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He Never Expected So Much
He Never Expected So Much
BY THOMAS HARDY
Thomas Hardy
Summary
‘He Never Expected Much’ by Thomas Hardy is a poem about the nature of
life, its unfairness, brief moments of happiness, and sorrow.
The poem is addressed to the “World” and includes the “world’s” words
within the text. In the first lines, Hardy’s speaker recalls his youth and the
moment he learned that life wasn’t going to be perfect, happy, or fair at all
times. In fact, he learned, it would likely not be fair most of the time. He
took this knowledge in stride and lived and a life based around it. He knew
he’d die no matter what he did in his lifetime, and this fact allowed him to
endure some of the strifehe suffered.
Themes
In ‘He Never Expected Much,’ Hardy explores themes of time, memory, and
life itself. Life, as a broad and all-encompassing theme, is the focus of the
poem. In the text, Hardy’s speaker, who could very well be Hardy himself,
addresses the “World”. He reminds it, and the readers, of
a conversation that he had when he was younger. He knew then, as he
knows now, that life is not fair. Hardy experienced some sorrow in his life,
most prominently when his wife, Emma, died unexpectedly.
Hardy also addresses themes of time and memory as he looks back on his
life and recalls how he’s lived with this knowledge in mind. His life has been
better, or at least stronger, due to the fact that he knew from a young age
that life wouldn’t be fair. Because he “never expected much,” he was not
too disappointed when his life played out the way it did.
Literary Devices
Hardy makes use of several literary devices in ‘He Never Expected
Much’. These include but are not limited to examples
of apostrophe, alliteration, and enjambment. The first of these, an
apostrophe, appears in the first lines of the poem. Hardy starts the poem by
talking to the “World”. this is a prime example of this technique as the
world is something that cannot hear Hardy’s speaker, nor could it reply if it
wanted to.
Enjambment is a formal device that’s used when a poet cuts off a line of
the verse before the natural end of a phrase or sentence. For example,
the transition between lines three and four of the first stanza and lines
three and four of the second stanza.
Stanza Two
‘Twas then you said, and since have said,
Times since have said,
In that mysterious voice you shed
From clouds and hills around:
“Many have loved me desperately,
Many with smooth serenity,
While some have shown contempt of me
Till they dropped underground.
In the second stanza of ‘He Never Expected Much,’ the speaker goes on to
refer to that time as a child when he communed with the world and learned
its truths. Then, the world talked to him and informed him that everyone
who loved the earth and everyone who showed contempt has ended up
“dropped underground.” One way or another, the world told the young
boy, this is where everyone ends up.
The first lines of this stanza make use of some interesting repetitive
elements. Hardy uses “said” several times, building up the reader until it’s
time for him to reveal what the world said. This plays into the already song-
like feeling of the lines.
Stanza Three
“I do not promise overmuch,
Child; overmuch;
Just neutral-tinted haps and such,”
You said to minds like mine.
Wise warning for your credit’s sake!
Which I for one failed not to take,
And hence could stem such strain and ache
As each year might assign.
In the final eight lines of ‘He Never Expected Much,’ the poem concludes
with a few more words from the world. The world told the child that it
couldn’t promise much. There will be some moments of happiness but
many more common, unremarkable ones.
The speaker comes back into the poem in the final lines. He tells the world
and the listeners that he took the world’s advice. He “failed not to take” it,
so throughout his life, he knew that things wouldn’t always be fair. He knew
he’d struggle and “strain and ache” throughout the years. But, because he
was prepared for it, he could take it all in stride.
Similar Poetry
Readers who enjoyed Hardy’s ‘He Never Expected Much’ should consider
reading some of his other poems. This includes ‘The Forbidden Banns,’ ‘And
There Was a Great Calm,’ and ‘Wessex Heights.’ The latter includes a
depiction of a speaker surveying lands around him and experiencing a
resurgence of memory and several ghostlike presences that haunt him. ‘The
Forbidden Banns’ is a long narrative poem in which the speaker tells the
story of a doomed marriage. Finally, ‘And There Was a Great Calm,’ is one
of Hardy’s best-known poems. In it, he describes the horrors of World War I
and the “Great Calm” that came about on November 11th, 1918.