Wessex Tales was the first collection of Hardy's short stories, and they reflect the experience of a novelist at the height of his powers. These seven tales, in which characters and scenes are imbued with a haunting realism, show considerable diversity of content, form and style, and range from fantasy to realism and from tragedy to comedy. In insisting on the unusual nature of any story worth the telling, and with his gift for irony and compassion, Hardy achieves more in the genre of the short story than any English novelist before him.
Thomas Hardy was a great novelist and a great poet. In both mediums he shows remarkable consistency, not in the sense that everything is equally good - he could be a very uneven writer - but in that all his work, from first to last, displays the same habits of vision and imagination. The mind-print is utterly distinctive. It can be said of Hardy, as of few other novelists, that many of his narratives could be identified as his work on the basis of the opening sentence alone. So it comes about that Wessex Tales, by no means one of his major productions, shows enough of his characteristic skills to provide a useful introduction to his fiction at large. If these stories do not have the weight or the passion of the major novels,they convey something of their flavour and singularity.
INTRODUCTION
PREFACE
THE THREE STRANGERS
A TRADITION OF EIGHTEEN HUNDRED AND FOUR
THE MELANCHOLY HUSSAR OF THE GERMAN LEGION
THE WITHERED ARM
A Lorn Milkmaid
The Young Wife
A Vision
A Suggestion
Conjuror Trendle
A Second Attempt
A Ride
A WatersideHermit
A Rencounter
FELLOW-TOWNSMEN
INTERLOPERS AT THE KNAP
THE DISTRACTED PREACHER
How His Cold Was Cured
How He Saw Two Other Men
The Mysterious Greatcoat
At the Time of the New Moon
How They Went to Lulwind Cove
The Great Search at Nether-Moynton
The Walk to Warm"ell Cross; and Afterwards
NOTES