Friday, July 19, 2019
What is the Significance of the Heath in Return of the Native? :: English Literature
What is the Significance of the Heath in Return of the Native?    It is evident right from the beginning that the heath plays an  integral part in the novel ââ¬Å"Return of the Nativeâ⬠, this is because the  opening chapter is exclusively about the heath.    The heath assists in creating the feelings of both central characters  and the background heath folk, the first chapter is titled ââ¬Å"A Face on  which Time makes but little Impressionâ⬠, meaning that Egdon Heath is  timeless and everybody on it has little significance.    The reader gains an insight of the novel and its genre through the  first chapter, ââ¬Å"It had a lonely face, suggesting tragical  possibilities.â⬠ This aids the reader in identifying that there is  going to be something tragical in the novel. Hardy is also using  personification, which brings the heath to life.    In spite of this, the first chapter also does what every other first  chapter in a novel does, it sets the scene. Egdon Heath, as far as the  novel is concerned and the characters inside it, is the world. The  only time that the novel ever abandons the heath is only briefly  between pages 253-257 which is the part when Wildeve and Eustacia are  at the dance together in Budmouth. It is comprehensible that the heath  folk consider Egdon Heath to be everything when they talk about Paris  as if it were a million miles away, ââ¬Å"like a Kingââ¬â¢s Palace as far as  diments goâ⬠ is the description they use when describing Clymââ¬â¢s shop.    Hardy also uses the heath as a metaphor for how the central characters  are feeling. On page 206, when Clym moves out of his mothers house,  the fir and beech trees are described to be ââ¬Å"suffering more damage  than during the highest winds of winterâ⬠¦ the wasting sap would bleed  for many days to comeâ⬠. We also get an insight to the way Eustacia is  feeling through the storm on the heath on page 345-346, ââ¬Å"Never was  harmony more perfect than that between the chaos of her mind and the  chaos of the world withoutâ⬠. The brief flowering in the summer time on  Egdon heath represents the love between Eustacia and Clym, when it  flowered it was beautiful and colourful and sweet, but it soon  drooped, dried out and finally died.    When Wildeve and Diggory Venn are playing dice on the heath, the  contrast is prominent between human behaviour and nature, ââ¬Å"The  incongruity between the menââ¬â¢s deeds and their environment was  strikingâ⬠. Hardy is making a comment on human nature and itââ¬â¢s battle  against nature. The behaviour of the two men is described as almost    					    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.