Study Guide to Far from the Madding Crowd by Thomas Hardy
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Study Guide to Far from the Madding Crowd by Thomas Hardy

Intelligent Education

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Study Guide to Far from the Madding Crowd by Thomas Hardy

Intelligent Education

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A comprehensive study guide offering in-depth explanation, essay, and test prep for Thomas Hardy’s Far from the Madding Crowd, the publication attributed with Hardy’s achievement of literary success. As a novel of Victorian England, Far from the Madding Crowd tells the realities of living in the idyllic farming communities of southwest England. Moreover, Hardy is acknowledged for his use of Victorian and modern literary techniques with traditional constructed plots, yet modern psychological development of his characters and reflection of modern problems. This Bright Notes Study Guide explores the context and history of Hardy’s classic work, helping students to thoroughly explore the reasons it has stood the literary test of time. Each Bright Notes Study Guide contains: - Introductions to the Author and the Work
- Character Summaries
- Plot Guides
- Section and Chapter Overviews
- Test Essay and Study Q&As The Bright Notes Study Guide series offers an in-depth tour of more than 275 classic works of literature, exploring characters, critical commentary, historical background, plots, and themes. This set of study guides encourages readers to dig deeper in their understanding by including
essay questions and answers as well as topics for further research.

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Year
2020
ISBN
9781645424857
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INTRODUCTION TO THOMAS HARDY
 
BACKGROUND
Although Thomas Hardy was born into Victorian England, and is always considered a Victorian novelist, he shares a common interest with some twentieth century novelists. Like D. H. Lawrence, Ford Madox Ford and E. M. Forster, he is fascinated by England’s past and her rural areas. The name “Wessex,” as he himself explains, was taken from an old English history; he gave it to a district that was once part of an Anglo-Saxon kingdom.
He was born in this district, in Higher Brockhampton, near Dorchester (Casterbridge, in his novels), on June 2, 1840. Since he was a sickly child, he received his early education at home from his mother, who inspired his love of the classics. His father, a builder and contractor, gave him an early interest in architecture.
When he was about eight years old, he started school in Dorchester. His walk to school took him along country lanes, and he became familiar with rustic scenes. He continued school there until he was about sixteen, when he was apprenticed in the office of John Hicks, a Dorchester architect. He devoted much of his spare time during the years he worked here to his studies of the classics. In 1862, he went to London to work under a London architect, Arthur Blomfield. He continued his studies of the classics in London, both privately and by attending lectures at Kings College. In 1867, he returned to Dorchester to work with Hicks in restoring churches.
LITERARY CAREER
While he lived in London, Hardy became interested in literature as a possible career. He wrote several poems and some essays, as well as a novel, The Poor Man and The Lady (1868). The novel was rejected by publishers and destroyed. George Meredith, already established as a novelist, advised Hardy not to write social satire, but to try to write a novel with a highly complicated plot. The acceptance of Desperate Remedies (1871), which was published anonymously, launched Hardy’s career as a novelist. Another novel, A Pair of Blue Eyes (1872), was also published anonymously, but Hardy did not achieve literary success until the publication of Far From the Madding Crowd (1874). That same year he married Emma Gifford, whom he had met while restoring a church in Cornwall. He and his wife eventually settled at Max Gate, Dorchester, where Hardy spent the remainder of his long life.
LATER LIFE
At Dorchester, he wrote his major novels, including: Return of the Native (1878), Mayor of Casterbridge (1886), Tess of the d’Urbervilles (1891), and Jude the Obscure (1895). The novels were usually serialized in magazines before their first publication. The “controversial” subject matter of his books upset Victorian readers, and Hardy reacted by abandoning the novel form. He devoted his later years to writing short stories and poems (particularly, Dynasts: A Drama of the Napoleonic Wars, which was published in three parts, in 1904, 1906 and 1908).
In 1912, his first wife died, ending a rather difficult marriage. He married Florence Dugdale in 1914; she survived him and wrote one of the most important Hardy biographies. He died on January 11, 1928, and his ashes were buried in Westminster Abbey.
INTEREST IN NATURE
In most of the Wessex novels, nature is pictured as a hard, unrelenting force. Eustacia and Wildeve (in Return of the Native) are not sympathetic to nature, and are eventually destroyed by drowning. Some of this harshness can also be found in Far From the Madding Crowd, in scenes such as the one in which the storm threatens Bathsheba’s wheat and barley, and in the death of Gabriel Oak’s lambs.
The major impact of nature in this novel, however, is of a happier tone. The descriptions include views of nature at its prime: warm spring and summer days spent in sheep washing and shearing, and cold winter nights when the stars are at their brightest. The descriptions are not included only for their beauty; they are integral since they set the atmosphere, and should not be skipped over, as if they were in the way of the plot development.
Hardy’s perception of the world of nature is very accurate; small details, like the buttercups which stain Boldwood’s boots as he walks through a field on a spring day, show us how wide-awake Hardy’s senses were to external impressions of nature.
Moreover, the novel contains Hardy’s most complete picture of farm life. To be sure, this life is not always easy, but it provides for happy times at the malthouse, and feasts after sheep shearing. Rural England is at its best here, and some of the atmosphere of older pastorals can be found in Gabriel’s characterization, occupation and closeness to nature. When he plays his flute, the world of Sir Philip Sidney’s Arcadia is not far off.
WESSEX
With the selection of Wessex as the setting for his novels, Hardy assured his success as a novelist. The area, familiar to him from his childhood, can be located on a modern map. The Anglo-Saxon kingdom includes those southern counties from Surrey in the east, to the Bristol Channel and the Devonshire-Cornwall border on the west. It is rich in legend and the history of England, including its Celtic, Roman, Saxon and medieval past. (Stonehenge, with its mysterious stone ruins and the gigantic earthworks of Maiden’s Castle near Dorchester, lie within its boundaries.) Hardy’s Wessex is generally confined to the area of Dorsetshire.
It was more than just a physical location for him, however; he prized the economic and social order it had represented, as well as the manners and customs that formed a part of that order. He mourned the passing of these native customs and the changing character of the villages during England’s rapid industrialization. He found a way to preserve the old order by capturing it in his novels.
Although the dialect he created for his rustic characters was more often “literary” than accurate, it does convey the simplicity, common sense and humor associated with the natives of this region. The value that these rustic characters placed on the past is sensed in the frequent anecdotes (such as those indulged in by the ancient malster in Far From the Madding Crowd). Hardy’s retreat to the privacy of Max Gate is almost symbolic of his choice of the past greatness of rural England as the focal point of his work.
FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD
The title was taken from the familiar, “Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard,” by Thomas Gray, the eighteenth-century poet. The poem describes the burial of the country people who lived “Far from the madding crowd’s ignoble strife.” The title serves as an apt, though sometimes ironic, commentary on the novel.
The novel was a result of a request by Leslie Stephens, editor of the Cornhill magazine, for a serial. It appeared anonymously in Cornhill’s in 1874. It was first attributed to George Eliot, much to Hardy’s annoyance. It can almost be termed “a novel of setting,” since the rural life it describes forms the essence of the novel.
The plot is almost perfectly symmetrical, centering around Gabriel Oak. He is a prosperous farmer at the beginning, he suffers financial reverses, and he emerges as an even more prosperous farmer at the end. He meets Bathsheba Everdene and falls in love with her, patiently supports her through her romantic adventures, and finally wins her. There is very little wasted material in the story; incidents that seem to have little importance earlier in the book loom significantly later on. For instance, as Fanny leaves Frank Troy in his barracks, laughter is heard “hardly distinguishable from the gurgle of the tiny whirlpools outside.” The gurgle of these whirlpools is recalled by the deluging rain that carries off the flowers on Fanny’s grave.
Although Hardy never ignored the public’s reactions to his serialized novels and won his success in popular magazines, he remained a craftsman who never lost sight of his own ideal of the novel.
OUTSTANDING FEATURES
In Hardy’s novels the characters that succeed, and are generally the happiest, are the ones that remain in harmony with their surroundings. The best example in this novel is, of course, Gabriel Oak. The most interesting characterization, however, is the almost collective use of the rustics. They manage to retain their individuality, but they seem to have a communal personality. They view the action of their social “betters” and comment on it, in a Greek-chorus-like effect. In addition, they help the action to progress. A good example of his occurs when Joseph Poorgrass is sent to bring Fanny’s body back to Weatherbury. He lingers at the Buck’s Head Inn so long that the body is brought to the churchyard too late for burial. Her body is then taken to Bathsheba at Weatherbury Farm for the night, and Bathsheba has time to open the coffin and discover Fanny’s child.
The comedy associated with the rustics is almost Shakespearean. Hardy sympathizes with even the silliest characters (such as Poorgrass), and never laughs at them. Even Poorgrass can join in the merriment, as the tales of his timidity are presented. High spirits are again in evidence when Coggan coaxes Poorgrass to sing his “ballet” at the shearing feast.
Less important than Hardy’s skill in depicting his rustic characters, but a distinct feature of his writing style, is his wide use of allusion. The unusual number of references, both classical and Biblical, is astonishing. The most effective allusions are the Biblical ones, since they seem to echo rugged strength of the pastoral setting. The choice of Bathsheba’s name is an obvious device, but the use of Adam’s first view of Eve as a comparison for Boldwood’s awakening to Bathsheba’s charms adds more substance to the episode. The comparison of Bathsheba to a nymph, or to Venus, is less subtle, and refines to Thor, Jove, Cyclops, etc., are often weak and ineffective, as well as incongruous.
Literary allusions are also included, such as Gabriel’s bird’s-eye view of Bathsheba “as Milton’s Satan first saw Paradise,” (from Paradise Lost), and the quotation from Macbeth to describe Gabriel’s lack of skill in describing his feelings for Bathsheba.
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FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD
SUMMARY
Gabriel Oak, a prosperous young farmer, meets a beautiful, though vain young lady (Bathsheba Everdene), whom he decides to marry. She refuses his proposal, however, since she does not love him, and is not yet ready to marry. He promises to love her always, but vows never to ask her to marry him again. Shortly after, her uncle dies, and she inherits his farm at Weatherbury. She leaves Norcombe, and Gabriel, already disappointed in love and unaware of Bathsheba’s new position in life, suffers a grave financial loss when his sheep fall into a chalk pit. He is forced to sell everything he owns to pay his debts.
Since he is unsuccessful in finding a place as bailiff or as shepherd, Gabriel makes his way toward Weatherbury. He helps to put out a fire in a hayrick and hopes to get a place as shepherd on this farm. He is surprised to find that Bathsheba owns the farm. She hires him as shepherd and he goes to the local malthouse to inquire about lodgings. At the malthouse he is welcomed by the villagers; as the group begins to leave, news is brought of the dismissal of Bathsheba’s bailiff for stealing, and of the sudden disappearance of Fanny Robin, the youngest of the maidservants at Weatherbury Farm.
Bathsheba decides to manage the farm herself and goes to Casterbridge to the grain market. She is annoyed when she is ignored by one of the farmers, Mr. Boldwood. He has led a solitary existence on the next farm, and he has a reputation for being a confirmed bachelor. On a wild impulse, she sends him an anonymous valentine, inscribed “Marry me.” From Gabriel, Boldwood learns that the handwriting is Bathsheba’s, and his interest in her is aroused. He falls in love with her, and one day, as she and her laborers are involved in washing her sheep, he approaches and asks her to marry him.
She refuses this offer, and when he begs her again and again to accept, she asks for more time. She seeks out Gabriel as he is grinding shears and asks his opinion. Gabriel is still deeply in love with her, but answers her honestly; he strongly disapproves of her conduct. She is angered by his reply and tells him to leave the farm. Gabriel agrees to leave immediately. The very next day her sheep are injured, and she is forced to send for Gabriel. He ignores her first request and then comes to save the sheep, when she pleads with him not to desert her.
Meanwhile, Fanny Robin is reported to have run away with Francis Troy, an army sergeant. She follows him to his new post and anxiously inquires about their marriage. He seems hesitant about his plans, but promises to meet her as soon as he can.
At Weatherbury Farm the rustics gather to help shear the sheep. After the shearing, a gay feast takes place, and Boldwood appears to act as host. He again asks Bathsheba to marry him and is sorry for her foolish valentine.. When she reveals about five or six weeks.
That night, however, she accidentally meets Troy and is charmed by his manner and his good looks. She meets him again during the hay gathering and is secretly pleased by his compliments. She is further impressed by his daring swordplay; she refuses to see how unstable a character he is, and that he has little beyond his charm to offer. Gabriel tries to warm her about Troy; though he still loves her, he advises her th...

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