Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Emma_GiffordEmma Gifford - Wikipedia

    Emma Lavinia Gifford (24 November 1840 – 27 November 1912) was an English writer and suffragist. She was also the first wife of the novelist and poet Thomas Hardy . [1]

  2. Apr 12, 2022 · One Wednesday morning in November 1912 the ageing Thomas Hardy, entombed by paper and books and increasingly estranged from his wife Emma, finds her dying in her bedroom. Between his speaking to her and taking her in his arms, she has gone.

  3. Emma Lavinia Gifford (1840-1912) was the youngest daughter of a Bristol solicitor and a Devonshire school-master. She married Thomas Hardy in 1874, after a childhood of poverty and tragedy, and became his inspiration for many of his novels and poems.

  4. Emma Gifford was living at the rectory with her sister, the Revd Cadell Holder’s second wife. The first visit lasted four days during which Hardy visited Tintagel, Beeny Cliff and the Valency Valley. Hardy returned to St Juliot in August that same year when he stayed longer.

    • Emma Gifford1
    • Emma Gifford2
    • Emma Gifford3
    • Emma Gifford4
    • Emma Gifford5
  5. Central to Hardy’s dilemma is his chaotic relationship with his childhood sweetheart and first wife, Emma, whom he now shamefully neglects. But Emma is an ardent Christian and a Suffragette, who always says what she is thinking, so her diary is entitled ‘What I Really Think of My Husband’.

  6. Jul 27, 2017 · We might analyse the novel biographically, with Elfride standing in for Emma Gifford, the woman who became Hardy’s wife the year after the novel was published, and Stephen and Knight representing, respectively, Hardy’s dual trades as assistant architect and man of letters.

  7. People also ask

  8. In 1874, Thomas Hardy married Emma Gifford, a woman who never let her novelist husband forget that she was born of a higher class than he, ever his superior in taste and breeding. After her death he got back at her—poetically—in a big way. And she at him.