A Pair of Blue Eyes (Oxford World's Classics)

by Thomas Hardy | Literature & Fiction |
ISBN: 0199538492 Global Overview for this book
Registered by gypsysmom of Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada on 8/15/2011
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3 journalers for this copy...
Journal Entry 1 by gypsysmom from Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada on Monday, August 15, 2011
I've joined an online Thomas Hardy reading group. We're going to read all of Thomas Hardy's novels between July 2011 and April 2014, reading 1 book every two months. I've already read the first book, Desperate Measures. This book will be read in November/December 2011.

Journal Entry 2 by gypsysmom at Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada on Sunday, December 18, 2011
Well, now we're getting into the Thomas Hardy that is known from his more famous novels like Tess of the D'Ubervilles. In this novel, first published in 1873, Elfride Swancourt, daughter of a clergyman, is wooed by a series of men. The title refers to Elfride's eyes described by Hardy on the first page:
One point in her, however, you did notice: that was her eyes. In them was seen a sublimation of all of her; it was not necessary to look further: there she lived.
These eyes were blue; blue as autumn distance--blue as the blue we see between the retreating mouldings of hills and woody slopes on a sunny September morning. A misty and shady blue, that had no beginning or surface, and was looked into rather than at.


Elfride's first suitor was a local boy and the action between them occurs before the opening of the book. Elfride seems hardly to have noticed him but when he died soon after his grieving mother claimed he died of a broken heart.

Her second suitor was Stephen Smith, an apprentice architect (as was Hardy) who is sent to study the tower of the church of which Mr. Swancourt is minister. Mr. Swancourt is quite taken by this young man and invites him to come back for his summer holidays. Stephen is already smitten with Elfride and so he agrees to do so. But although Stephen is now a professional he comes from humble beginnings. In fact his father is master mason on the estate next to the village where the Swancourts live. When he tells Mr. Swancourt this his suit for Elfride's hand is rejected because he comes from a lower class. Elfride and Stephen decide to be secretly married but, although they go away to London to do so, Elfride pulls out and they immediately return to her home. Stephen decides to go away to India to make his fortune so that he can be worthy of Elfride.

In his absence his mentor, Harry Knight, sees Elfride and discovers that his cousin is her stepmother. He then goes to spend some vacation time with the family and falls in love with Elfride. Elfride forgets her promise to Stephen and is smitten with Knight. Knight thinks that Elfride has never been loved by anyone and that is her prime attraction for him. By bits and pieces he learns some of her previous history including her attempted elopement but he never learns that his acolyte, Stephen, was her previous lover. He rejects Elfride and leaves England for the continent.

When Stephen and Knight meet after their respective returns to England they each realize they still love her and want to try to marry her. Unfortunately, Elfride has recently died and they have both lost her.

I didn't much like Elfride whom Hardy portrays as a weak-willed and vain female. And Knight is not sympathetic either since he dominates Elfride and expects her to be unkissed and unwooed. Stephen, on the other hand, is quite sympathetic. Nothing he did caused the rift between him and Elfride. He refrained from telling Knight about their promise to each other when he could easily have done so. He was even nice to his parents. I guess it's not surprising that Hardy would paint Stephen thusly. Others have said that Stephen is an autobiographical figure so it figures that Hardy would treat him kindly.

As always in Hardy's novels, the descriptions of the countryside are vivid. The sea plays a big part in the story and I fancied as I read this book I could hear waves crashing on the shore. The setting for this novel is a little outside of the usual realm of his books since it is on the Atlantic Ocean side of the south-west of England. Usually his books are set in the area he calls Wessex along the English Channel. So that setting really conveys the out of the way world that Elfride inhabits and to some extent explains her naivete.

I'm really enjoying reading Hardy's books in the order they were written and seeing his evolvement as a writer.

Journal Entry 3 by gypsysmom at Park Theatre & Movie Cafe in Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada on Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Released 12 yrs ago (1/12/2012 UTC) at Park Theatre & Movie Cafe in Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada

WILD RELEASE NOTES:

I'll take this book to the meet-up and if no-one wants to take it home you can find it on the OBCZ shelves.

Journal Entry 4 by wingwinnipegobczwing at Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada on Friday, January 13, 2012
This book is currently sitting on the Winnipeg Official Bookcrossing Zone bookshelf in the loft of The Park Theatre & Movie Café, 698 Osborne Street, Winnipeg MB.

It is waiting there for a new reader to take home, read, and release back into the wild!


Winnipeg bookcrossers meet at my location on the second Wednesday of every month at 7pm to chat about books, swap great reads, and release on the OBCZ shelves. Please join us! We love to see new faces! You will enjoy the comfy atmosphere, the fabulous coffees and teas, and the yummy treats!

Journal Entry 5 by Crossing-Guard at Calgary, Alberta Canada on Monday, April 16, 2012
I couldn't make the April meeting where the book box was opened but fortunately a fellow crosser nicely brought me home a couple books. I haven't read this one yet so will add to TBR pile.

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