Thomas Hardy’s novels are all Victorian in date. Most of them are set in ______, the fictional primitive and crude rural region which is really the home place he both loves and hates.
A: Sussex
B: Wessex
C: Casterbridge
D: Oxford
A: Sussex
B: Wessex
C: Casterbridge
D: Oxford
举一反三
- Thomas Hardy's novels are all Victorian in date. Most of them are set in ______, the fictional primitive and crude rural region which is really the home place he both loves and hates. A: Sussex B: Wessex C: Casterbridge D: D. Oxford
- Which of the following descriptions of Thomas Hardy is wrong______ A: Most of his novels are set in Wessex. B: Tess of the D’Urbervilles is one of the most representative of him as both a naturalistic and a critical realist writer. C: Among Hardy’s major works, Under the Greenwood Tree is the most cheerful and idyllic. D: From The Mayor of Casterbridge on, the tragic sense becomes the keynote of his novels.
- 1. Hardy’s most famous novels were written before the year ____, which belong to the Victorian novels.
- Three most eminent novelists who represent the three phases of the Victorian novels are Charles Dickens, Thomas Hardy and ( ).
- "Tess of the d'Urbervilles" was set in Wessex, a fictional place in _______ of England.