Satire In The Ruined Maid By Thomas Hardy

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In Thomas Hardy’s poem called “The Ruined Maid, he uses satire to exemplify women of the working class and upper class during the Victorian Era. The meeting takes place in a town. It is typically a place where everything can be observed by the public and the society. The first line of the poem starts off with the maiden name “O’Melia” spoken by another maiden who might possibly be of a working class woman. What strikes my interests the most is Hardy’s definition of a “ruined” female. He voices Amelia’s friend to show her stages of envies, jealousy, and anger toward Amelia, who considered herself a “ruined” woman. Amelia considered herself a “ruined” woman, because she is a prostitute. For a woman of a working class to climb up the social ladder,

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