The Return of the Native, by Thomas Hardy – June, 1952 (November, 1939 (1878)) [Bayre Phillips]

“He had been a lad of whom something was expected.”

He had been a lad of whom something was expected. 
Beyond this all had been chaos. 
That he would be successful in an original way,
or that he would go to the dogs in an original way,
seemed equally probable. 
The only absolute certainty about him
was that he would not stand still in the circumstances amid which he was born.

Hence, when his name was casually mentioned by neighboring yeomen,
the listener said, “Ah, Clym Yeobright: what is he doing now?”
When the instinctive question about a person is, What is he doing?
It is felt that he will not be found to be, like most of us, doing nothing in particular.
There is an indefinite sense that he must be invading some region of singularity, good or bad.
The devout hope is that he is doing well.
The secret faith is that he is making a mess of it.
Half a dozen comfortable market men,
who were habitual callers at the Quiet Woman as they passed by in their carts,
were partial to the topic.
In fact, though they were not Egdon men,
they could hardly avoid it while they sucked their long clay tubes
and regarded the heath through the window.
Clynn had been so inwoven with the in his boyhood
that hardly anybody could look upon it without thinking of him.
So the subject recurred:
if he were making a fortune and a name, so much the better for him;
if he were making a tragical figure in the world, so much the better for the narrative.  (190)

Yorktown, by Burke Davis – October, 1952 (January, 1954) [Tom Dunn]

No boyhood, for before he was twelve he had been alone,
an oversized hostler in the old Quiet Woman Tavern in Philadelphia,
brawling with the Negro grooms,
gambling with them for the casual coins flung to them by travelling gentlemen. 
At first a runway from his bondage,
and then a men on his own: furrier, hostler, stableboy, groom, barman, cuckholder,
in an endless succession of inns and posthouses on the rutted roads of Pennsylvania –
The Crooked Billet,
The Penny Pot House,
Wench & Serpent,
the King of Prussia,
the Jolly Post Boy,
the Good Ox,
even the old Indian Queen,
where they now said Thomas Jefferson had written the Declaration.

And beyond that, no more than piecemeal recollections of his time as a child inChester County.
A rare glimpse of the fat grainlands,
returning with prankish clarity,
or of the work- and sun-ravished face of old Pigot, his first master.
He had forgotten, if indeed his child’s brain had ever recorded, the village tale
that he was the foundling son of the daughter of a secretary to the governor of Pennsylvania,
and of an itinerant barber and dancing master up from the Indies,
probably French, or at least had run away like a Frenchman.  (17)