18 pages • 36 minutes read
'Ode to a Nightingale' by John Keats (1819)
While John Milton first connected the word “darkling” to birds in Paradise Lost, it was John Keats who made it famous in his “Ode to a Nightingale.” Comparing “Ode to a Nightingale” to “The Darkling Thrush” illuminates the divergence between Keats’s Romantic worldview and Hardy’s more Modernist approach. While Keats’s nightingale seems almost supernatural in its power and beauty, Hardy’s thrush is a grubby, scrawny thing, perhaps reflecting Hardy’s more sober realism.
"To A Skylark" by William Wordsworth (1825)
William Wordsworth, an important influence on Hardy, addresses his poem’s title bird, the skylark, directly. He ascribes an almost divine quality to the bird, linking the beauty of God’s creation—nature—with His divinity itself. In “The Darkling Thrush,” Hardy takes some of the shine off of these Romantic (and religious) interpretations of the natural world.
"Dover Beach" by Matthew Arnold (1867)
In “Dover Beach,” Hardy’s contemporary Matthew Arnold also uses poetry to reckon with alienation and loss of faith against the tide of scientific progress. Like “The Darkling Thrush,” these sorts of elegies mourning the passing of a historical era were a popular genre for the Victorians.
The Cambridge Companion to Thomas Hardy edited by Dale Kramer (2001)
This volume is a comprehensive collection of critical essays on Hardy by leading scholars in the field. Of particular interest for “The Darkling Thrush” is Chapter 11, which treats Hardy’s career as a 19th century poet.
Oxford Reader's Companion to Hardy edited by Norman Page (2001)
This Oxford Reader is a reference work with hundreds of alphabetized entries on various subjects related to Hardy. It includes his poems, characters, and a glossary of words he favored in his writings.
"Daily Life in Victorian England" by Sally Mitchell (1996)
While Sally Mitchell’s book is not on Hardy proper, it is an invaluable resource for understanding Hardy’s world. Mitchell explores what life was like in Victorian England, covering everything from country living and factory work to innovations in science and technology.
Dedicated to promoting public knowledge of Hardy, the Thomas Hardy Society’s website is a treasure trove of information about the poet’s life and works.
James Avis reads Hardy’s “The Darkling Thrush,” pairing the lines with relevant images from Julian Peters’s Poetry Comics for the poem.
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By Thomas Hardy