A Laodicean |
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Harper's Magazine, December 1880 - December 1881 Sampson Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington: London, 1881 Henry Holt: New York, 1881 |
January 2014 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
An uncertain romance or a half-hearted novel? The odd thing about A Laodicean is that Thomas Hardy doesn't seem to have written the novel he thought he was writing. Of course any artist capable of complex and subtle situations is likely to include undertones of which he isn't consciously aware; but in this case, Hardy clearly states his intent in the title. Thus his heroine is uncertain or half-hearted by nature, and this is reflected in her feelings and actions. The meaning comes from the Bible; the Revelation to John includes the following message to the Church in Laodicea, a Roman Empire city with a tepid water-supply, on the partly subterranean river Lycus in western Anatolia:
In earlier novels, Hardy also deploys the pejorative "Laodicean" with more-or-less churchly mentions in Desperate Remedies (1871), Under the Greenwood Tree (1872), and Far from the Madding Crowd (1874). The heroine of the novel at hand, Paula Power, is the "Laodicean" of the title. There is an explicit discussion of her stern Baptist heritage, and her vacillation on the brink of taking the plunge. So here is a precise application, although given what we early learn of the heroine, we may question whether a belated recognition of principle is vacillation or a maturing and firming of character. Hardy himself seems to suggest it is the latter. Matthew Henry's Commentary on the Whole Bible calls the church of Laodicea "the last and worst of all the seven Asian churches", which would be quite harsh if extended to Paula. We have assorted other instances of Paula's wavering or changing her mind, which do comprise reasonable allusions to the titular theme. But now we have a problem. The main line of the story is a romance, with Paula's suitors being Somerset, an architect under consideration to fix up De Stancy Castle which her late father, a railroad builder, purchased from a declined family; and De Stancy, heir to the title but not to the castle or lands. Somerset represents modernity, De Stancy is tradition. Paula loves her old castle but has installed a telegraph line and instrument, which she operates herself, to keep her connected to London and the world. Surely this is one of the earliest fictional examples of telegraph operation by a woman on her own behalf, and exemplifies her decisively communicating modern ideas into a medieval setting. In the vital heart of the novel, the romance, Paula is not uncertain, indecisive, lukewarm, or half-hearted. There are a plethora of occasions of mis-communication and mal-communication — she is deceived and otherwise lied to — so it is no wonder that the hopeful course of love is wayward. Paula herself is clear enough, guardedly warming as she goes. Paula is cautious and circumspect, as becomes a proper young Victorian maiden; her love is delayed, hindered, baffled, and diverted by circumstantial confusion and by others' dishonesty — but I would not call this Laodicean. The completed novel overran its planned length by a third, and would have benefited hugely from thinning the to-and-fro journeys and chases in the West of Europe during the latter part of the book, as F. B. Pinion points out in A Hardy Companion. Hardy's characters are clear and striking, if less riveting than his best; we have some interesting aspects of practical architecture and working architects, and there are flashes of fine landscape. The main weakness is in Hardy's own wavering or uncertain authorial tone, as though the to-and-fro journeys and chases represented his own feelings.
The sentiment above comprises part of the paragraphs beginning the novel, stamping a tone of melancholy finality upon a prospect of creative and industrious activity in a pleasantly warm and bright landscape. We must make allowance for Thomas Hardy being almost mortally ill during the composition of A Laodicean. My own recurrent impression at the beauty of a sunset is of its beauty. The undergoing of the Sun in glory at the close of a day, completes that day only.
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© 2014 Robert Wilfred Franson |
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Romance at Troynovant |
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