| Galsworthy, John (1867-1933) |
|
As a novelist Galsworthy
is chiefly known for his roman fleuve, The Forsyte Saga. The first novel
of this vast work appeared in 1906. The Man of Property was a harsh criticism
of the upper middle classes, Galsworthy's own background. Galsworthy did
not immediately continue it; fifteen years and with them the First World
War intervened until he resumed work on the history of the Forsytes with
In Chancery (1920) and To Let (1921). Meanwhile he had written a considerable
number of novels, short stories, and plays. The Forsyte Saga was continued
y the three volumes of A Modern Comedy, The White Monkey (1924), The Silver
Spoon (1926), Swan Song (1928), and its two interludes A Silent Wooing
and Passersby (1927). To these should be added On Forsyte Change (1930),
a collection of short stories. With growing age Galsworthy came more and
more to identify himself with the world of his novels, which at first
he had judged very harshly. This development is nowhere more evident than
in the author's changing attitude toward Soames Forsyte, the «man of property»,
who dominates the first part of the work. From Nobel Lectures, Literature 1901-1967. John Galsworthy died in 1933. |