TEXT B Thomas Hardy’s impulses as
a writer, all of which he indulged in his novels, were numerous and divergent,
and they did not always work together in harmony. Hardy was to some degree
interested in exploring his characters’ psychologies, though impelled less by
curiosity than by sympathy. Occasionally he felt the impulse to comedy (in all
its detached coldness) as well as the impulse to farce, but he was more often
inclined to see tragedy and record it. He was also inclined to literary realism
in the several senses of that phrase. He wanted to describe ordinary human
beings; he wanted to speculate on their dilemma rationally (and, unfortunately,
even schematically); and he wanted to record precisely the material universe,
Finally, he wanted to be more than a realist. He wanted to transcend what he
considered to be the banality of solely recording things exactly and to express
as well his awareness of the occult and the strange. In his
novels these various impulses were sacrificed to each other inevitably and
often. Inevitably, because Hardy did not care in the way that novelists such as
Flaubert or James cared, and therefore took paths of least resistance. Thus, one
impulse often surrendered to a fresher one and, unfortunately, instead of
exacting a compromise, simply disappeared. A desire to throw over reality a
light that never was might give way abruptly to the desire on the part of what
we might consider a novelist-scientist to record exactly and concretely the
structure and texture of a flower. In this instance, the new impulse was at
least an energetic one, and thus its indulgence did not result in a relaxed
style. But on other occasions Hardy abandoned a perilous, risky, and highly
energizing impulse in favor of what was for him the fatally relaxing impulse to
classify and schematize abstractly. When a relaxing impulse was indulged, the
style—that sure index of an author’s literary worth—was certain to become
verbose. Hardy’s weakness derived from his apparent inability to control the
comings and goings of these divergent impulses and from his unwillingness to
cultivate and sustain the energetic and risky ones. He submitted to first one
and then another, and the spirit blew where it listed; hence the unevenness of
any one of his novels. His most controlled novel, Under the Greenwood Tree,
prominently exhibits two different but reconcilable impulses—a desire to be a
realist-historian and a desire to be a psychologist of love—but the slight
interlockings of plot are not enough to bind the two completely together. Thus
even this book splits into two distinct parts. The most appropriate title for the passage could be ______.
A.Under the Greenwood Tree: Hardy’s Ambiguous Triumph B.The Real and the Strange: The Novelist’s Shifting Realms C.Hardy’s Novelistic Impulses: The Problem of Control D.Divergent Impulses: The Issue of Unity in the Novel