yīng guó zuòzhělièbiǎo
bèi 'ào Beowulfqiáo sǒu Geoffrey Chaucerāi méng · bīn sài Edmund Spenser
wēi lián · suō shì William Shakespeareqióng sēn Ben Jonson 'ěr dùn John Milton
duō 'ēn John Donne wéi 'ěr Andrew Marvell léi Thomas Gray
lāi William Blakehuá huá William Wordsworth miù 'ěr · zhì Samuel Coleridge
Sir Walter Scottbài lún George Gordon Byronxuě lāi Percy Bysshe Shelley
John Keatsài · lǎng Emily Bronte lǎng níng rén Elizabeth Barret Browning
ài huá · fěi jié Edward Fitzgeralddīng shēng Alfred Tennysonluó · lǎng níng Robert Browning
ā nuò Matthew Arnold dài Thomas Hardyài lüè Thomas Stearns Eliot
láo lún David Herbert Lawrence lán · tuō Dylan Thomasmài kǎi Norman Maccaig
mài lín Somhairle Mac Gill-Eainxiū Ted Hughes jīn Philip Larkin
· qióng Peter Jonesbiān qìn Jeremy Bentham luó · pǐn Harold Pinter
lín Joseph Rudyard Kiplingài 'ēn · 'ěr dùn Ian Hamilton
yuē hàn · gāo 'ěr huá suí John Galsworthy
yīng guó wēn suō wáng cháo  (1867niánbāyuè14rì1933niányuányuè31rì)
chūshēngdì: lún dūn

xiàn shí bǎi tài Realistic Fictionpíng guǒ shù The Apple Tree》
fāng occident dramazhēng qiáng

yuèdòuyuē hàn · gāo 'ěr huá suí John Galsworthyzài小说之家dezuòpǐn!!!
yuèdòuyuē hàn · gāo 'ěr huá suí John Galsworthyzài影视与戏剧dezuòpǐn!!!
约翰·高尔斯华绥
  gāo 'ěr huá suí( 1867-1933) shì yīng guó xiǎo shuō jiā zuò jiāshēng lún dūncéng zài niú jīn xué hòu fàng shī gōng zuò cóng shì wén xué chuàng zuò。 1906 niángāo 'ěr huá suí wán chéng cháng piān xiǎo shuōyòu chǎn de rén》, xiǎo shuō huò guǎng fàn hǎo píng yīn 'ér bèi gōng rèn wéi yīng guó liú zuò jiāgāo 'ěr huá suí shì duō chǎn zuò jiāzài 'èr shí duō nián de chuàng zuò shēng zhōngjīhū měi nián xiě xiǎo shuō běn。 1932 niángāo 'ěr huá suí yīn miáo shù de zhuó yuè shù -- zhè zhǒng shù zài 'ěr sài shì jiāzhōng dào gāo fēng ér huò nuò bèi 'ěr wén xué jiǎng jīn
  
   yuē hàn · gāo 'ěr huá suí - zhòng yào zuò pǐn
  
   gāo 'ěr huá suí de zhòng yào zuò pǐn yòucháng piān xiǎo shuō sān 'ěr sài shì jiā》( yóuyòu chǎn de rén》 1906、《 》 1920 chū 》 1821 chéng)、 sān xiàn dài 》( yóubái yuán》 1926、《 yín chí》 1926 tiān 'é zhī 》 1928 chéng)、 sān wěi shēng》(《 shì》 1931、《 kāi huā de huāng 》 1932 biān》 1933 chéng), běnyín xiá》( 1936)、《 dǒu zhēng》( 1909)、《 qún zhòng》( 1914) táo páo》( 1926) děng
  
   gāo 'ěr huá suí de zuò pǐn shí jiǔ shì hòu 'èr shí shì chū de yīng guó shè huì wéi bèi jǐngmiáo xiě liǎo yīng guó chǎn jiē de shè huì jiā tíng shēng huó shèng 'ér shuāi de shǐ de zuò pǐn yán jiǎn liànxíng xiàng shēng dòngfěng xīn
  
  《 yòu chǎn de rén》( 1906) shì gāo 'ěr huá suí de 'ěr sài shì jiāsān zhōng de shū zhōng suǒ miáo xiě de 'ěr sài shì jiā zhèng chù yóu xīng shèng dào shuāi luò de zhuǎn zhé shí 'ěr sài jiā shì jīn róng jiājiāo suǒ jīng rényōng yòu fáng chǎn huò zhě piào de chǎn jiē men duì shēn chǔshìdài rén jiē duì shí zhù xíngjiā tíng guān duì zhí mín liè diān guó děngdōu xíng chéng liǎo běn zhì shàng xiāng tóng de kàn zhè jiù shì shū zhōng suǒ jiǎng de 'ěr sài jīng shén”, de zhù yào zhēng shì jǐn zhuā zhù cái chǎn fàng guǎn shì lǎo hái shì fáng hái shì jīn qiánhái shì míng ”。
  
  《 yòu chǎn de rénzhōng de zhù rén gōng suǒ bèi zuò zhě chēng wéi 'ěr sài jūn duì de xiān fēng”。 qiē dōng dāng zuò shāng pǐndāng zuò běnměi kàn jiàn míng huà jiàn wánzǒng yào xiǎng dào zhè zài pāi mài xíng néng pāi mài shàng duō shǎo qián mǎi zào shǒu xiān kǎo de shì jià huì huì shàng zhǎngfáng jiāng lái néng néng mài shàng gāo jiàzài duì dài lín de tài shànggèng jiā míng xiǎn bào liǎo zhè zhǒng guān niàn kàn zhōng liǎo měi línxiǎng zhàn wéi yòubiàn yòng jīn qián shōu mǎi liǎo lín de hòu dào liǎo mùdìdàn bìng méi yòu lín kàn zuò yòu rén de rénzhǐ shì xiàng shōu cáng míng huà yàng zhàn yòu yóu " zài quán lún dūn rén miàn qián gǎn dào shì zhè yóu de zhàn yòu zhěér zhān zhān jué shēn jià bǎi bèi”。 hūn hòu xiàng bǎo de cái chǎn yàng jǐn dīng zhe ràng bié rén jiē chùdāng xiàn lín 'ài shèn zhì hèn shí rèn wéi zhè jiǎn zhí shì wéi fǎn liǎo qiē zhōng zuì běn de guī dìng -- cái chǎn biàn xiǎng zài xiāng xià zào suǒ bié shù jìn láidāng lín 'ài shàng jiàn zhù shī xīn hòu jiān jué tóng hūnér yòng mánhèng shǒu duànxíng shǐ liǎo zhàng de quán ”, hái bēi yòng jiàn zhù bié shù de cái jiū fēn xiàng yuàn kòng gào xīn zào chéng liǎo xīn zǒu tóu shén zhì huǎng bèi chē zhuàng de bēi xiǎo shuō duì 'ěr sài jiā biǎo miàn shàng tuán lái wǎng gòu xīn dǒu jiǎo xiāng cāi xìng zāi huò de xīn zuò liǎo zhì de jiē
  
   xiǎo shuō duì chǎn zhě zuò liǎo de fěng shì zuì néng xiàn gāo 'ěr huá suí jìn xiǎng shù shǒu de xiàn shí zhù jié zuòdàn fǎn yìng liǎo zuò zhě de xiǎng xiànmiáo xiě de shēng huó juàn guò xiá 'ài xiàn chǎn jiē zhōng shàng céng de jiā tínghūn yīndào lǐng ér méi yòu zhǎn xiàn chū shí dài guǎng kuò de shè huì fēng màozài jiē fěng " 'ěr sài jīng shén " de tóng shíquè yòu duì 'ěr sài jiā mǒu xiē zhòng yào chéng yuán lǎo qiáo 'ēn děng rén zuò liǎo xiǎng huà de miáo xiě
  
   yuē hàn · gāo 'ěr huá suí - chuàng zuò fēng
  
   yuē hàn · gāo 'ěr huá suí( 1867 héng 1933) shì yīng guó 'èr shí shì chéng pàn xiàn shí zhù de dài biǎo zuò jiā qīn shì lún dūn de zhù míng shī jiǔ jiǔ nián gāo 'ěr huá suí zài niú jīn xué dàn duì shī gǎn xīng ér zhuān xīn cóng shì wén xué xiě zuò zǎo yuē hàn · xīn yuē hàn de míng xiě liǎo xiǎo shuōdàn méi yòu yǐn rén men zhù 。《 dǎo guó de sài rénshì yòng zhēn míng biǎo de jiào chéng shú de cháng piān xiǎo shuōxiǎo shuō de zhù rén gōng chá · xiè 'ěr dùn de jīng yòu diǎn zuò zhě xiāng xué hòu yuàn dāng shīdào chù yóu jié shí liǎo wài qīng nián fèi lǎng fèi lǎng shǐ xīn de yǎn guāng lái guān chá jiǔ shú de shēng huó huán jìnghòu lái yòu jiàn shí liǎo lún dūn pín mín qióng rén de shēng huó qíng jǐngcóng 'ér rèn shí dào sài rén de hòu héng héng chǎn jiē de wěi zhà xiǔ běn zhìzài shì wěixiè 'ěr dùn xiàn dìng hūn de niàn shǔ sài rén zhī lèi de jiā tíngbìng zài shēng huó de běn wèn shàng de zhòng fēn shì rán jiě yuē
  
  《 yòu chǎn de rén》( 1906) miáo xiě 'ěr sài jiā wéi dài biǎo de yīng guó zhōng shàng céng jiē men shì gōng jiāyòu shì kāi diàn deér shì suí zhe yīng guó gōng zhǎn guó zhù qiáng 'ér jué de xiē yōng yòu fáng chǎn yòu jià zhèng quàn de suǒ wèi yòu chǎn de rén 'ěr sài jiā chéng yuán de zhù yào zhēng shì cái chǎn shí men zhàn yòu de duì xiàng jǐn bāo kuò jīn qiánfáng chǎngōng zhài piào shù pǐn děng bāo kuò de zhè shū chū bǎn hòu dàn fēng xíng shíbìng qiě diàn dìng liǎo gāo 'ěr huá suí zài yīng guó wén xué jiè de wèi。《 zhuāng yuán》( 1907) miáo xiě zhù jiē de xiá 'ài wèi。《 yǒu 'ài》( 1909) shū xiě chǎn jiē zhī shí fènzǐ de duān rén zhù céng jīng bèi gāo 'ěr wéi jiàng de shǒu wàn xiě chéng de zuò pǐn
  
   gāo 'ěr huá suí jǐn shì jié chū de xiǎo shuō jiā shì zhù míng de zuò jiā de běn yín xiá》( 1909),《 dǒu zhēng》( 1909),《 zhèng 》( 1910), zài guó zǎo yòu liǎo běnzài gāo 'ěr huá suí de duō xiǎo shuō zhōngpiān zuì wéi zuì wéi shì rén zhǔ mùdìdāng yòu chǎn de rénwéi kāi duān de duō 'ér yòu yòu lián xìng de cháng piān xiǎo shuōzhè xiē yòu chǎn de rén》( 1906)、《 》( 1920) chū 》( 1921) liǎng chāqǔcán xiàjué xǐng wéi sān 'ěr sài shì jiā》; bái yuán》( 1 gāo 'ěr huá suí sǎnwén 924)、《 yín chí》( 1926) tiān 'é zhī 》( 1928) wéi 'èr sān xiàn dài 》; shì》( 1931)、《 kāi huā de huāng 》( 1932) guò 》( 1933, hòu yóu rén zhěng chū bǎn wéi sān sān wěi shēng》。 chú liǎo zhè jiǔ wàihái chū bǎn liǎo liǎng yòu guān 'ěr sài jiā de duǎn piān xiǎo shuō zhè xiē shì gāo 'ěr huá suí shēng chuàng zuò jīng zhī suǒ cuì shì men de wén xué zào yīngdāng zhuózhòng kǎo de zuò pǐncóngyòu chǎn de rén dàoguò wéi zhǐzhōng jiān xiāng 'èr shí liù nián de shí jiānzài zhè duàn màn cháng de suì yuè lùn yīng guó guó nèi xíng shìhuò zhě shì jiè xíng shì shēng liǎo biàn huàyīng zhàn zhēng shì jiè zhànshí yuè mìngyīng guó gōng dǎng de zhú jiàn zhuàng xíng jiāng zhí zhèng děng děngzhè qièbù néng duì gāo 'ěr huá suí de zuò pǐn chǎn shēng chéng tóng de yǐng xiǎngcóng zǒng de xiàng kàn zàixiàn dài wěi shēngzhōng suǒ biǎo xiàn de fěng liàng yào 'ěr sài shì jiālái chāér jiù 'ěr sài shì jiāsān lái shuō,《 chū zài zhè fāng miàn yòu shāo xùn yòu chǎn de rén》。 dàn zài wán chéng zhè sān de zǒng zuò zhě què chéng rèn zhè zhōng shàng céng jiē lián tóng xuē jiē quán jiāng jìn shēng zhuàng tàiér rén men zhǐ néng zài wén xué de shǐ guǎn zhōng jiàn dào menzhè què shì zàiyòu chǎn de rénzhōng suǒ méi yòu míng bái biǎo shì guò de
  
   yuē hàn · gāo 'ěr huá suí - xuǎn
  
  DelosCuatroVientos,1897 nián ( zuò wéi yuē hàn Sinjohn)
  
   gāo 'ěr huá suí sǎnwén Jocelyn,1898 nián ( zuò wéi yuē hàn・ Sinjohn)
  
   bié shù Rubein,1900 nián ( zuò wéi yuē hàn・ Sinjohn)
  
   wén jùn de rén ,1901 nián ( zuò wéi yuē hàn・ Sinjohn)
  
   hǎi dǎo Pharisees,1904 nián
  
   yín xiāng ,1906 nián
  
  Forsyte yīngxióngchuánqí ,1906-21
  
   dào yuán ,1906 nián
  
   zài dàng 'àn guǎn ,1920 nián
  
   huàn xǐng ,1920 nián
  
   ràng ,1921 nián
  
   xiāng jiān bié shù ,1907 nián
  
   píng lùn ,1908 nián
  
   lián huì ,1909 nián
  
   yín xiāng ,1909 nián
  
   biàn jiě wéi shěn chá ,1909 nián
  
   chōng ,1909 nián
  
   lián huì ,1909 nián
  
   yuè ,1909 nián
  
   zhèng ,1910 nián
  
   yán liù ,1910 nián
  
   chǔfá de jīng shén ,1910 nián
  
   zài kuàng ,1910 nián
  
  Patrician,1911 nián
  
   gāo 'ěr huá suí sǎnwén xiǎo de mèng xiǎng ,1911 nián
  
   ,1912 nián
  
   zhǎngzǐ ,1912 nián
  
   xīn qínggēqǔ , Doggerels,1912 nián
  
   wéi shòu 'ài ,1912 nián
  
   níng jìng diàn ,1912
  
   hēi 'àn de huā ,1913 nián
  
   táo wáng zhě ,1913 nián
  
   bào mín ,1914 nián
  
  Freelands,1915 nián
  
   xiǎo rén ,1915 nián
  
   wèi de 'ài ,1915 nián
  
   kǔn ,1916 nián
  
   wài miàn ,1917 nián
  
   chuán shuō ,1918 nián
  
   shèng de jìn zhǎn ,1919 nián
  
   zhǐ zài měi guó ,1912 nián
  
   chǔ ,1920 nián
  
   zài dàng 'àn guǎn ,1920 nián
  
   huàn xǐng ,1920 nián
  
   sài ,1920 nián
  
   ràng ,1920 nián
  
   yòu jiā shì de rén ,1922 nián
  
   xiǎo rén ,1922 nián
  
   yòu chǎn zhě zhōng chéng ,1922 nián
  
   chuāng kǒu ,1922 nián
  
   huò ,1923 nián
  
  Abracadabra,1924 nián
  
   sēn lín ,1924 nián
  
   lǎo yīng ,1924 nián
  
   zhǎn shì ,1925 nián
  
   táo mìng ,1926 nián
  
   shī xīn lǎo ,1926 nián
  
   chéng bǎo zài bān ,1927 nián
  
   xiàn dài ,1924-1928
  
   bái hóu ,1924 nián
  
   yín chí ,1926 nián
  
   tiān 'é gēqǔ ,1928 nián
  
   èr zhī Forsyte chāqǔ ,1927 nián
  
  Manaton biān ji ,1923-26( huì ,30vols。 )
  
  Exiled,1929 nián
  
   dǐng ,1929 nián
  
   zài Forsyte biàn dòng ,1930 nián
  
   guān kāng liè de 'èr piān wén ,1930 nián
  
  Soames ,1930 nián
  
   de chuàng zuò zài wén xué ,1931 nián (Romanes yǎn jiǎng wéi 1931)。
  
   yōng rén zài děng dài ,1931 nián
  
   yuē hàn · gāo 'ěr huá suí shí shǒu shī ,1932 nián
  
   kāi huā de yuán ,1932 nián
  
   zài ,1933 nián
  
  Galsworthy zìzhuàn xìn jiàn : fēng shū xìn tǎn shuài de ,1933 nián
  
   shù cóng biān ji ,1927-34( huì ,27Vols。 )
  
   bèi shōu de shī ,1934 nián
  
   jié wěi de zhāng jié ,1934 nián ( sān )
  
   měng ,1935 nián
  
   shēng huó xìn jiàn ,1935 nián
  
  Wintergarden,1935 nián
  
  Forsytes,Pendyces rén ,1935 nián
  
   jié wěi de zhāng jié ,1935 nián
  
   xuǎn de duǎn piān xiǎo shuō ,1935 nián
  
   piē jiàn fǎn shè ,1937 nián
  
   gěi Leon shī de Galsworthy de xìn jiàn ,1968 nián
  
   cóng yuē hànde xìn jiàn Galsworthy1900-1932,1970 nián


  John Galsworthy OM (pronounced /ˈɡɔːlzwɜrði/; 14 August 1867 – 31 January 1933) was an English novelist and playwright. Notable works include The Forsyte Saga (1906—1921) and its sequels, A Modern Comedy and End of the Chapter. He won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1932.
  
  John Galsworthy was born at Kingston Hill in Surrey, England into an established wealthy family, the son of John and Blanche Bailey (née Bartleet) Galsworthy. His large Kingston upon Thames estate is now the site of three schools: Marymount International, Rokeby Preparatory School and Holy Cross. He attended Harrow and New College, Oxford, training as a barrister and was called to the bar in 1890. However, he was not keen to begin practising law and instead travelled abroad to look after the family's shipping business interests. During these travels he met Joseph Conrad, then the first mate of a sailing-ship moored in the harbour of Adelaide, Australia, and the two future novelists became close friends. In 1895 Galsworthy began an affair with Ada Nemesis Pearson Cooper (1864–1956), the wife of Major Arthur Galsworthy, one of his cousins. After her divorce ten years later, the pair married on the 23 September 1905, and stayed together until his death in 1933. Prior to their marriage they stayed clandestinely in a farmhouse called Wingstone in the village of Manaton on Dartmoor, Devon. From 1908 he took out a long lease on part of the building and made it their regular second home until 1923.
  
  From the Four Winds, a collection of short stories, was Galsworthy's first published work in 1897. These, and several subsequent works, were published under the pen name John Sinjohn and it would not be until The Island Pharisees (1904) that he would begin publishing under his own name, probably owing to the death of his father. His first play, The Silver Box (1906), became a success and he followed it up with The Man of Property (1906), the first in the Forsyte trilogy. Although he continued writing both plays and novels it was as a playwright that he was mainly appreciated for at the time. Along with those of other writers of the time, such as George Bernard Shaw, his plays addressed the class system and social issues, two of the best known being Strife (1909) and The Skin Game (1920).
  
  He is now far better known for his novels and particularly The Forsyte Saga, his trilogy about the eponymous family and connected lives. These books, as with many of his other works, dealt with class, and in particular upper-middle class lives. Although sympathetic to his characters he highlights their insular, snobbish and acquisitive attitudes and their suffocating moral codes. He is viewed as one of the first writers of the Edwardian era; challenging in his works some of the ideals of society depicted in the preceding literature of Victorian England. The depiction of a woman in an unhappy marriage furnishes another recurring theme in his work. The character of Irene in The Forsyte Saga is drawn from Ada Pearson even though her previous marriage was not as miserable as that of Irene.
  
  Bury House, Galsworthy's West Sussex home.His work is often less convincing when it deals with the changing face of wider British society and how it affects people of the lower social classes. Through his writings he campaigned for a variety of causes including prison reform, women's rights, animal welfare and the opposition of censorship. During World War I he worked in a hospital in France as an orderly after being passed over for military service. He was elected as the first president of the International PEN literary club in 1921, was appointed to the Order of Merit in 1929—after earlier turning down a knighthood—and was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1932. He was too ill to attend the Nobel awards ceremony, and died six weeks later.
  
  John Galsworthy lived for the final seven years of his life at Bury in West Sussex. He died from a brain tumour at his London home, Grove Lodge, Hampstead. In accordance with his will he was cremated at Woking with his ashes then being scattered over the South Downs from an aeroplane, but there are also memorials in Highgate 'New' Cemetery and in the cloisters of New College, Oxford (the latter cut and placed in the cloisters by Eric Gill). The popularity of his fiction waned quickly after his death but the hugely successful adaptation of The Forsyte Saga in 1967 renewed interest in his work.
  
  A number of John Galsworthy's letters and papers are held at the University of Birmingham Special Collections.
  
  In 2007, Kingston University, London opened a new building named in recognition of his local birth.
  
  Adaptation
  
  The Forsyte Saga has been filmed several times:
  
  That Forsyte Woman (1949), dir. by Compton Bennett, an MGM adaptation in which Errol Flynn played a rare villainous role as Soames.
  
  BBC television drama (1967), dir. by James Cellan Jones, David Giles, starring Eric Porter, Nyree Dawn Porter, Kenneth More, Susan Hampshire, Joseph O'Conor, adaptor Lennox Philips and others, 26 parts
  
  Granada television drama (2002), dir. by Christopher Menaul, starring Gina McKee, Damian Lewis, Rupert Graves, Corin Redgrave, 13 parts.
  
  The Skin Game was adapted and directed by Alfred Hitchcock in 1931. It starred C.V. France, Helen Haye, Jill Esmond, Edmund Gwenn, John Longden.
  
  Escape was filmed in 1930 and 1948. The latter was directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz, starring Rex Harrison, Peggy Cummins, William Hartnell. The screenplay was by Philip Dunne.
  
  One More River (a film version of Galsworthy's Over the River) was filmed by James Whale in 1934. The film starred Frank Lawton, Colin Clive (one of Whale's most frequently used actors), and Diana Wynyard. It also featured Mrs. Patrick Campbell in a rare sound film appearance.
  
  The First and the Last, a short play, was adapted as 21 Days, starring Vivien Leigh and Laurence Olivier.
  
  Selected work
  
  From The Four Winds, 1897 (as John Sinjohn)
  
  Jocelyn, 1898 (as John Sinjohn)
  
  Villa Rubein, 1900 (as John Sinjohn)
  
  A Man Of Devon, 1901 (as John Sinjohn)
  
  The Island Pharisees, 1904
  
  The Silver Box, 1906 (his first play)
  
  The Forsyte Saga, 1906–21, 1922
  
  The Man Of Property, 1906
  
  (interlude) Indian Summer of a Forsyte, 1918
  
  In Chancery, 1920
  
  (interlude) Awakening, 1920
  
  To Let, 1921
  
  The Country House, 1907
  
  A Commentary, 1908
  
  Fraternity, 1909
  
  A Justification For The Censorship Of Plays, 1909
  
  Strife, 1909
  
  Fraternity, 1909
  
  Joy, 1909
  
  Justice, 1910
  
  A Motley, 1910
  
  The Spirit Of Punishment, 1910
  
  Horses In Mines, 1910
  
  The Patrician, 1911
  
  The Little Dream, 1911
  
  The Pigeon, 1912
  
  The Eldest Son, 1912
  
  Moods, Songs, And Doggerels, 1912
  
  For Love Of Beasts, 1912
  
  The Inn Of Tranquillity, 1912
  
  The Dark Flower, 1913
  
  The Fugitive, 1913
  
  The Mob, 1914
  
  The Freelands, 1915
  
  The Little Man, 1915
  
  A Bit's Love, 1915
  
  A Sheaf, 1916
  
  The Apple Tree, 1916
  
  Beyond, 1917
  
  Five Tales, 1918
  
  Saint's Progress, 1919
  
  Addresses In America, 1912
  
  The Foundations, 1920
  
  In Chancery, 1920
  
  Awakening, 1920
  
  The Skin Game, 1920
  
   To Let, 1920
  
  A Family Man, 1922
  
  The Little Man, 1922
  
  Loyalties, 1922
  
  Windows, 1922
  
  Captures, 1923
  
  Abracadabra, 1924
  
  The Forest, 1924
  
  Old English, 1924
  
  The Show, 1925
  
  Escape, 1926
  
  Verses New And Old, 1926
  
  Castles In Spain, 1927
  
  A Modern Comedy, 1924–1928, 1929
  
  The White Monkey, 1924
  
  (Interlude) a Silent Wooing, 1927
  
  The Silver Spoon, 1926
  
  (Interlude) Passers By, 1927
  
  Swan Song, 1928
  
  Two Forsyte Interludes, 1927
  
  The Manaton Edition, 1923–26 (collection, 30 vols.)
  
  Exiled, 1929
  
  The Roof, 1929
  
  On Forsyte 'Change, 1930
  
  Two Essays On Conrad, 1930
  
  Soames And The Flag, 1930
  
  The Creation Of Character In Literature, 1931 (The Romanes Lecture for 1931).
  
  Maid In Waiting, 1931
  
  Forty Poems, 1932
  
  Flowering Wilderness, 1932
  
  Over the River, 1933
  
  Autobiographical Letters Of Galsworthy: A Correspondence With Frank Harris, 1933
  
  The Grove Edition, 1927–34 (collection, 27 Vols.)
  
  Collected Poems, 1934
  
  End Of the Chapter, 1931–1933, 1934 (posthumously)
  
  Maid In Waiting, 1931
  
  Flowering Wilderness, 1932
  
  One More River, 1933 (originally the English edition was called Over the River)
  
  Punch And Go, 1935
  
  The Life And Letters, 1935
  
  The Winter Garden, 1935
  
  Forsytes, Pendyces And Others, 1935
  
  Selected Short Stories, 1935
  
  Glimpses And Reflections, 1937
  
  Galsworthy's Letters To Leon Lion, 1968
  
  Letters From John Galsworthy 1900–1932, 1970
    

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