moor, u.s, IJS Forster, E. M., 4I7 Fortnightly Review, :us, 33:1, 354, JH,

J65, 375, 436 Frampton Court, Dorset, u9, :133, :159,

383 France, Anatole, 363 Fran cis, Sir Philip, zoo Frangc;on-Davies, Gwen, 4:16, 4:19 Frazer, Sir James, 350 Frederick, Empress, 48 Frederick III, Emperor, 48 Freshwater, I37 Frith, Mr. (marshal to Sir Charles Cave),

240 Frith, W. P., IJI, 2:15 Froom (Frome), river and valley, 5, ::r.I4,

295; tune, 337 Froom-Quintin, u4 F ryston, I 4 5

Galsworthy, John, 366,405, 4I9, 440,447; Mrs., 440

Galway, Viscountess, I59, I7Z Gardner, Lady Winifred, 253 Garrick Theatre, Tess at the, 4:1S Gaskell, see Milnes-Gaskell Gautier, Thcophile, 35 5 General Blind Association, 36z Geneva, z94-5 Genoa, IS7 'Genoa and the Mediterranean' (poem),

JS7 Gentleman's Maga{ine, I07 George III, 12.7, zoo, zo9, zz9 George, Lieut. F., 37I, 443 German prisoners, visit to, 374 Gerome, J. L., 76, zo6 Gibbon, Edward, I9o, 293 Gibbon, Edward, :193 Gifford, Emma Lavinia (afterwards Mrs.

Hardy, q.v.), 74, 75, 76, 7S-9, S3-4, S6-7, 93, 9S, IOI; her' Recollections', 65-73

Gifford, Dr. E. Hamilton, IOI Gifford, Evelyn, 39S, 407 Gifford, J. Attersoll, 66 Gilder, Miss Jeannette, z79-SI Giotto, 190 Gissing, George, I Sz Giuglini, 43 Gladstone, W. E., I u, I7z, I77-S, ISz;

Mrs., I7S Glasgow University, Hardy asked to stand

for Lord Rectorship of, z76-7

Glasgow University Liberal Club, :176-7 'Glass-stainer, The' (poem), z6o Glastonbury, pz, 4z6 Globe Theatre, Ip Gloucester Cathedral, z9S, 357 Godley, A. D., 397 'God's Funeral' (poem), 354 Godwin, Mary, I7, 4z, 304 'Going of the Battery, The' (poem), 305 Gollop, Miss, ISI Good Words, I3I Gordon, General, I7Z Gorky, Maxim, 334; Mme., 334 Gorst, Hilda, ZJ3 Goschen, G. J. (Lord Goschen), zoo, z3o,

ZSJ Gosse, Sir Edmund, I 6o, I 6 I, I 64, I So,

zoz, 2I5, 220, i21, zz6, z5I, 3z3, 3SS, 447

Graham, Lady Cynthia, 26o, z66 Granville-Barker, H., 372, 399, 404, 4I9,

4Z6, 435, 436, 449 Granville-Barker, Mrs., 404, 4I9, 426, 435,

436 Graphic, the, I5S, I 59, I76, 2:1:1, zz5, zz7,

240, 305 Gray, Thomas, 386; visit to grave of, 303-4;

(quoted) I 49 Great Exhibition (I862), 35, 38 Great Fawley, Berks., 250 Greek Testament, 29-32 Greenhill, Sir G., uS 'Greenhill Fair', original of,_ 96 Greenwich Observatory, ISJ Greenwood, Frederick, IOO Greer, Mrs., Z54 Grein, J. T., 2zo Grieg, I8I, 329-30 Grosart, Rev. Dr. A. B., letter to, :105 Grosvenor Gallery, I2I Group of Nohle Dames, A, I95, z25, n7,

2J2 Grove, Mrs. (Lady), z69, z81 Grundesburgh Hall, Suffolk, 23S Guays, Gabriel, 208 Guinness's Brewery, visit to, zss Gurdon, Sir Brampton and Lady Camilla,

238

Hackwood Park, 34:1 Haggard, Rider, letter to, 3 I2-I4 Hague, The, 110 Halifax, Lord, 20I Halsey, Admiral Sir Lionel, 42.:1. Hambledon Hill, u6 Hamilton, Lord George, 178

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Hamilton Terrace (No. 70), 2.53-7 Hanbury, Cecil, 413, 414, 433 Hanbury, Mrs. John, 2.66

INDEX

I Harrow School, 127 Harte, Bret, 181 Hartington, Lord, 177-8 Hastings, 2.6 S Hand of Ethelherta, The, 102.-·L 107, 10B

Hands, maternal ancestors of Hardy, 6 Hanover Square Club, 126 Harcourt, Lewis, 2.59 Harcourt, Sir W., 17B Hardwicke, Philip C., 36 Hardy, Emma Lavinia (see also Gifford,

Emma Lavinia), 104, 11B, 12.3, IJI, IJB-140, 145-6, 14B1 1p, 15)-51 1701 IBJ, 1B6, 2.01, 2.0B-9, 2.1B, 2.2.4, 2.2.B, 2.2.9, 2.33, 2.34, 2.36, 2.37, 2.45, 2.49-50, 2.54-6, 2.58, 2.59, 2.65, 2.76, 2.81, zBJ, 2.92., 2.94-5, 2.98, 305, 306, JOB, 32.6, 331, 333, J42., 353, 354, 359-60, 3B7, 41B, 419, 443; Recol­lections, 65-73, 357

Hardy, Mrs. F. E., 363-4, 367, 370-1, 372., 373, 377, 38B, 3B9, 392., 393. 399-404, 406, 416-17, 42.0-JO, 434-46

Hardy, Mrs. (Mary Head, grandmother of Hardy), 2.15, 2.82., 42.0

Hardy, Henry (brother), 2.2.9, 2.4B, 2.62., 2.98, 371, 417, 418, 442., 447-B

Hardy, Jemima (mother), B, 13, 14, x6, 1B, 2.1-2., 2.J1 2.5, 2.7, IIJ, 139, 2.)51 2.48, 2.81 1

, 309, )2.1, 419 Hardy, John (great-grandfather), B, 19 Hardy, Katherine (sister), 309, 356, 373,

JBB, 404, 417, 4IB, 442. Hardy, Mary (sister), 2.47, 2.50, 309, J2.I,

357, 371, 405, 430, 444; letters to, 311-9, 5 '-2.

Hardy, Admiral Sir Thomas (captain of Victory), 5, IJ, 117, p6, 32.7, 367

Hardy, Thomas, of Melcombe Regis (d. 1599), 5, J4J, 4JB

Hardy, Thomas (of Chaldon), 5 Hardy, Thomas (of Dorchester), B Hardy, Thomas (of Wareham), 5 Hardy, Thomas (father), xo, 12.~14, 19, 2.1,

2.3-4, 32.-4, 35-6, 73, BJ, 96, IIJ, 2.47-8, 2.50, 2.62., JIB, 393, 444

Hardy, Thomas (grandfather), 8-xo, u, IJ, 19,93, 2.48 1 2.50, JI8

Hardy Dictionary, A, 356 Hardy Players, the, 372., 402., 413, 42.3, 42.6 Harley, Lady Charlotte (Byron's 'Ianthe'),

IJI-2. Harper, Henry, 2.66 Harf'e•'s Maga:ci"e, 145, 2.63, 350, 357 Harper's Weekly, 176 Harrison, Frederic, 2.2.0, 2.36, 362. Harrison, William, 43-4

Hatfield, 55 Havre, IJS-9, 2.2.9 Haweis, Rev., zxS-19 Hawker, Rev. R. S., of Morwenstow,

156 Hawkins, Anthony Hope, 366, 405 Hawkins, Sir Henry, zp Haymarket Theatre, 54 'He abjures love' (poem), 409 'He views himself as an automaton'

(poem), z6o Head, Sir Henry, 445 Hegel, 179 Heidelberg, 110, 120 Heine's grave, 2.2.9 Henley, W. E., 2.37 Henniker, General, 2.66, 357 Henniker, Mrs. Arthur (Florence) 2.54-5,

2.56-7, 2.61, 357. J89, 406, 416, 419 Her Majesty's (opera house), 43 Herbert, Auberon, 170, 172., 182. Herbert, Lady Winifred (afterwards Lady

Burghclere), 170, 182., 184 'Heredity' (poem), 2.17 Hereford Cathedral, 2.58, 355 Herkomer, Sir Hubert, 342. Hertfordshire, childhood visit to, 17, 35 Hewlett, Maurice, 308, 346 Hibbs, Mr., 2.31 Hicks, John, 2.7-8, 33, J4, 35, 36, 46, 53,

56-s, 6J, 65, 69, 73, 443 Higginson, Colonel T. W., 2.96 Highclere, 18 5 Higher Bockhampton, see Bockhampton Highgate Hill, 137 Hill, Mrs. Frank, 160 Hind, Arthur M., 4Jl 'His Country' (poem), 365 'His Education' (poem), 409 Hoare, Sir Henry and Lady, 364, 371 Hobbema, 120 Hobby-horse, as Christmas amusement,

IIJ Holborn Hill, 42. Holder, Rev. Caddell, 65, 67-72., 74, 155-

157 ; Mrs., 67-70, 74, 75 Holland, visit to, 110 Holmes, Dr. Oliver Wendell, 1Bo-1,

190-1 Holst, Gustav, 439 Holt, Henry (New York publisher), 128

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INDEX

Holywell Street, 12.4, tb Home Rule, 177-9 Honfleur, 139 Horace, 48, p, 190 Horses: in London, 2.11, 2.16; in war,

303 Houghton, Lord, 138, I4S, IS9, t6o, 2.08,

2.S4-S House of Commons, tea on the terrace

at, 2.68 Housman, A. E., 304, 3o6, 363, 447 How, Bishop, see Wakefield, Bishop of • How I built myself a house' (article, 1 86S ),

47 Howard, Hubert, 2.6o Howell, George, 37 Howells, W. D., t6o, 2.39 Hughes, Miss, 2.33 Hughes, Thomas, 2.33 Hugo, Victor, 172., 2.09, 3" Human Shows, 414, 42.8 Humanitarian League, letter to the,

349-5° Hummums, the, 38 Hungerford Market, 42. Hunt, Leigh, 136, J2.S Huxley, T. H., 12.2., 199, 2.01 Hyde Park Mansions, 32.9, 334, 336 Hymns, 'familiar and favourite', 2.74-5;

Latin, 306 Hyndman, Mr. and Mrs. H. M., 2.2.8, 386

Ibsen, 2.2.1, us, 2.34, 2.56, 2.65, 2.92. 'If a madness 'tis to weepe' (old epi-

taph), 336 Ilchester, Earls of, 6, 9, to, 163 Ilchester, Lady, 386 Iliad, the, 2.8, J2. Illustrated London News, 159 Ilminster, 440 'Imaginative Woman, An' (short story),

:t6o Imperial Institute, the, 2.81, 2.92., 2.98 'In Memoriam, F. T.' (poem), 42.4 'In the Garden' (poem), 371 'In the Old Theatre' (Fiesole) (poem), 192. 'In Time of "the Breaking of Nations" '

(poem), 79, 372., 378 Institute of Journalists, visit from 2.00

members of, 32.6 Interlaken, 2.92.-3 International Literary Congress, u6 Irving, Sir Henry, 12.2., 138, t6o, 2.2.6, 2.32.,

2.S7, 3:tS

'It never looks like Summer Now' (poem), 79

Italy, visit to, 186-96, 2.03

Jackson, Henry, 361 James, Dr., 363 James, Henry, IJ2., 134, 137, 164, 167, 181,

2.11, 2.46, 2.76, 346, 370 James, Sir Henry (Lord James), 178 'January Night, 1879, A' (poem), 12.4 Jefferies, Richard, I 34 Jeffreys, Judge, 6, 33 6 Jekyll, Mrs., 2.H Jersey, t68, see also le Hardys Jersey, Lord, 2. 3 1 Jeune, Sir Francis, 2.44, 2.46, 2.p, 2.6o, 2.68,

2.8s, 32.4 Jeune, Lady (afterwards Lady St. Helier,

q.v.), 171, 180, 184, 2.01, 2.07, 2.2.8, 2.30, 2.36, 2.37, 2.46, 2.SI, 2.S6-8, 2.6o, 2.68, 2.81

John, Augustus, 436 Jones, Miss (of Girton), 364 Jowett, Benjamin, 2.01, 2.69 Jubilee, Queen Victoria's (1887), :too-t Jude the Ohscure, 148, :to6, 2.08, 2.63, 2.68-

2.74, 2.76-8, 2.97, 32.s, 3S6, 392., 400, 401, 42.0, 42.1, 433

Judie, Madame, 167 'Julia Augusta', su Martin, Julia Augusta

Kapurthala, Raja of, 2.01 Kauffmanp, Angelica, 2.37 Kean, Charles, 42. Kean, Edmund, Hardy on, 3IS-I7 Keats,t36,I89,32.S,370,384,404,412.,442. Keene, Charles, 181 Kenilworth, visit to, 2.81 Kensington (Upper Phillimore Place), 2.09

2.10 Key, Rev. S. Whittell, letter to, 321 Killarney, visit to, :tH-6 King Alhert's Book, 367 King's College, London, 49, p King's College Chapel, Cambridge, 93,

141 'King's Soliloquy on the Night of his

Funeral, A' (poem), 3SO Kingsford, Dr. Anna, 179 Kingston Lacy, 12.2., 433 Kingston Maurward, 19-2.0, 31, 41, 414, 42.6 Kipling, Rudyard, 2.2.6, 2.34, 2.79, 2.96, 447 'Knight, Henry', original of, 74, 77 Knight, J., 132. Kotzebue, 2.34 Kubelik, 308

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INDEX 'Lacking Sense, The' (poem), 310 Lake Country, visit to, 3H Lamb, Charles, lOS, 136 Lane, John, 322,362,406 Lang, Andrew, 201 Lang, Principal Marshall, 323 Lankester, Ray, 2S4, 266 Lansdowne, Lord, 212, 262 Laodicean, A, 30, 128, 14S1 148, ISO Larmer Tree, annual sports at, 269 Lassouche (actor), 167 Last, I. G. (Hardy's schoolmaster), 18, n,

24, 3S6 Last, I. G., JS6 Last, W. J., JS6 'Last Performance, The' (poem), 3S§ 'Last Signal, The' (poem), 183 Late Lyrics and Earlier, 33 J, 376, 41 S Lathom, Lord (Lord Chamberlain), 201 Launceston, 6s, 72 Lausanne, 293-4 'Lausanne' (poem), 293-4 Lawrence, Colonel T. E., 424, 426, 434 Layard, Sir Henry, 151, 211 Lazarus, Misses, r6o Leach, Dr., 118 League of Nations, Hardy on the, 4o6 Lee, Sir Sidney, JZS le Hardy, Clement, s, 117 le Hardys, Jersey ancestors of Hardy, 4-S Leighton, Mr., In Leighton, Sir Frederick (Lord Leighton),

IZZ Leland, Charles Godfrey, u8-9, 132 Lemon, Mark, S4 Lewis, Sir George, 276 Lichlield Cathedral, 3 H Liddell, Dr., 257 Lifo's Little Ironies, 321 Lincoln Cathedral, 331 Lindisfarne (Holy Isle), 239 Literature, 305 'Little Hintock', 384 Litwinski, Dr. L., letter to, 37S Liverpool, 1 sz ' 'Lizbie Browne' (poem), z6, zo6 Llandudno, 254 Lock, Dr. Walter, 246 Locker, Arthur, 227 Locker, Frederick, 133, 136 Lodi, Bridge of, 19s-6 'Logs on the Hearth' (poem), 371 London School Board, drawings for, 87,

89,90 Londonderry, Lady, zs7, z6o, 161, 176,

)86

Long, Mr., 118 Longfellow, H. W., 16o Longleat, 295 Longpuddle, 193 'Looking Across' (poem), 371, 379 Lord Mayor's Show, 131 'Lost Pyx, The' (poem), 367 'Louisa in the Lane' (poem), 16 Louisiana, U.S. flagship, 3S4 Lowell, Miss Amy, 388 Lowell, James Russell, 138, 140, 100 Lucy, Sir Henry, 154-s Ludgate Hill, 41, 131, 116 Ludlow Castle, 159 Lulworth, legend of Napoleon at, 391-1;

tune, 337 Lulworth Castle, 11,, 44o-1 Lunatic asylum, visit to a, 136 Lushington, Mr. and Mrs., 134, 319 Lyceum Theatre, 111, 118, 131 Lyme Regis, ISJ-4, 370 Lymington, Lord and Lady, 108 'Lyonnesse', 7S. 79, 92, IH Lyttelton, Alfred, 16o Lyttelton, Mrs., 1H, z6o, 383 Lytton, Lord, 100

Maartens, Maarten, 157 Macaulay, Lord, 181, ::ur, 270 McCabe, Joseph, letter to, 403 McCarthy, Justin, r8o, zp MacDonald, Ramsay, 447 Mcilvaine, C. W., zso Mackail, J. W., 366 Macmillan, Alexander, sS-61, 6s, UI, rn,

I4S ; Mrs., uS, 145 Macmillan, Sir Frederick, 1S4 Macmillan, G. A., 1S4 Macmillan, Harold, 404 Macmillan, Maggie, 148 Macmillan and Co., Messrs., 75, 86, 186,

317, J27, 377 Macmillan's Maga{ine, 168, 176, 112 MacTaggart, Dr., 297, 363 Maeterlinck's Apology for Nature, Hardy

on, 314-IS Magdalene College, Cambridge, Hardy's

honorary Fellowship of, 361-3 Mahaffy, J. P., 1H 'Maid of Keinton Mandeville, The'

(poem), 118 Maiden Newton, ro, 1 u, 114, 249 Maitland, E., 179 Maitland, Fuller, 363 Malmesbury, Lady, 247, 164,176

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INDEX

Malvern, visit to, z8x 'Man was drawing near to me, A' (poem),

70n. Manchester, Consuelo Duchess of, :1.58, :1.6 o Mancl.ester Guardian, the, 431 Mandeville Place, ZJ4 'Marian' (dairymaid in Tess), original of,

25, 304 Marie Antoinette, zoo Mario, 43 Marlborough, Duchess of, z3o Marnhull, II 3 Marsh, Miss, 118 Martin, Julia Augusta, 18-zo, 41, xox-z, 394 Martin, Sir Theodore, 3 3 5 Masefield, John, 366, 398, 415, 4:1.1, 437;

Mrs., 415, 437 Masterman, C. F. G., 366 Masters (Hardy's Swanage landlord),

107-8 Matterhorn, the, z64, z94-5 Max Gate, 73, 164, x66, 170, 173-5, 176,

183, 185, Z02, 230, z33, 249, Z59, Z6I, z6z, z64, z65, z68, z69, :1.84, z9s, 306, 326, 327, 331, 336, 350, 354, 358, 359, 360, 368, 379, 383, 387, 40Z, 405, 41 I, 41z, 415,419, 4ZZ, 4Z5-3Z, 434-7,440-4, 447

'Mayfair Lodgings, At' (poem), z67 Mayne Down, u6 Mayor ofCasterhridge, Tl.e, 168, 171, 176,

179-80, 357, 36z; dramatized by John Drinkwater, 432-3 ; film version, 414

Medico-Psychological Society, 336 Melancl.oly Hussar, Tl.e (short story), 116 Mellstock Club, the, 394-5 Mel!stock Quire, Tl.e, dramatic version of

Under tl.e Greenwood Tree, q.v. 'Memories of Church Restoration' (paper),

331 'Men who March Away' (poem), 367, 370 Mercy (tune), 337 Meredith, George, 6x-z, 64, 76, 85, 181,

z63, z68, 304, 321, 344, 345-6, 370, 439 Meyrick, St. John, zss Middleton, Professor J. H., zz6 Milan, 195-6 Mildmay, Mrs., z59 Mill, J. S., 58, 330 Millais, Sir John, zox Milman, General, z56-7 Milman, Miss, z56-7 Milnes-Gaskell, Lady Catherine, zo8, 237,

:1.58-9 Milton, 141, zo3, z77 Minterne, not 'Little Hintock', 431-z

Moments of Vision, 18, 79, 119, 124, 157, 267, 371, J7Z, 373, 377, 378, 405

Monteagle, Lord, 3Z3 Montrose, Duchess of, z66, z76 Moore, Dr. G. E., 369 Moore, Sir John, 123 Morgan, Charles, on Hardy's visit to

Oxford (19zo), 398-403 Morgan, General J. H., letter to, 417-18 Morley, John (Lord Morley), 58-6x, 86,

n8, x68, 176, 177-8, 199, 2.54-5, 330, J46, 404

Morning Post, the, 407 Morris, Sir Lewis, 2.6o Moss (Hardy's dog), z3o, 43S 'Mother Mourns, The' (poem), 163 Moule, C. W., xu, 363, 387, 404-5, 412 Moule, Handley (Bishop of Durham), 390-

391, 404-s; letter to, 134-5, 3z1 Moule, Rev. Henry, 134-5, 39o-1 Moule, H. M. M., p, 3J, 39, 48, 77, 78, 84,

87, 89, 91, 93· 96 Moulin Rouge, the, zz9 Murray, Rev. Edward, xo, u Murray, Sir Gilbert, 366 Murray, Sir James, 324, 34z, 361 Murray's Maga{ine, zo4, zzz 'Music in a Snowy Street' (poem), 165 'Musical Box, The' (poem), 119 Mynterne (conjuror), 169

Napoleon, Joseph Charles Paul ('Pion­Pion'), u8

Napoleon, Louis (Prince Imperial), n8, 175-6

Napoleon III, u8 Nation, the, 344 National Club, the, zp, 323 National Gallery, p, u6 'Nature's Questioning' (poem), 409 NeucMtel, visit to, 292 Nevill, Lady Dorothy, 23z-3, z68 New Poole (tune), 337 'New Year's Eve' (poem), 33z, 409 New York Trihune, the, 3Z7 New York World, the, z79, 37z, 410-11 Newbolt, Sir Henry, 353, 358, 366 Newman, Cardinal, 48, 105, z33, 315 Newnes Library, Putney, 36z Newstead Abbey, Z37 Newton, A. E., 385 Newton, Sir Isaac, 42. Newton Hall, zzo Nicoll, Dr. W. Robertson, z4o Nicolson, Mrs. Malcolm ('Laurence

Hope'), 322

Page 19: APPENDIX I978-1-349-00286...wish was to be buried at Stinsford, amid the graves of his ancestors and of his first wife. After much consideration a compromise was found between this

INDEX

Nietzsche, Hardy on, 315, 364 'Night of Trafalgar, The' (poem), 370 Niisson, 43 Nineteenth Century, the, 4:17 Niven, Dr., 414 'Noble Lady's Tale, A' (poem), 32.3 No-Popery Riots (Dorchester), 2.1 North American Review, the, 317 Norton, John, 36 'Not a line of her writing have I' (poem),

2.2.4 Noyes, Alfred, 407-1 I

Oak-apple Day, :1.:1.1 Oakshott, Walter, 42.5 O'Brien, Lady Susan, 9, 163-4, ::r.so O'Brien, William, 9, I63 Oedipus, the, 33 Oliphant, Laurence, :137 Olympic Theatre, :134 Omar Khayyam Club, the, ::r.68 'On Sturminster Foot-Bridge' (poem),

119, 301, 390 'On the Belgian Expatriation' (sonnet),

367 Order of Merit conferred on Hardy, 350-1 Orr, Mrs. Sutherland, In, 16o Ostend, ::r.8::r.-4 Ouless, W. W., 4I4 'Overlooking the River Stour' (poem),

119 Ower Moigne, 117 'Oxen, The' (poem), MS. of, 37:1 Oxford, ::r.o8, :157, and 'Christminster',

:17:1-3, :178; University confers D.C.L. on Hardy, 397, 400, 4:18; visits to, 2.57, 4::r.o-::r.

Oxford University Dramatic Society and The Dynasts, 39:1-3, 397-403

Page, W. H. (American Ambassador), 36::r. Paget, Lady Florence, 41 Pair of Blue Eyes, A, 73, 77, 90, 91, 9:1, 93,

95, 104-5, 113, 137, 30:1 Pall Mall Ga{ette, 89, :101 Palmer, E. H., 13:1 Palmerston, Lord, 50, 5 1-::r. Pantheon (London), I7 Parepa, 43 Paris, 103, 106, u8, 1 H, I96, ::r.oS-9, :12.9 Parnell, Charles Stewart, ::r. 30 Parsons, Alfred, ZI7, ::r.::r.9 Pater, Walter, I So, 2.09 Paterson, Helen (Mrs. Allingham), 97, 100,

IOI

Patmore, Coventry, 104-5, 30:1

Patti, Adelina, 43 Paul, Kegan, I:u-::r. Payn, James, 1So Peacock, Sir Walter, 4:12. Pearce-Edgcumbe, :1.:1.9 'Peasant's Confession, The' (poem), :198 Peile, Dr., 34:1 Pembroke, Lord, ::r.63 Pender, Sir John, :154 Peninsular veterans, 78, 12.3-4 'Penny, Robert', original of, 9:1 Penpethy, 75 Perkins, the Rev. T., 333 Perkins family (Hardy's friends at Dor-

chester), :19-30, 4:14 Peterborough, :139 Petrie, Sir W. M. Flinders, ::r.n, 371 Phelps, Samuel, 53 Phillpotts, Mr. and Mrs. Eden, 370, 377 'Philosophical Fantasy, A' (poem), 436 Phoenix Park murders, the, ::r.ss Piccadilly Circus, ::r.::r.6, ::r. 3 5 Pidele Valley, 6 'Pink Frock, The' (poem), ::r.64 Pisa, 1S7 Pitt, Morton, 394-5 Pitt, Mrs., 2.69 Pitt-Rivers, General, ::r.69 ; Mrs., ::r.64, ::r.69 Pittsburgh Institute, 331 Plymouth, 66, 97, 360, 361, 364, 377 Poe, Edgar Allan, 343 'Poems ofi912.-13', 79 Poems of the Past and the Present, 196, ::r.86,

:193, 310, 335, 393 'Poets' Tribute' to Hardy, the, 390 Pollock, Sir Frederick, 132., 16o, 306, JZS,

394 Pollock (Juliet), Lady, ::r.oo Pollock, W. H., n2., 13:1 Poole, Dorset, 5, 114, :198 Poole, Father, 175 Poor Man and the Lady, The (unpublished

novel), 43, 57, 58-64, 86, 108 Porter, John, ns Portisham, 367 Portland, 107, us, 1:19, 2.:1.5, 306, 419 Portraits and busts of Hardy : Blanche,

331; Herkomer, 34:1; Strang, 350; Maitland, 363 ; Thomycroft, 370, 430 ; Ouless, 414; Yourievitch,4::r.6; John,436

Portsmouth, Lord and Lady, 170, 18::r., 183, 2.10, 2.1 I

Powis, Lady, ::r.66 Powys, John, 3S6 Pretor, Mr., 336 Priestley, J. B., 439

Page 20: APPENDIX I978-1-349-00286...wish was to be buried at Stinsford, amid the graves of his ancestors and of his first wife. After much consideration a compromise was found between this

INDEX Procter, Mrs. Anne Benson, roo, ror, n4,

IJf-7, r6o, r66, 167, 171-~, r8r, rb, 190, 199, ~oo, ~or, 3~S

Proudfoot, Mr., 4n Proust, Marcel, ~86, 4P Puddlehinton, r s8 Puddletown, 8, ro, n, us, r6~, ~49, 3~6,

439 Pugin, A. W. N., Jf, 38, 4~ Punela, S ~. S4, U4 Pursuit of tlae We/1-Be/oveJ, Tlae, see We/1-

Be/oveJ, Tlae Pyne, Louisa, 43

Quain, Sir R., ~07, ~S4 Quarterly Review, the, ~46 Queen of Cornwall, Tlae Famous Tragedy of

tlae, 78, ~34, 419, 41a-4, 4~6 Queen's College, Oxford, Hardy's Fellow-

ship of, 418; visit to, 419-n Queen's Hall, concerts at, 3o8, 3u, 3~4 'Quid hie agis ? ' {poem), I S7 Quiller-Couch, Sir A., 363, 388 Quilter, H., ~13

Rabelais Club, I 3 ~. I S 9, I 8 r Raeburn, Macbeth, illustrator of the

Wessex novels, ~67-8 Rainbarrows' Beacon, r 6~ Raleigh, Sir Walter and Lady, 397-400 Ramsay, A. S. (Master of Magdalene Col-

lege, Cambridge), 447 Ramsay, Sir J., 3~S Ranelagh Gardens, I~ 3 Rationalist Press Association, the, 304 Rawle, Rev. Richard, 7~ Reade, A. A., letter to, I S7 Reading, ~b Reason, Robert (original of 'Robert

Penny'), 394, 4~8-9 Reay, Lord, 3~3 Reeve, Mr. and Mrs. Henry, r8r-~ Reform League, 37 Rehan, Ada, ~~~. us, ~s7 Reims Cathedral, 367 Religion, Hardy's views on, 33~-3, 337 'Reminiscences of a Dancing Man'

(poem), 43 Return of tlae Native, Tlae, 117, uo, ru,

1~, ~r8, 3S7, 3S8, 373, 400, 413, 4IS, ~~ ; dramatized, 407

Revi1w of R1vuws, Tlae, ~74 Revue Bleu1, the, 311 R1vue Ju Deux Montlu, roB, 113 Reynolds, Sir Joshua, ~r6, u9

Richman, H. J., 316 Richmond Hill, ~oo ; Hardy on, 309-

)IO Ripon, Bishop of, u7 Rives, Amelie, ~66 Roberts, Lord, ~6~, ~63 Robertson, Professor D. A., letter to,

38S Robins, Miss Elizabeth, ~s6 Rockborne (tune), 337 Rogers, Samuel, ~oo Romantic Adventures of a MillcmaiJ, Tlae

(short story), I S8 Rome, ~r8; visit to, r88-9r, ~03 'Rome: The Vatican: Sala delle Muse'

(poem), 300 Romney, George, ~r6 Rosebery, Lord, 138, ~s7, ~78 Roslin, rso Ross Castle, ~ss-6 Rotten Row, 137, rb Rotterdam, 110 Rouen, ror, 103 Rowton, Lord, ~30 Royal Academy, 76, 171, 199, 116, us,

~3S ; dinners, 341, 363, 388; private view (r893), ~n

Royal Institute of British Architects, 39, 4~. 47. 87, 364, 404

Royal Literary Fund, the, ~n-4 Royal Society, the, ~S4. 3~S Royal Society for the Prevention of

Cruelty to Animals, 4~S Royal Society of Literature, the, 3 s 8,

374-S Rubens, ~17 Rugby School, visit to, 3H Rushmore, ~69 Ruskin, John, 17~, 193, ~H Russell, Countess, r 36 Russell, Lady Agatha, 136 Russell, Lord John, p, 136 Russell, Dr. W. H., ~6s

St. Albans, Duchess of, 34~ St. Benet's Abbey, 91 St. George, Tlae Play of, 41 I St. George's, Hanover Square, us St. Helier, Lady, 334, 341, 3S8, 371,

388, 389, 418, 4U St. James's, Piccadilly, ~H St. James's, Westmoreland Street, ~r8 St. James's Hall, r u, uS St. Juliot, Cornwall, s6, 6s, 67-7~, 74-s,

77-9,91, 9~, IH, IS6, 36o, 361, 373

Page 21: APPENDIX I978-1-349-00286...wish was to be buried at Stinsford, amid the graves of his ancestors and of his first wife. After much consideration a compromise was found between this

INDEX

St. Margaret's, Westminster, 404 St. Mark's, Venice, 193 St. Martin's Place (No. 8), 36, 38, 4S St. !,fary Abbots, Kensington, ~10 St. Mary's, Kilburn, 38 St. Matthias's, Richmond, 4S St. Pancras (Old) Churchyard, 44-s, 131 St. Paul's Cathedral, 42, 3u St. Peter's, Bournemouth, 4S St. Peter's, Dorchester, s, 169-70, 343 St. Peter's, Paddington, 101 St. Saviour's, Southwark, 268 Saleeby, Dr. C. W., letters to, 369-70,

449-p Salisbury, 38, 153, 388, 389, 419;

Cathedral, 29s-6, 420 Salisbury, Lord, 171, I99> ~4S Sambourne, Linley, 181 Sargent, John, 361 Sassoon, Siegfned, 390, 416, 426, 430, 437 'Satires in Fifteen Glimpses', see Satiru

of Circumstance Satires of Circumstanc., Lyrics and

Reveries, 79, 3H, 367 Saturday Review, 39, 6o, 7S, 88, 91, 9S, 2.9S Savile Club, 12.1, 12.9, 16o, 2.00, 2.01, ~~~.

22.6,2.J4,2.37,2.S3,~66 Saxelby, F., )S6 Scarborough, 239 Scheveningen, 11 o, 12.0 'Schreckhom, The' (poem), 2.93 Scotland, visits to, 1 so, 239 Scots Ohserver, 240 Scott, Sir Gilbert, 404 Scott, Sir Walter, 49, ISO, 203, 239 Scott, Lady, 239 Scribner, Messrs., 2p Scribner's Maga{ine, 191 Seaman, Sir Owen, 366 Sedgemoor, battle of, 6 Selby, James, 116 Selected Poems of Thomas Hartly (Golden

Treasury), 374, 440 Selous, F. C., ~62 Sergeant, Captain and Mrs., 91 Seven Dials, 42 Shanesbury, Io7, 2I4 Shaftesbury, Lady, 383 Shaftesbury, Lord, I u, 4u Shakespeare, 24, SJ, S9, 77, 98, Io8, I p,

203, 238, 28I, 2.82, 32S, p6, 341-2, 386 'Shakespeare after three hundred years,

To' (poem), 372, 394 Shakespeare Memorial Committee, the,

3~6, 34I-~

Shaw, G. B., 1o8, J2S, 334, 423-4, 447; Mrs., 334, 423-4

'She, to Him' (poem), S4 Shelley, 17, 42, IJI, 188, 189, 193,277,304,

34S, 370, 383 n., 384 Shelley, Mary, 4S Shelley, Sir Percy and Lady, 4S 1 131 Sheridan, Miss, 219, 2S9 Sheridan, Mr. and Mrs. A. Brinsley, u9,

233, 2s9, 383 Sherren, Tom, us Shipley, Dr., 323 Shorthand, Hardy's progress in, 41 Shrewsbury, 2s8 Shroton Fair, 116 'Sick Battle-God, The' (poem), 36s, 368 Sidney, Sir Philip, ISS Siichester, 292 'Singer Asleep, A' (poem), 349 Skinner Street, 42 Skirrow, Mrs., 182 Slater, John, 364, 403-4 'Sleep-worker, The' (poem), 310 Smaylh'ome Tower, ~39 Smith, Bosworth, 77, 12.7, :~so, 2S4, 342 Smith, Sir Charles Euan, 2S7 Smith, G. M., too, 101, 113, I34 Smith, Miss (daughter of G. M. Smith),

IOO Smith, Mrs. G. M., too, IJ4, 167 Smith, Henry, 12.7 Smith, Henry (of West Stafford), ~03 Smith, Rev. J. Alexander, letter to, 307 Smith, L. Pearsall, 427 Smith, Canon R., 249-50 Smith, Reginald, 33S 'Smith, Stephen' and his father, origin;ds

of, 73 Smith, Sydney, 181 Smith, Professor T. Roger, 87, 89, 90, 9I Smith, W. F. D., 277 Smith, Elder and Co., Messrs., IOI, 12.1,

12.21 1241 I381 16o, I80 Smithfield, I7 Smugglers, 107-8 Smyth, Dame Ethel, 443 Society for the Protection of Ancient

Buildings, 331 Society of Authors, the, 346, 404, 4o6-7,

44S Society of British Artists, I 84 Society of Dorset Men, the, 337, 341, 347,

402 'Songs of Five-and-Twenty Years' (pro­

jected volume, 1892.), 2.43

Page 22: APPENDIX I978-1-349-00286...wish was to be buried at Stinsford, amid the graves of his ancestors and of his first wife. After much consideration a compromise was found between this

INDEX

'Souls of the Slain, The' (poem), 305 South African War, the, JII South Kensington, z63, z6j, z66, :176-7;

Museum, 4:1, 6o Spa, visit to, z83-4 Spectator, the, 7, 84, 85, 91, 93, 98, 417 'Spectre of the Real, The' (story), z61 Spencer, Herbert, zox, zoj Spencer, Lady, z66 Speyer, Charles A., 411 Sphere, the, 3:11, 37:1 Sports, field, Hardy on, 3:11-z Spring-Rice, Hon. Aubrey, 175 'Springrove, Edward', original of, 64 Springwood Park, :139 Spurgeon, C. H., :134 Squibb (parish clerk at Stinsford), IZ) Stalbridge, II) · Stanley, Miss Dorothy, z81 Stanley, Sir H. M., u7 Stanley, Hon. Maude, zo1 Stanley, Lady (of Alderley), zox Stanley, Monsignor, zoi Stead, W. T., :174, 303 Steepleton Church, u6 Stephen, Sir Herbert, :111 Stephen, Sir J. F., :140 Stephen, Sir Leslie, 36-7,95, 96, 97, 98, 99,

IOO, IOJ-4, IOj-6, I08-9, 1:17-8, I69, I7I, I76, I8z, 2.0), 2.09, 2.2.I, 2.93, 2.98, 304, 308, JZI, 3JO

Stephen, Mr. (of the N.W.R.), z6o Stepniak, Sergius, :157 Stevens, Alfred, 362. Stevenson, R. A. M., I84 Stevenson, R. L., 6I, I75, I79-8o, I8I,

I84, 2.02., 2.46, 2.79 Stievenard, Professor, 49 Stinsford, 3, 8, I8j, 2.48, 353,371,379,415,

442., 447 ; church, 9, I 3, 92., 2.2.2., 2.62., JIB, J2.I, J5J, J6o, 361, 373, 412., 413-14; church music at, 8-xo, 12.-IJ, 12.5; House, 2.49-50

Stirling, 150 Stockwell Training College, 2.36-7 Stokesay Castle, 2.58 Stonehenge, 2.96 Stour, River (Dorset), IIX-12. Stourton Caundell, uS Stracey, Lady, 2.59 Strang, \Villiam, 350 Strangles Beach, 7I Strangways, Lady Susan, afterwards Lady

Susan O'Brien, q.v. Stratford-on-Avon, visit to, 2.81

Strauss, Edouard, 2.92. Stuart-Wortleys, the, 373 Sturminster Newton, 111, 114, 116, 117,

118, 119, I84, 373. 413, 41), 417 'Sunday Morning Tragedy, A' (poem),

337 Surbiton, 101, 105 Sutton Mandeville, 118 Swanage, 107-8, 343, 373 ; 'the King of',

2.49 Swetman, maternal ancestors of Hardy, 6 Swetman, Christopher (great-grand-

father), 2.85 Swetman, Elizabeth, 6-7 Swift, Jonathan, 134 Swinburne, A. C., 37, 42., 49, 64, 2.39, 2.70-

2.71, 2.86-7, 304, J2.j, J46, 349. 362., 383; Hardy on, 344-5, 42.3

Swinburne, Lady Jane, 32.5 Swiss Cottage, 17 Symonds, J. Addington, 2.18 Symons, Mr. and Mrs., 75

Taine, M., 2.19 Talbothays, 6, 2.39, 371, 397, 417, 442. Tauchnitz, Baron, 89, 118 Tavistock Hotel, 1 p Tayleure's Circus, 166 Teck, Duke and Duchess of, 2.53 Teck, Princess May of (Queen Mary),

2.5J, 2.)7 Temple Bar, 42. Tennant, Sir Charles, 2.78 Tennyson, Alfred (Lord Tennyson), 78,

I36-7, 2.2.0, 346, 378, 386, 42.8; funeral, 2.51

Tennyson, Mrs. (Lady Tennyson), I36-7 Terry, Ellen, 2. p, 2.65 Terry, Marion, xp Tess of the d'Urhervilles, 2.5, 173-4, 2.2.1-2.,

2.30, 2.34, 2.38-40, 2.43-6, 2.59, 26o, 2.65, 2.74, 2.79, 307; 356; Hardy's own dra­matic version, 2.8 5, 402., 42.6, 42.8, 42.9-430; Italian opera founded on, 54, 347, 350

Thackeray, Miss (Lady Ritchie), 98, xoo, 104, 2.09

Thackeray, W. M., 40, 41, 57, 59,-I2.1, 191, 2.34

'Then and Now' (poem), 377 Theosophical Society, 179 Thomas, Sir Godfrey, 42.2. Thompson, Sir Henry, 148, 2.32., z68 Thompson, Lady, 32.9 Thomson, Miss Winifred, 2.68

Page 23: APPENDIX I978-1-349-00286...wish was to be buried at Stinsford, amid the graves of his ancestors and of his first wife. After much consideration a compromise was found between this

INDEX

Thornton, Douglas, 371 Thornycroft, Sir Hamo, 164, ::r.o1, 306,370,

430 Thornycroft, Lady, 430 Three Wayfarers, The (dramatic version of

The Three Strangers), 2.56, 357 Thring, G. Herbert, letter to, 406-7 Tichborne Case, the, 2.51 Tietjens, 43 Tilley, Mr., 407 Time against Two (tentative title of The

Well-Beloved), 164 Time's Laughingstocks, 332., 345, 347, 34S,

356, 409 Times, The, 162., 2.07, 2.14, 2.65, 2.7S, 2.92-3,

294,J19-20,J22,JJO,J44,345>356,367, 373, 39S, 407, 414, 418, 419, 424, 425, 42S, 444-5 ; reviews in, 99, 12.4

Tindal-Atldnson, Mr. (Serjeant-at-Law), lSI

Tinsley, W., SJ, 88-90 Tinsley Brothers, Messrs., 76-7, 83-4,

SS-9, 101 Tinsley's Maga{ine, S9 Tintagel, 71, 75, 7S, 91, 92, 373; Hardy's

drawing of, 419 Tintern Abbey, 93 Titanic disaster, tl1e, 3 57 'To C. F. H.' (poem), 414 'To My Father's Violin' (poem), 410 'To Shakespeare' (poem), 372, 394 'To the Matterhorn' (poem), 294 'Toad Fair', 112 Tolbort, T. W. Hooper, p, 161-2 Toller-Welme, s, 214 Tolstoy, 257, 274, 32.2. Toole, J. L., 138, 256-7 Tooting, Upper (1 Arundel Terrace),

IIS, 120,1:14,127,133, 1)7,149 Torquay, 370, 377 'Townsend' (home of the Swetmans

q.v.), 6 'Tragedy of Two Ambitions, A' (short

story), 213, 215 'Trampwoman's Tragedy, A' (poem),

311-12, 317 Trebarwith Strand, 71 Trevelyan, G. M., 366 Trevelyan, Mr., 154 Treves, Sir Frederick, 336, 371, 3S6, 423,

424 Treves, Lady, 336, 371 Trocadero Music Hall, 253 Trollope, Anthony, 51, 112.-13 Trossachs, visit to, 1 so

Trouville, 139 Trumpet-Major, The, 17, 19, 13S, 145, 146,

362, 416; dramatized, 360; Hardy's drawings for first edition, JSS

Tryon, Admiral, 257 Turner, J. M. W., xSs, 2.16, 329 Turnpike tolls, auction of, xsS Twain, Mark, 16o Two on a Tower, 151, 154, 267,441 'Two Rosalinds, The' (poem), 228 Tyndale, Walter, 326

'Unborn, The' (poem), 409 Under the Greenwood Tree, u, 86, 88-9, 91,

92., 95, 97, 101, 384, 394> 413, 429; dramatized, 3 53

'Under the Waterfall' (poem), 71 n. 'Unkindly May, An' (poem), 444 Upper Tooting, see Tooting Up-Sydling, s, 214 Upwey, 12.9 Usher, Mr., 239

Vaudeville Theatre, 234 Venice, 192-5, 22.2.; St. Mark's, 193 Ventnor, visit to, 349 Verdi, 300 Versailles, 1 55 Victoria, Queen, 150, 2oo-1 Vincent, Sir Edgar, 323 Virginia, University of, 343 'Voices from Things growing in a Country

Churchyard' (poem), 413 Voss, T., 9::r., 214 Vreeland, Admiral (of the U.S. Navy),

354

Wade-Gery, H. T., 425 Wagner, Hardy on, 181, 329-30 'Waiting Supper, The' (short story), 2.04 Wakefield, Bishop of, and jude, 2.77-8 Wales, the Prince of, 37, 39, s::r., 199; at

Max Gate, 422. Walker, Dr. E. M. (Pro-Provost of

Queen's College, Oxford), 447 Walpole, Horace, 9, 59, 164, 376 Wandsworth Common, 118, uo, 149 War, Hardy on, 303, 3S7 War propaganda, conference of literary

men on (Sept. 1914), 366 Ward, Humphry, 2.54; Mrs., 2.79 Ward, Leslie, 2.46 Wareham, 5; tune, 337 Warwick, Lord, ::r.8 1

Page 24: APPENDIX I978-1-349-00286...wish was to be buried at Stinsford, amid the graves of his ancestors and of his first wife. After much consideration a compromise was found between this

470 INDEX Warwick, visit to, :a81 Waterloo, visit to field of, 110, 1.84 Waterloo veterans, 78, 1o6, 111, 113 Watkins, William, 41.7-8 Watson, Sir William, :as 1, 31.1. Watteau, 1.16 Watts, G. F., :a37 Watts-Dunton, T., :as1, J:lS Webbs of Newstead, the, 1.37 Weld, H. J., 440 WJ/-BJov,J, Tlte, 6, 164, 1.17, :~8s-7,

)U, 4)1. Wells, H. G., 334, 366 Wells Cathedral, :l9S Wellspring (builder), u6 Wenlock, Lady, :lS9 Wenlock Abbey, :~s8 'Wessex', term revived by Hardy, 11.1.-3 Wessex, Hardy's dog, 41.7, 434-S w,ssu PtUmS, S4. 73, 76, 174, :~8s, 1.98-9,

310; illustrated MS. of, JS6 Wessex Scenes from Tlte Dynasts, 371., 374 Wessex Society of Manchester, motto for,

3)6 11'1st Briton (newspaper), 7 West Stafford, Dorset, n;, 1:1.1., 2.s2,

266-7 Westboume Grove (Newton Road), 103,

lOS Westboume Park, 47, 49, SJ, f4, 89, 90 Westminster, Duke of, 113 Westminster Abbey, so, s1, ISJ, 201, 222,

2SI, 346, JSO, 3H; midnight visit to, 304; Hardy's funeral in, 447

Westminster Cathedral, 268 Westminst1r G<J{ette, the, 30S Westwood Bam, 213 Weymouth, s, 26, 63-4, 75, 84, us, 119,

Jf4-s, 168, 209, u9, 296, 298, 351, 3s9, 371, 374. 387, 4o6, 426

Weymouth, Mass., 43:a 'When I set out for Lyonnesse' (poem),

"' 411 Whetham, Dampier, 384 Whibley, Charles, 2SJ, 364; Mrs., 364 Whistler, J. M., 181, 184 Whitby, 239 White, Jack, his gibbet, 1 S3 White, Mr. (of Harvard), n8 Whitechapel murder, 1.14 Whitefriars Club, the, at Max Gate, 308 Whiteing, Richard, 334 Whitelands Training School, 235

'Why did I sketch' (poem), 79

Whymper, Edward, 264 Wilberforce, Dr., 329 Wilde, Oscar, 182 William II, Emperor, 1.37 Williamson, Henry, 442 Willis's Rooms, 1.74 Wilson, Mr., 42-:a Wimbome, 107; Hardy's house 'Llan-

heme', 149-S 1, I SJ-4, 161 Wimbome, Lord and Lady, 1p Wincanton, 1 53 Windermere, 1 so Windsor, 48 ; Castle, garden party at,

335 Winter WorJs, 444 Winterbome-Came-cum-Whitcombe,

161, 183 'Withered Arm, The' (short story), 2.04 W oltr, Sir H. Drummond, :~68 Wolseley, Lord, :ass Women Writers' Club, 2.64 Woodbury Hill Fair, 96 Woodlanders, Tlte, 102., 168, 173, 176, 183,

185, 186, 2.03, 22.0, :U.I, 357-8, 384, 416, 43:a; dramatized, 363

Woodman (Cornish clergyman), 156 W oodyates Inn, 388 Woolbridge Manor House, 254 Woolcombe, 5, 214 Worcester Cathedral, 2.81, JH Wordsworth, Bishop, 205 Wordsworth, William, 58, 93, 136, 141,

147, 300, 3o6, 370, 377, )86, 394; grave, 3H

Wright, Edward, letter to, 334-5 Wright, Dr. Hagberg, 334 Wyndham, Charles, 2SJ Wynford, Lord and Lady, 237 Wynnstay Gardens, Kensington, 298, 303

Yarborough, Marcia Lady, 2.64, 2.66 Yeatman, Dr. (Bishop of Southwark), 2.49 Yeats, W. B., 358 Yeovil, 108,111, n6,44o York, 239; Minster, 347 'Young Man's Epigram on Existence, A'

(poem), 409 Y ourievitch, Serge, 42.6 Y saye, Eugene, 308

Zangwill, Israel, letter to, 3:&8 Zermatt, 294 Zionism, Hardy on, 31.8, 388 Zola, ~mile, 273