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LIBER'S NOTE BOOK

.Thomas Hardy celebrated Lis eightieth birthday-,.last Veek (Juno' 7).' ' The veteran novelist confines his -literary Mdoura and-activities in' these later days ,to .the, writing, of poetry, and some time ago inoTCVinformed the. public that no fnf W?r,fl<ition (in prose at feast).may be ?? j t from him> But -how heavy-is the debt ofigratitude lovers.of good fictions owe'to:tho famous author of the-Wess-ax novels!-"He'can well" afford to rest- upon -his.laurels. \ "Liber's"- devotion, to. Hardy, began'when, as,a youth,' JL 8 . re i?,:that delightful pastoral, • "Par irom the-Madding Crowd," then running as a serial in the "Cornhill Magazine, with iltastratone by- (I'' think) George du Maurier.'- I can well femoto- • ««* finding, as a .Yorkshireman; the Dor9et' lal M,;(iri ,the,.fambus.hialtfhouse scene) a little puzzlingi':. For sorae v year.i I never jea'd another: Hardy storyfo But when most of them came' out in-Mnc-milum's -.Colonial-HLibrary—howl many Roort_books came out'in thnt series'—l found a new ;ioy in life.. For me, the best Hardys will always be 'Tar From the Maddin?;:.Crowd/' ( ,,!'The- Return of the Wpi' f 5, d - , the ' bloomy. but, powerful *~ Mafcor- of Casterbridge." There* aTS'-some fine•'•passages in '-Tea,of■ ihe' D'Hrber-;vUles;-.,>but;.l''shall never forgive Hardy : 'f,?^°H-?PA rin )f''as the' tragic" horror of •viiß'hnale. ■ Just recently' I started to rm Jude the Obscure," but found it ..altpg6ther..,to6., dismal to finish. "As to ilwdy'svpoetry; I find,th'e ; !ifteri domiuatrngnote of .irony -somewhat . repellent, 'to s «SS eHo '4 r 4 ma > on ' the Napoleonic Wars,-,. The .Dynasts," is a- irarvelloufl Jiteraw tour'.de.forc©, and must-surely liye. 4s Hardy, read 1 muclvV. nowadays'? -We'J,- as- to -that, the' best'r.nswer ;is ' "That ;new..editions of- his works seem no.published every ,twa or three"years'. Tn-ipv o*n modest ccilection' various irahlishers are reoresented, but t.ere I to buy a -Am set I think I should invest m Macmlllan's pocket: edition. •''.. ■.A- correspondent '-"("EiF.H,,"" Wangamuj.asks'me in. what book appears a " entitled '• Mr. Tittlebat, Tit-' •m6tis'e?>>:The .'answer'• is easiJy;given- : Tittlebat'Titmoupe is the leading qh'iwuv ire,in'.Samuel.,Warren's ;novel, "Ten -Thousand a "Yeah"' .Titmouse is a..vulgar, ignorant, would-be dandy and .roan •of':fashion, -who,';previous 'to inheriting■a fortune, of .'sfilO.OflO a year, is a .draper's assistant;.. There is.a.certairi rough hu;moiir in ,tlie etory, which had a great ■ •.yogue. in .the earlier Victorian 'days, ' many- people Warren, who,' after studying medicine, took to- law ■ .and, became >E«corder.-.of Hull, and; a.' 'Master'iri lunacy,'a,greater writer than- ' ■Dickens... : Warren also wrote "The Diary ;;,of r a Late Physician.",, .Both his nova's , ero,:,;l* think, still in:print, and procurable. ' '•'... •:.. ■ -

-iThose -who have read that vriry ie.niarkable' 'book, "The Moon' aiid . Six--'pence," by-W, Somerset Maugham, in which the. story ci' Paul Gauguin, the French'. artist .who' settled in Tahiti, : ia retold," with Gauguin.transformed into u London stockbroker, may be .interested' to know..that in one. of Maugham's ewlier novels,' "Of Human-Bondage," there is an eccentric artist, wbois a post-impression-ist 1 patnfor,'*aitd. who, like the Charles Slfioklan'd/of the Cutter story,'. deserts his .wife;,,and'.family ond goes off to (he Soiith':Sea^.•,.','.. .' - ■ ■ : -Uobin Blochairn's" last published collection ..of versa -written in 'Ibraid Scots," "The Fireside .Clime" (reviewed in. these columns recently), has, I notice, been very warmly'praised by many leading !.Scots journals. .The Glasgow "Herald,", a journal of, high reputation for the" excellence of its reviews, is specially laudatory. , Says the "Herald":—*• Only genius can re-illume what Is overfamiliar and for the majority of poets the moments of genius como but as flashes ■•In-the ordinary light of day. Two such, at least, are evident hero. One in •"A .■Mlther's'Sang'ih Exile," where the poet :has.-felt with the soul of a mother for away from all that makes the ''North Oountrie"; another .in "A Waesome' Weird,",a Btory of bereaved motherhood; with a'-movim* traffio end. There are many fine poems, in Mr, Bloohairn's volume, .but th?s6 best justify .it; v.A-,.complete edition- of Marion Craw-ford's,-hovels is announced -by' an Ame•rican publishing firm. Crawford's stories 'had'a'great vogue'in'the 'eighties, and some of..them, notably the fine. "Sara..flinesoa" series, are" well worth ro--reading..'.'fA Cigarette Maker's Eo- : liianoe," "Dr. Isaacs," and "A Roman'. Singer" were also very popular, and there:,waa. a. powerfully written story of Sicilian brigandage, Corleone," which .is. worth looking up. Crawford 1 was a 'born story-teller. An American by birth, he lived for many years at Sorrento, near Naples. There seems-to be some doubt a 9 to the,, identity pf E. T.' Raymond,. whose 'clever'studies of contemporary public figures, "Uncensored Celebrities," havo been so popular. One London weekly r£ contly published a portrait, said to bo that of E. T. Raymond. As a matter of fabt, it was a portrait of Mr. J. T. ..Squire, until recently literary .editor of Statesman," and author of the delightful'essays signed "Solomon -Eagle." : .-and-,collected under the title'-'Books, m General."." Mr. Squire promptly • gavo the report a denial. Meanwhile, the well-known • London weekly, "The Out--] look,""has :the name of E. T. Raymond I on its first page as editor. 1

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19200619.2.109.2

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Dominion, Volume 13, Issue 227, 19 June 1920, Page 11

Word count
Tapeke kupu
795

LIBER'S NOTE BOOK Dominion, Volume 13, Issue 227, 19 June 1920, Page 11

LIBER'S NOTE BOOK Dominion, Volume 13, Issue 227, 19 June 1920, Page 11

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