The Mayor of Casterbridge: What's Inside
The Mayor of Casterbridge: What's Inside
The Mayor of Casterbridge: What's Inside
Casterbridge
Study Guide by Course Hero
TENSE
What's Inside The Mayor of Casterbridge is narrated in the past tense.
g Quotes ........................................................................................................ 30
d In Context
l Symbols ..................................................................................................... 33
m Themes ...................................................................................................... 34
Victorian Treatment of Women
e Suggested Reading .............................................................................. 35
The reign of Queen Victoria (1837–1901) marked the high point
of British power and prosperity. The Industrial Revolution
(1760–1840), which replaced human labor with machine power
j Book Basics in many industries, was at its height. Largely thanks to the
power and reach of the British navy, the nation's colonizing
AUTHOR efforts spanned the globe. According to a popular adage, the
Thomas Hardy British Empire held "dominions, on which the sun never sets."
YEAR PUBLISHED British global supremacy in the second half of the 19th century
1886 had numerous implications on the home front as well. A rigid
social code became even more established in a culture where
GENRE class divisions had long been ingrained. Families were strongly
Tragedy patriarchal, with women and children relegated to silence and
obedience. Institutions such as the monarchy, the nobility, the
PERSPECTIVE AND NARRATOR
military, and the church were rarely questioned. Responsibility
The Mayor of Casterbridge is narrated through a sympathetic
and respectability were supreme virtues. There were
third-person omniscient point of view. The narrator knows the
occasional political reforms, however, and science did
characters thoroughly and is understanding of their
progress, as with English naturalist Charles Darwin's landmark
weaknesses or mistakes.
work On the Origin of Species (1859).
The Mayor of Casterbridge Study Guide In Context 2
Hardy challenged virtually all the social norms of his era, Casterbridge.
especially the sanctity of marriage, the rigidity of class
distinctions, and the Victorian treatment of women.
Modernism
In the Victorian era women were commonly stereotyped as
physically weaker but also morally superior to men. The sexes In modernist works, novelists and poets, as well as composers
were typically entrenched in separate spheres. The women's and artists, displayed a conscious break with traditional styles
sphere was the home, and the men's was the workplace—a and forms. Modernist writers were experimental to a
factory, a shop, or an office. This separation meant husbands significant degree, and some of them reflected the influence of
and wives could pass the entire day, from breakfast till dinner, newly developed theories of social and individual behavior,
without meeting. such as the theories of German philosopher Karl Marx and
Austrian neurologist Sigmund Freud.
Women's education made some advances during this period,
and in the latter part of the century the elite universities of In The Mayor of Casterbridge Hardy takes an unconventional
Oxford and Cambridge began to admit women. As a woman, stance toward marriage, as well as a pessimistic outlook on
though, one had to toe a fine line between self-improving human destiny and behavior. For example, it is doubtful any
"accomplishments" and appearing to be a "bluestocking"—the 19th-century British novelist before Hardy would have termed
term describing women who were overly intellectual. It was life as a "general drama of pain."
also important not to angle too openly for a husband.
Movements He could infuse his novels and short stories with appealing
local color through traditional folkways and dialect.
He could critique social prejudice and injustice without
Realism unduly offending real-life culprits.
He could appeal to familiar character types and landscapes
The literary movement known as realism played an important while bathing them in a somewhat unfamiliar and alluring
role in Hardy's fiction. Participation in the realist movement light.
signified a writer's or artist's readiness to present life as it was
actually lived by a broad spectrum of society. Serious fiction The title of Hardy's novel suggests the town of Casterbridge,
was not confined to the upper classes, nor was it limited to an located in Wessex County, will share the spotlight, and the
idealized portrait of human beings and their behavior. author obliges by offering a broad variety of descriptions of
streets, inns, nearby roads, and landmarks such as the Ring, an
In The Mayor of Casterbridge Hardy's realism is evident in his ancient Roman amphitheater.
portrayals of Michael Henchard and Lucetta Templeman. Both
are many-sided characters whose traits and actions reveal After Hardy, major novelists who adopted such a strategy for
numerous conflicts. They strike the reader as real people, with setting included the American writer William Faulkner
both virtues and flaws. Another aspect of Hardy's realism is his (1897–1962), who set many of his novels in fictional
detailed description of local places in and around Yoknapatawpha County in Mississippi, and the Indian novelist
R.K. Narayan (1906–2001), whose works unfolded in fictional
Early Career
After leaving school Hardy became an apprentice to local
Literary Success
architect John Hicks. In 1862 he moved to London, where he
Hardy became a full-time writer in 1872, when he serialized his
was employed as a draftsman in the office of a leading
next novel, A Pair of Blue Eyes. The next work, Far from the
ecclesiastical architect, working on gothic churches and
Madding Crowd (1874), introduced Wessex, the semifictional
rectory houses and participating in the culture of the great
region based on the medieval Anglo-Saxon kingdom of
metropolis of London. Hardy spent his spare time teaching
Wessex—full of real cities and places—where his mature
himself about poetry, experimenting with verse forms, and
novels would be set. From then on, Hardy became more and
studying Greek. For a time, he had ambitions of obtaining a
more successful as a fiction writer, publishing 10 novels and 50
university education and becoming an Anglican priest, but he
short stories from 1876 to 1895. His later and most famous
realized in 1866 the notion was "farfetched," as he told his
novels come from this period: The Return of the Native (1878),
sister Mary. Ill health drove him back to the country in 1867,
The Mayor of Casterbridge (1886), The Woodlanders (1887),
and he was rehired by Hicks. He then fell in love with his 16-
Tess of the d'Urbervilles (1891), and Jude the Obscure (1895).
year-old cousin, Tryphena Sparks, an apprentice teacher who
later became headmistress at a girls' school in Plymouth. The As a novelist Hardy was forced to tone down his work to avoid
relationship eventually faded as they spent less time together. offending readers with his frank depictions of sexual
relationships and criticism of Victorian hypocrisy. His serialized
novels were less explicit than the published volumes, and he
allowed his editors, in some instances, to pare away what the
public might find objectionable in the published volumes.
absence of free will) and overtly sexual subject matter, most convention, putting his wife and child up for auction. He then
critics were outraged by Jude the Obscure. The latter novel swears a solemn vow not to touch alcohol for 21 years. By dint
was darker, more shocking, and overtly condemnatory of both of self-control and hard work, he becomes wealthy and
class structure and conventional morality. influential. But he then suffers reverses—financial, social, and
personal—that leave him a lonely wanderer who dies in a poor
cottage. Is Henchard a tragic hero? Hardy suggests he is.
Later Years Henchard is acutely aware of his character flaws, but in the
end he cannot overcome them.
mortification of his second wife, Florence Dugdale. After the degree she submits to Henchard's dominating nature.
reception of Jude the Obscure, which was materially However, Hardy hints Susan is capable of some initiative. For
successful but much maligned by the critics, Hardy abandoned example, she writes notes in an effort to unite her daughter,
Character Map
Susan Henchard
Meek woman; sold at auction
Mother
Spouses
Friends
turned rivals Second
Spouses
wife
Donald Farfrae
Practical, resourceful
newcomer
Main Character
Minor Character
Nance Mockridge is a local character Soon, however, Henchard and Farfrae part ways, becoming
Nance who advocates the skimmity-ride. She bitter rivals. Susan becomes ill, and shortly before her death
Mockridge is portrayed as saucy, envious, and
disrespectful. she writes a letter to Henchard, telling him Elizabeth-Jane is
not really his daughter. Her father is the sea captain Richard
Richard Newson is the sea captain Newson, the man who bought Susan at auction. Henchard is
who "buys" Susan Henchard and her powerfully disillusioned and comes to treat Elizabeth-Jane with
infant child in Chapter 1 of the novel. cold indifference.
Richard Newson
He reappears toward the end of the
story. He is portrayed as genial and
A new character now enters the picture: Lucetta Templeman.
appealing.
Lucetta and Henchard were romantically linked in the past.
Henchard presses this claim, but Lucetta is captivated instead
Mrs. Stannidge is the landlady at the
Mrs. Stannidge by young Donald Farfrae. Her shift of affections enrages
Three Mariners Inn.
Henchard, and he becomes obsessed with ruining Farfrae to
Constable Constable Stubberd is a local police get his revenge.
Stubberd officer.
Henchard miscalculates, however, and suffers huge losses in
the grain business, while Farfrae prospers. Henchard is finally
Alderman Tubber is a local official
Alderman who nettles Henchard about the forced to declare bankruptcy. He also becomes a social
Tubber failure of Henchard's planned holiday outcast when everyone learns he sold Susan at auction.
entertainment.
Meanwhile, local envy and gossip lead to Lucetta's downfall as
Alderman Vatt is a local official who well. Both she and Henchard are publicly humiliated in a
Alderman Vatt sounds out Farfrae on the issue of his "skimmity-ride," a raucous procession organized to bring
selection as mayor.
disgrace on people suspected of adultery or other sexual
laxity. Lucetta is so unnerved she becomes fatally ill.
Abel Whittle is a humble employee in
Henchard's business associate whom
After Lucetta's death, Farfrae and Elizabeth-Jane are married.
Abel Whittle Henchard bullies and humiliates.
Henchard dies in Whittle's poor, This is the last straw for Henchard, now an impoverished,
simple cottage. embittered wanderer. He dies a lonely death in a poor cottage.
k Plot Summary
Michael Henchard, the novel's protagonist, is a young, hot-
tempered hay-trusser (someone who composes hay into
bundles or bales, also called trusses). While intoxicated at a
village fair, he impulsively sells his wife and infant child at
auction for the sum of five guineas. Waking up the next day, he
experiences extreme remorse and makes a solemn vow not to
touch alcohol for the next 21 years.
Plot Diagram
Climax
7
Falling Action
6
Rising Action
5 8
4
9
3
Resolution
2
1
Introduction
Rising Action
Climax
Timeline of Events
Around 1830
18 years later
Soon after
Soon after
Soon after
Soon after
Harvest time
Soon after
Soon after
Soon after
Author's Preface Henchard and Farfrae make their living and operate
businesses in this sector of agriculture, and Henchard's rise
and fall as well as Farfrae's are closely linked with the
fluctuations Hardy notes.
Summary
The preface is also notable because it conveys the author's
Writing in the years 1895 to 1912, some years after The Mayor scrupulous attention to detail. No aspect of language or
of Casterbridge was published (in 1886), Thomas Hardy incident, no minor inconsistency between editions, seems to
comments on several aspects of the novel. He notes younger escape Hardy's attention. The preface, despite its relative
readers may have no vivid memories of economic conditions in brevity, gives a picture of Hardy as a "writer's writer."
the 1830s and 40s, when the story is set. In particular,
uncertain harvests and heavy speculation characterized the
home corn trade, which was a key part of the British economy. Chapters 1–2
Trade in wheat, rye, and barley was long subject to intense
regulation. Imports were taxed, and exports were penalized.
These regulations, known as the Corn Laws, were relaxed and
ultimately suspended in favor of free trade during the mid-to-
Summary
late 1840s.
In the preface Hardy also mentions the sale of a wife by her Chapter 1
husband, which constitutes the novel's dramatic opening, as a
The setting for the novel's opening scene is southwestern
historical event. In addition, he mentions some editorial
England in the 1820s. On an afternoon in late summer, a young
changes prompted by the appearance of the novel in an
hay-trusser—someone who composes hay into bundles or
American edition.
bales, also called trusses—approaches the town of Weydon-
Finally, Hardy comments on the dialogue he devised for Donald Priors, accompanied by his wife and their infant daughter. From
Farfrae, one of the novel's most important characters. In the their silence and body language, it is easy to surmise the
story, Farfrae is said to hail from Scotland. Some of Hardy's spouses are estranged to some degree.
critics, however, noted the dialect expressions Hardy employs
Weydon-Priors is celebrating Fair Day. The young family enters
are not authentically Scottish. Along with some counter-
a tent in which an older woman dispenses furmity, a type of
testimony, Hardy offers an ingenious justification. Farfrae's
local porridge. The hay-trusser consumes increasing amounts
language, he declares, was not intended to reproduce Scottish
of this drink, laced with rum, and grows argumentative. The
pronunciation with complete accuracy, but only to illustrate
spiel of an auctioneer selling old horses outside suggests a
how his accent and dialect would have appeared to
plan to the hay-trusser: he will put his wife on the block for
"southerners," namely people who lived farther south in
sale. Their two years of marriage have brought him nothing but
England.
trouble, he declares.
Chapter 2 Summary
The next morning the young man, whose full name is Michael
Henchard, awakens in a haze of dim memories. Slowly he Chapter 3
pieces together the previous afternoon's events. Full of
contrition and shame, he makes his way to a church and This chapter takes up the story after a gap of 18 years. In a
swears a solemn oath not to touch strong liquor for the next 21 mirror image of the conclusion of Chapter 2, when Michael
years—one year for each year of his current age. Then he Henchard was searching for his wife and child, Susan
begins a months-long search for his wife and child. Henchard and her daughter Elizabeth-Jane are now searching
for the man who sold them off to a stranger. Their path leads
them to Weydon-Priors, where they encounter the furmity-
Analysis woman. Susan has not disclosed the whole truth of their past
to Elizabeth-Jane. In Susan's partial account, Henchard is not
In 1886, when Hardy first published The Mayor of Casterbridge, Elizabeth-Jane's father; he is a "connection by marriage."
the novel's opening chapter must have struck readers as Elizabeth-Jane believes her father is the sailor Richard
revolutionary. Hardy's treatment of the theme of marriage was Newson, the man who bought them at auction 18 years earlier,
highly unconventional throughout most of his career as a and Susan hasn't denied it.
novelist. The portraits of marriage in The Return of the Native,
Tess of the d'Urbervilles, and Jude the Obscure, for example, The furmity-woman, Mrs. Goodenough, directs Susan and
grow steadily more dark and pessimistic. Chapter 1 of The Elizabeth-Jane to Casterbridge, the region's major town and
Mayor of Casterbridge encapsulates Hardy's view of marriage farming center. Although many years have passed since she
as a far-from-blissful union. This view was in stark contrast to encountered Michael Henchard, she remembers he was
Victorian orthodoxy. headed there. Susan resolves to go there and seek her former
husband.
In these opening chapters Hardy establishes his protagonist's
character traits, which will alter very little throughout the novel.
Michael Henchard is impulsive, headstrong, and combative. His Chapter 4
inebriation is his downfall; by the same token, his shame and
repentance are also outsized. Hardy's subtitle for the novel After a considerable journey, Susan and Elizabeth-Jane arrive
was "A Story of a Man of Character." It is doubtful if anyone in Casterbridge. In a mini-flashback, readers learn Richard
meeting Henchard would soon forget him. This supposition is Newson, Elizabeth-Jane's supposed father, has been reported
later borne out in Chapter 28 when, many years later, the as lost at sea and is now presumed dead. For reasons of pride,
furmity-woman steps forward to disclose Henchard's past Susan has kept Elizabeth-Jane in a "half-informed state."
actions, bringing an abrupt end to his burnished reputation in
Casterbridge.
Analysis
Scholars have found a historical basis for both Henchard's
wife-selling and his solemn oath of abstinence from liquor. In Chapter 3 Hardy initiates what will turn out to be one of the
Hardy seems to have gleaned these details from the Dorset novel's major strands: the theme of deception. This theme,
County Chronicle (1826–1829). which will involve nearly all the characters, will range from
outright mendacity to partial truth to suppression of the whole
truth, and Hardy will create many variations on it. For the
Chapters 3–4 moment, deception involves Susan's deliberate concealment of
Michael Henchard's true identity and of his relationship to her
and to Elizabeth-Jane.
Chapters 7–8 toward the end of Chapter 7, when Henchard asks what he
should pay Farfrae for disclosing the method to improve the
quality of Henchard's grain. "Nothing at all, nothing at all,"
replies Farfrae. "I don't value it at all." It is difficult to imagine
Summary Henchard voicing the same sentiments.
however, and he candidly refers to his youthful errors and his Henchard proposes they take a walk together before saying
former overindulgence in strong drink. farewell. Meanwhile, Susan decides to send Elizabeth-Jane to
Henchard to tell him his relative, a sailor's widow, has arrived in
Meanwhile, Elizabeth-Jane helps to pay for her and Susan's Casterbridge. Susan's motives are twofold. Henchard has been
accommodation at the Three Mariners by assisting the described as a lonely widower, and he has expressed shame
landlady and staff in waiting on clients. for his previous behavior. Susan instructs Elizabeth-Jane to tell
Henchard, if he is interested in meeting with the widow, to
write Susan a note, telling how and when a reunion may be
Chapter 8 arranged.
Chapter 8 centers on various characters' reactions to Farfrae. Elizabeth-Jane's stroll up the street to Henchard's residence in
Elizabeth-Jane, who is fond of music, is especially impressed Casterbridge affords an opportunity for a description of
by the young Scotchman's singing voice. The locals encourage market day in the town. Much communication among the
Farfrae's singing of ballads, and he gives a rendition of Robert townsfolk occurs through gestures, rather than words. When
Burns's famous song "Auld Lang Syne." An encounter between Elizabeth-Jane arrives at her destination, she comes upon
Elizabeth-Jane and Farfrae strongly foreshadows a deeper Farfrae rather than Henchard. In a brief flashback, readers
relationship later in the novel. Meanwhile, Henchard closes the learn how Farfrae came to be busy at Henchard's office. On
chapter by registering extreme regret about Farfrae traveling the walk with Henchard just before he planned to depart,
to America, declaring to himself he would have offered Farfrae Farfrae had finally yielded to Henchard's pleading and
a third of the business to remain in Casterbridge. accepted the mayor's third job offer. Shaking hands on the
deal, Henchard has offered his house as lodging for his new
friend, as least until suitable alternative accommodation can be
Analysis found.
companions. She also pays some attention to Farfrae's Donald Farfrae intervenes, strongly challenging Henchard and
attractive appearance and manners. The two have what seems threatening to quit if the public disgrace of Whittle continues.
like a chance encounter at Henchard's granary; the meeting is Henchard sullenly backs down. From this point on, his
somewhat awkward—but also somewhat intriguing—for both of reputation suffers, while ever greater numbers of people
them. admire and rely on Farfrae. The two men ostensibly patch up
their spat, but privately Henchard begins to regret confiding so
many secrets to the younger man.
Analysis
The account of Henchard and Susan's remarriage in Chapter Chapter 16
13 is more notable for the townspeople's remarks than for the
ceremony itself. Their comments are lightly sarcastic and are Henchard's reserve toward Farfrae increases. In this chapter
expressed in Wessex dialect. The locals' interest in marital tension again arises between the two men. Farfrae makes
affairs and their propensity for gossip may foreshadow the plans to stage a public entertainment during a town holiday.
malicious skimmity-ride in Chapter 39, in which public opinion Henchard does the same, determined to make his preparations
becomes a lethal weapon assaulting, and then annihilating, on a grander scale, staging a "mammoth tea" for everyone free
Lucetta's reputation. of charge. But a rainstorm on the appointed day dooms
Henchard's plans to failure because the venue he has selected
There are two other important instances of foreshadowing in is too exposed to the inclement weather. Farfrae's
Chapter 14, both bearing on Elizabeth-Jane's true paternity. As entertainment, by contrast, succeeds admirably. Embarrassed
will be revealed in Chapter 19, Henchard's real daughter died in by the success of a man who is now his rival and who has
infancy, and the present Elizabeth-Jane was actually fathered captured public admiration, Henchard hints Farfrae's time as
by Richard Newson. The dialogue concerning her hair color his manager is drawing to a close.
and surname serves as foreshadowing for the revelations to
come.
Analysis
Chapters 15–16 These two chapters are united by a common thread. Both
dramatize a growing rift between Henchard and Farfrae.
Henchard's tyrannical nature verges on brutality in his
treatment of poor Abel Whittle, whose subordination is
Summary
stressed in the title he uses to address the mayor: "your
worshipful." Farfrae intervenes in the name of common
decency, and his reputation immediately grows more positive,
Chapter 15
while Henchard's dips downward.
To improve her education Elizabeth-Jane embarks on the In Chapter 20 Henchard's disillusionment results in his "open
study of Latin. She is inspired in her effort by the ancient chiding" of Elizabeth-Jane, as he reproaches her for all kinds of
Roman roots of Casterbridge. petty faults, including her use of local dialect and her
unsatisfactory handwriting. Henchard's disillusionment and
Henchard now reconsiders his decision to forbid any contact embarrassment at the latest turn of events are magnified by
between Elizabeth-Jane and Farfrae. He writes to his former the challenging disrespect of Nance Mockridge, who reminds
manager to this effect, withdrawing his objection. the mayor that Elizabeth-Jane once acted in a working-class
capacity. In a poignant reaction to Henchard's reproaches,
On a visit to the churchyard where Susan is buried, Elizabeth- Elizabeth-Jane makes a strenuous effort to further her
Jane encounters a strange lady. In the course of a courteous education. Meanwhile, the estranged Henchard—perhaps in an
and kindly dialogue, the stranger—who soon will be revealed as effort to distance himself from Elizabeth-Jane still
Lucetta—invites Elizabeth-Jane to visit her, and perhaps to further—changes his mind about her contact with Farfrae.
remain as a housekeeper and companion, at her new
Casterbridge residence, High-Place Hall. At the end of the chapter, with Lucetta's first appearance,
readers are compelled to speculate on her role in the rest of
the novel. Clearly she will play a major part in the plot, as
Analysis forecast by her past connection with Henchard and her
installation at a grand residence in town.
Chapter 19 serves as a showcase for dramatic irony, one of
Hardy's favorite literary techniques. Among the many examples
of this device is Henchard's opening declaration to Elizabeth- Chapters 21–22
Jane that he, not Newson, is her real father—a statement soon
to be contradicted by the contents of Susan's letter. This irony
is reinforced when Elizabeth-Jane, to please Henchard,
formally changes her surname to his and makes a public
Summary
announcement of the change in the local newspaper.
Just before Henchard reads Susan's fateful letter, the narrator Chapter 21
delivers another highly significant comment on Henchard's
psychology: "He was the kind of man to whom some human This chapter offers Elizabeth-Jane's impressions of High-Place
object for pouring out his heat upon—were it emotive or were it Hall, the imposing mansion where the stranger, Lucetta, has
choleric—was almost a necessity." In other words, Henchard is, taken up residence in Casterbridge. The place has stood
in today's parlance, passive-aggressive or even bipolar—an vacant for several years because some of its rooms overlook
individual of strong, conflicting impulses, with unpredictable the market. Elizabeth-Jane decides to accept Lucetta's
and stress-inducing mood swings. invitation to move there, and she asks Henchard for his
approval. Indifference has now replaced irritability in
When he learns Elizabeth-Jane is Richard Newson's child, Henchard's attitude toward Elizabeth-Jane. Seemingly happy
Henchard is stunned. He looks at Susan's letter "as if it were a to have her off his hands, Henchard acquiesces and even
offers her an allowance. darkness near High-Place Hall. Neither character recognizes
the other—perhaps an emblem of the persistent
Typically for Henchard, though, he has a wave of regret and misunderstanding and misconceptions between them. As the
second thoughts. When the time for the move has arrived, he narrator comments, "Henchard passed in as ignorant of her
begs Elizabeth-Jane to stay with him, but his entreaty comes presence as she was ignorant of his identity."
10 minutes too late. Meanwhile, Lucetta has told Elizabeth-
Jane her name is Miss Templeman. In Chapter 21 Hardy also draws attention to Henchard's mood
swings, which have already been noted above. For example,
Henchard's "absolute indifference" to Elizabeth-Jane "had
Chapter 22 taken the place of irritability." He seems "relieved to get her off
his hands." Once again, as with the payment of five guineas to
This chapter begins with a flashback revealing that Miss Susan, an "arrangement" appears the expedient way to
Templeman and Lucetta (or Lucette) Le Sueur are the same Henchard to solve his emotional problems or conflicts. Toward
person. Lucetta writes Henchard to tell him her invitation to the end of the chapter, his mood changes yet again, as he
Elizabeth-Jane to live as her companion at High-Place Hall was comes to regret his acquiescence to Elizabeth-Jane's move to
intended to make it easier and more convenient for Henchard High-Place Hall. As is typical with Henchard, his regret is
to visit there without provoking local gossip. Upon learning this, belated and ineffectual.
Henchard cheers up.
Chapter 22 includes three letters from Lucetta to Henchard.
After Elizabeth-Jane arrives at High-Place Hall with her Along with other facets of her characterization, it is strongly
possessions, she and Lucetta chat, with Lucetta disclosing implied that Lucetta possesses a voluble and somewhat
some—but not all—of her background on the island of Jersey. mercurial personality. Readers will recall her original contact
The following morning the two women sit together watching with Henchard—also in a letter—was to request the return of
the market. Elizabeth-Jane spots Farfrae, but she does not potentially compromising letters she had written him when they
comment on him to Lucetta. Instead she identifies some of the lived on the island of Jersey.
locals for the newcomer.
In the scene describing Lucetta and Elizabeth-Jane's
Lucetta grows disappointed as the days pass without a visit observation of the marketplace in Chapter 22, Hardy
from Henchard. She feels there now should be no impediment foreshadows the two women's rivalry for Farfrae's affections.
to their marriage, especially considering the fortune she has Elizabeth-Jane is careful to conceal any interest she feels in
recently inherited from her wealthy relative in Bristol. Farfrae's presence at the market.
Elizabeth-Jane tells her new friend that Henchard is probably
avoiding the house because he has taken a dislike to her. This Chapter 22 is also notable for the semi-comic irony with which
comment unnerves Lucetta, since it means her carefully Lucetta's carefully laid plan for Henchard's visits to High-Place
prepared plans have been made in vain. Lucetta decides Hall is upset. Lucetta had assumed Elizabeth-Jane's presence
Elizabeth-Jane will have to be sent outside the house on some there would facilitate Henchard's visits. Now, however, she
trumped-up errands so the way can be cleared for a visit from learns Henchard is estranged from his stepdaughter. Lucetta's
Henchard. Lucetta promptly follows through on this plan, solution is to send Elizabeth-Jane on trumped-up errands and
writing Henchard yet another note to tell him the coast is clear. to apprise Henchard of the situation in yet another letter.
A visitor arrives and Lucetta eagerly greets him; it turns out to
be Farfrae rather than Henchard. Chapter 22 concludes on a suspenseful note as Farfrae, not
Henchard, appears at High-Place Hall. The explanation will
come in the next chapter.
Analysis
In an apparently minor vignette early in Chapter 21, Hardy
wrings an effective variation on the theme of deception when
he has Henchard and Elizabeth-Jane almost meet in the
Minutes later a servant announces Henchard's arrival. Now, The romance between Lucetta and Farfrae is paralleled, as
however, Lucetta's affections have changed, and she puts the well as advanced, by a seemingly minor scene the two
mayor off, saying she has a headache. Suddenly Lucetta characters observe at the hiring-fair in the marketplace where
conceives of a new role for Elizabeth-Jane: as a "watch-dog" a negotiation threatens to split two young lovers. The kindly
to keep her stepfather from visiting! Farfrae steps out of High-Place Hall to intervene, and his
assistance ensures the young couple can stay together.
Lucetta is impressed—and smitten.
Chapter 24
Lucetta abandons her interest in Henchard and shifts her
Life goes on for Lucetta and Elizabeth-Jane, with the two affections to Farfrae. The narrator sums up this change: "Her
women focusing their attention on the weekly market day. heart longed for some ark into which it could fly and be at rest."
Lucetta considers the relative merits of two new dresses she The ark connotes a place of protection and safety, notably
has received in a package from London. From the windows associated with the Biblical story of Noah and the flood in
overlooking the marketplace, they catch sight of a new Genesis, Chapters 8 and 9.
agricultural implement, a horse-drill. Suspecting Farfrae has
In Chapter 24 Hardy bestows much attention on the horse-drill,
brought the machine to Casterbridge, the women venture
an innovative agricultural implement Farfrae is introducing to
outside, where they encounter Henchard. Elizabeth-Jane—who
Casterbridge. The machine, which by this time had become
still does not know of her stepfather's prior relationship with
popular in other parts of England, serves as a realistic
Lucetta—introduces her to Henchard as Miss Templeman.
component of the novel's setting. But it is also symbolic of the
They discuss the horse-drill briefly, with Henchard expressing
intergenerational conflict between Henchard and Farfrae. This
pessimism about the machine's prospects. As Henchard
dimension becomes clear when Henchard goes out of his way
departs, Elizabeth-Jane hears him murmur something to
to belittle the device, while Farfrae claims it will revolutionize
sowing in the Casterbridge region. he tests his theory by calling on her and asking whether she
knows Farfrae. Soon afterward Farfrae himself appears, and
In The Mayor of Casterbridge, partial or incomplete recounting Lucetta's behavior increases Henchard's suspicions. In
of past events, often accompanied by outright deception, is Elizabeth-Jane's opinion, Lucetta and the two men are acting
common. In Chapter 24 Lucetta supplies her own "fictional in a ridiculous fashion.
tale" when she tells Elizabeth-Jane a partly true and partly
fictionalized version of her life story. The parallels with Michael Henchard then takes steps to seek revenge on his rival in
Henchard are striking; indeed, Hardy draws attention to them romance. He reengages Joshua Jopp, the man originally
at the beginning of Chapter 26, when he has Henchard displaced by Farfrae, as his manager, telling him the business
recapitulate the tale he had told long ago to Farfrae about his must now be run with the objective of ruining Farfrae. The two
past. The differences between these tales are perhaps as men discuss their strategy at length, commenting on Farfrae's
important as the similarities, for Lucetta's tale does not fool seemingly wondrous ability to play the grain markets
Elizabeth-Jane, while Henchard's story, contrived more successfully. Elizabeth-Jane tells Henchard that he is making a
ingeniously, finds credence with Farfrae. mistake by hiring Jopp, but Henchard sharply rebuffs her.
Chapters 25–26 extremely volatile, and farmers in the region are exposed to
serious risk. Henchard, who is superstitious, consults a local
weather prophet named Mr. Fall, who predicts a poor harvest
because of bad weather. As a result, Henchard buys up a large
Summary quantity of grain, gambling he will make a windfall when prices
rise. But the forecaster is mistaken: the weather turns out to be
favorable. Henchard suffers a huge loss and goes into debt.
Chapter 25 Rumor has it the formerly wealthy grain merchant has
mortgaged many of his properties to the bank. In a fit of
Donald Farfrae attends now almost entirely to Lucetta, with
temper Henchard discharges Jopp, who vows his boss will
Elizabeth-Jane having to take a back seat. As for Henchard, he
regret his action.
has by no means disposed of his "smoldering sentiments"
toward Lucetta, and he ventures to call on her again. Lucetta
greets him with "cool friendship." Henchard gets straight to the
Analysis
point, requesting her to decide on a date for their marriage.
Lucetta replies evasively, and she refuses to commit herself
The parallels between Henchard and Lucetta's temperaments
even when Henchard pointedly refers to her enemies in Jersey.
are further explored in these chapters. In Chapter 25, for
The two part on distinctly frosty terms. Meanwhile, Elizabeth-
example, when Henchard presses Lucetta on the matter of
Jane copes with Farfrae's new relationship with Lucetta,
marriage, she responds evasively. But after Henchard departs
viewing the turn of events with equanimity.
she impulsively gives vent to her true feelings. "I will love him!"
she exclaims, referring to Farfrae, and adds, "I'll love where I
choose!" Like Henchard, Lucetta is lonely and eager to bestow
Chapter 26
her affection; also like Henchard, she is self-willed and
headstrong. In contrast to both characters, Elizabeth-Jane is
In a chance meeting on the edge of Casterbridge, Henchard
portrayed as patient and balanced; note the emphasis on her
and Farfrae chat about the story Henchard had recounted to
"approach to equanimity" at the conclusion of Chapter 25.
him beforehand about a woman who suffered because of her
intimacy with him. Henchard says he has now offered to marry
Rivalry between Henchard and Farfrae is the keynote of
her, but she won't have him. Farfrae replies that Henchard
Chapter 26. Henchard begins by testing his theory Farfrae is
owes her nothing further. It is clear Farfrae does not realize
courting Lucetta. Having satisfied himself this is probably true,
Henchard is referring to Lucetta.
he sets out to ruin his rival. Unfortunately, this leads him to
renew his acquaintance with Joshua Jopp and engage him as a
Henchard suspects he has a rival for Lucetta's affections, and
manager. Here Hardy delivers a heavy dose of foreshadowing. Henchard overhears Farfrae speaking romantic words to
Jopp is said to reside in Mixen Lane, a tawdry neighborhood of Lucetta, and she encourages his affection. Soon afterward, in a
Casterbridge where dung and refuse dominate the scene. The showdown with Lucetta, Henchard warns he will reveal the
narrator also darkly declares, "That characters deteriorate in secrets of her past life unless she marries him. Elizabeth-Jane
time of need possibly did not occur to Henchard." When is summoned as a witness to Lucetta's promise to wed
Elizabeth-Jane learns her stepfather has hired Jopp, she warns Henchard. When Elizabeth-Jane expresses surprise, Henchard
him he is making a mistake, but he rejects her advice. cynically remarks his marriage to Lucetta will leave Farfrae
free for Elizabeth-Jane, if she still wants him. Now it is
Henchard says Jopp must lead a business operation to "grind Lucetta's turn to express astonishment. Elizabeth-Jane
[Farfrae] into the ground." Revenge is Henchard's overarching exclaims Lucetta has kept secrets from her. How is it, for
motivation. But when Henchard and Jopp's machinations fail example, Lucetta calls her stepfather Michael? Lucetta evades
because of unpredictable weather and Henchard dismisses this question, merely noting Elizabeth-Jane may have kept
the foreman, Jopp in turn vows revenge. As readers will learn secrets too.
later in the story, Jopp achieves his malignant objective.
Summary
Analysis
Chapter 29 Chapter 29 is among the most action-packed sections of the
novel. Two episodes predominate: the bull's threat to Lucetta
Walking on the road outside the town, Lucetta and Elizabeth- and Elizabeth-Jane, from which they are saved by Henchard,
Jane run into danger when they are threatened by a large bull, and Lucetta's admission to Henchard about her secret
which has somehow wandered free of supervision. They take marriage to Farfrae. Both episodes show Hardy at his best in a
refuge in a barn, where the bull pursues them. Henchard melodramatic, or a highly emotional and suspenseful, vein.
rescues the women in the nick of time.
Chapter 30 emphasizes Elizabeth-Jane's honesty and
On the walk back to Casterbridge, Lucetta suddenly straightforwardness, which stand in sharp contrast to the other
remembers she left her muff in the barn, and Elizabeth-Jane characters' penchant for deception.
offers to retrieve it. While doing so she encounters Farfrae,
who gives her a lift in his vehicle. Elizabeth-Jane tells him about
Henchard saving her and Lucetta from the bull. Back in town Chapters 31–32
Farfrae sets Elizabeth-Jane down and then proceeds to his
own house, where furniture movers are busy. Apparently
Farfrae is moving to a different residence.
Summary
Meanwhile, as he escorts Lucetta home, Henchard tells her he
is sorry for extracting from her a marriage promise. He will be
content, he says, if they wait several years to be married. Chapter 31
Lucetta asks if she can do anything to thank him for saving her
from the bull; she is specifically referring to finances. Henchard This chapter focuses on Henchard's rapidly sinking fortunes.
says he does not want her money but that she might aid him by He is forced to declare bankruptcy. Confronting the situation
persuading his chief creditor, Mr. Grower, to grant a two-week with typically defiant pride, he refuses to hold back any of his
reprieve for Henchard's loan repayment. Lucetta is evasive at possessions, even offering his gold watch to the bankruptcy
first, but then she breaks down, admitting she and Farfrae officials. When they decline to accept it, Henchard sells the
were married in Port-Bredy, with Grower as a witness. timepiece to the watchmaker and then hands the money to
Henchard is both astonished and enraged, once again one of his creditors who has fallen on hard times.
threatening Lucetta with blackmail. As the two go their
Meanwhile, Farfrae continues to displace Henchard on every
separate ways, church bells and band music ring out to
front. He buys Henchard's business, Henchard moves into
celebrate Lucetta's wedding.
Joshua Jopp's cottage, and Elizabeth-Jane's efforts to visit her gloomy, embittered moodiness in Chapter 32 offers a good
stepfather fail. example of the two characters' relationship as foils. In addition,
the dialogue between Henchard and Solomon Longways about
the imminent expiration of Henchard's oath offers a good
Chapter 32 example of foreshadowing.
At the beginning of Chapter 31, Hardy's psychological insight in Elizabeth-Jane decides to warn Farfrae about Henchard
the account of Henchard's fallen reputation is notable. The because of her stepfather's drinking.
The contents of Lucetta's letters set the stage for the novel's
Chapter 35 climax: the skimmity-ride. This is the point of strongest
emotional intensity and the pivotal turning point in the plot.
The action in this chapter directly picks up from the preceding
Lucetta receives Henchard's package with such relief at the
one. Lucetta overhears Henchard's reading of extracts from
end of Chapter 36, but Jopp's malignity, unbeknownst to her,
the letters she wrote him long ago, and she is terrified
has already done its work.
Henchard will tell all to Farfrae. In desperation Lucetta now
writes to Henchard, begging him to have pity on her and to
meet her at the Ring just before sunset.
Chapters 37–38
Henchard keeps the appointment, promising Lucetta she shall
have the letters and her secret will be safe.
Summary
Chapter 36
The principal interaction in this chapter is between Lucetta and
Chapter 37
Joshua Jopp. At the beginning of the chapter, Jopp asks
Casterbridge is all agog because a member of the royal family
Lucetta to put in a good word for him to Farfrae regarding a
is scheduled to visit. At a meeting of the town council,
job application. He says he lived in Jersey for several years and
Henchard appears, shabbily dressed, and boldly requests
knew her by sight. She coldly rejects his request, prompting his
approval for participation in the official ceremonies. Donald
resentment.
Farfrae, now the mayor, firmly rejects Henchard's request. His
Henchard gathers Lucetta's letters in a package and entrusts pride injured, Henchard goes about saying he will ignore the
the parcel to Jopp for delivery. Henchard neglects, however, to council's decision and welcome the royal visitor anyway.
seal the package properly. On his way Jopp encounters Nance
True to his word, Henchard attempts to intercept the royal
Mockridge and Mother Cuxsom. They all adjourn to an inn
carriage on the day of the visit. Farfrae roughly drags him away
named Peter's Finger in the neighborhood of Mixen Lane, a
and tells him to be off. The townsfolk gossip about the incident.
They also exchange opinions on the upcoming skimmity-ride, suspense has been building about the skimmity-ride. The
with Solomon Longways, in particular, urging the plans for it be conclusion of Chapter 37 indicates it may well occur that very
abandoned, since Farfrae is a decent man and Lucetta has evening. But Hardy does not proceed to the event directly,
behaved correctly during her time in Casterbridge. Joshua preferring to heighten the suspense further by dramatizing the
Jopp, however, maliciously encourages the scheme, urging it confrontation between Farfrae and Henchard.
be carried out that very evening.
Chapters 39–40
Chapter 38
Lucetta is thrilled by the royal visit, but Henchard is outraged at
his public humiliation by Farfrae and vows revenge. He reflects Summary
he is physically stronger than Farfrae. The two men confront
each other in a fight in a hayloft, and Henchard has tied one
arm behind his back to make the odds fairer. Henchard wins Chapter 39
the fight and is in a position to pitch Farfrae down a drop of 30
This chapter focuses on the skimmity-ride (also called the
feet—perhaps to his death. At the last moment, however, he
skimmington). As is suggested at the end of Chapter 37, some
spares his opponent, sinking onto some sacks in a fit of
of Farfrae's employees send him a note indicating his presence
remorse. As the chapter concludes Henchard wanders through
is required in Weatherbury. They want to spare him the
the streets and outskirts of Casterbridge. He hears a confusing
embarrassment of witnessing the skimmity-ride, but there is no
clangor from the town but does not pay much attention to it.
such consideration for Lucetta.
Henchard's lie to Newson in Chapter 41 extends the major Meanwhile, Elizabeth-Jane has a reunion with Newson, her real
theme of deception in the novel. Notably, Henchard regrets his father. Newson and Farfrae discuss the upcoming wedding.
falsehood almost immediately, realizing it may have entirely Newson reveals Henchard told him Elizabeth-Jane was dead,
unproductive consequences. He is, as ever, a creature of and the young woman is shocked. Good-natured Newson,
impulse. however, shrugs off Henchard's deception.
Summary long ago. Meeting them at his decrepit cottage, Whittle reveals
he had taken Henchard in because of Henchard's kindness to
his mother when she was ill and impoverished. Henchard died
only half an hour before Elizabeth-Jane and Farfrae's arrival.
Whittle shows them a piece of paper on which Henchard wrote
That Hardy meant to cast Henchard in the mold of a — Elizabeth-Jane Newson, Chapter 4
Shakespearean tragic figure is also supported by an allusion in
Chapter 45, when the narrator comments, "It was a part of his Elizabeth-Jane makes this remark just as she and her mother,
nature to extenuate nothing." The reference is to Susan, enter Casterbridge for the first time. Most of Hardy's
Shakespeare's Othello, when the hero, just before he stabs novel is set in this town, which stands in for the novelist's own
himself, declares to his listeners, "Speak of me as I am. Nothing adopted town of Dorchester, the center of Dorset County.
extenuate" (Act 5, Scene 2). Elizabeth-Jane's observation highlights the conservatism of
Casterbridge, and it also alludes to the town's ancient history,
In another significant allusion in Chapter 43, the wandering
which reaches back to ancient Roman times. Both dimensions
Henchard compares himself to Cain, the Biblical figure who
are important for Hardy's use of setting in the novel.
murdered his brother and then became an outcast and a
vagabond (Genesis 4:1-16).
The novel concludes with a solemn, elegiac tone. Hardy makes "There was temper under the thin
clear his pessimistic outlook on human life in the final
paragraphs, as he writes of "a general drama of pain" where
bland surface—the temper which,
happiness is but "an occasional episode." artificially intensified, had banished
a wife nearly a score of years
g Quotes before."
— Narrator, Chapter 5
"When she plodded on in the
shade of the hedge, silently The narrator comments on Henchard when, as mayor, he
grows visibly irritated at some townsfolk's complaint about the
thinking, she had the hard, half-
inferior quality of Henchard's grain. The comment draws
apathetic expression of one who attention to one of Hardy's major emphases in the novel: the
frequent inconsistency between appearance and reality.
deems anything possible at the
hands of Time and Chance except,
— Narrator, Chapter 17
"I feel it a great relief, Farfrae, to
tell some friend o' this! You see The narrator comments on another display of Henchard's
now that the mayor of impulsive, potentially explosive temperament. This time, after
Henchard and Farfrae have quarreled and split, Henchard is
Casterbridge is not so thriving in incensed to learn Farfrae has set himself up as a rival in the
his mind as it seems he might be grain business.
earlier. She accurately describes Henchard as "hot-tempered," of misunderstandings. In this case Henchard mistakenly
although Hardy portrays Lucetta as somewhat similar in this believes Farfrae has acted to prevent him from setting up his
regard. She is impulsive and changeable, and she does not own business, and he becomes enraged.
— Narrator, Chapter 45 As the pivotal event in the plot, the skimmity-ride is fraught
with symbolic significance. Above all there is the symbolism
suggested by the effigies. Seated back to back, the man and
The novel's concluding sentence sums up the role of chance
woman mocked by the procession are physically and visually
and coincidence in human affairs, as Elizabeth-Jane puzzles
inverted, suggesting the illicit nature of their relationship. They
over the contrast between her happy present and her tragic
are seated on a donkey, a notoriously randy animal, signifying
past. Her youth, she reflects, "seemed to teach that happiness
lust motivates their connection. The intensely public nature of
was but the occasional episode in a general drama of pain"—a
the skimmity-ride, advertised by loud clangor and inebriated
viewpoint reflected in the novel's pessimistic outlook on the
revelry, signifies shaming and exile from society.
possibility of enduring happiness.
But there is more. On a deeper level the skimmity-ride signifies
the immense, potentially lethal, power of public opinion and the
ominous menace of mass psychology. Characters like Joshua
l Symbols Jopp, Nance Mockridge, and Mother Cuxsom are motivated by
malice, envy, and resentment, not by any authentic concern for
social morality. The forces driving these characters are
Five Guineas dramatized when they egg each other on and whip up their
followers, even to the extent of opposing more moderate
views, such as those of Solomon Longways.
A guinea consists of 21 shillings, or one pound plus one shilling. The skimmity-ride, then, symbolizes the breakdown rather than
This is the price Newson pays when Henchard auctions off his the reinforcement of the social order in Casterbridge. It is
wife, Susan, at the Weydon-Priors fair. At the end of Chapter motivated by petty nastiness and selfish indulgence, and it
10, when Henchard writes Susan a note asking her to meet him leads directly to Lucetta's death.
at the Ring, he encloses five guineas. Hardy draws explicit
attention to the symbolism: "The amount was significant; it may
tacitly have said to her that he bought her back again."
Goldfinch
Henchard's relationships with women lead to many problems
and conflicts for him. For example, he dismisses Susan several
times for her "meekness," and he has no idea how to deal with
Henchard chooses a goldfinch in a cage as his wedding gift to
the flighty Lucetta. In Chapter 12 he goes to the extent of
Elizabeth-Jane. At the beginning of Chapter 45 she finds the
asking Farfrae, then his assistant, to frame a letter to Lucetta,
bird dead of neglect.
even as he deceives Elizabeth-Jane. All too often Henchard's
relationships with women seem transactional. As he says at Goldfinches were especially popular as caged birds in 19th-
the end of Chapter 12, "Can it be that it will go off so easily! ... century Britain. They are handsomely colored and very small,
Now then, to make amends to Susan!" seldom exceeding five inches in length, and they have a
pleasant, twittering call.
The five guineas he sends Susan, then, symbolically suggest
Henchard regards an intimate human relationship as a The goldfinch initially suggests Henchard's love for Elizabeth-
commercial transaction. At the beginning of Chapter 13 the Jane, but its cage and death foreshadow Henchard's own
narrator says Henchard pursues his quest for a remarriage to death, as he is imprisoned by the conflicts and
Susan "with businesslike determination." disappointments of his life. The image of a caged bird may also
evoke a passage from Shakespeare's King Lear, when the title
character addresses his daughter Cordelia in Act 5, Scene 3: Fate or destiny is a leading theme in most of Thomas Hardy's
see the "Insights" section on Chapter 45. novels. Hardy typically views fate as arbitrary but inalterable
and often inexplicable. In Chapter 41 of The Mayor of
Casterbridge, for example, Henchard exclaims about the
skimmity-ride and the effigy he saw in the water: "That
m Themes performance of theirs killed her [Lucetta], but kept me alive!"
Marriage dominates the plot of The Mayor of Casterbridge. At huge losses. Farfrae, on the other hand, buys grain when
the book's start Michael Henchard shows his cynical prices are low and makes large profits. On a less dramatic
disillusionment with his marriage, which has lasted only two scale, unpredictable weather at Casterbridge results in the
years, by selling his wife. Late in the book Henchard's failure of Henchard's plans for a festive public entertainment.
Throughout the novel Hardy implies marriage all too often the action. Situations and conflicts undergo unanticipated
involves cynical exploitation or manipulation. Henchard handles reversals: for example, the friendship between Henchard and
his relationship with Susan as a commercial transaction, buying Farfrae, the shift in Lucetta's affections, and the belief
her back for the same price as he sold her many years Henchard is Elizabeth-Jane's father. For Hardy, in the end, the
beforehand: five guineas. Lucetta furnishes another example, role of destiny in human affairs is inscrutable.
Newson is also portrayed as Henchard's rival. This is most the bankruptcy proceedings. Likewise, pride seems to be the
apparent in Henchard's morbid anxiety about Newson most likely motive in his decision to tie one arm behind his back
replacing him in Elizabeth-Jane's affections. In Newson's own in the fight with Farfrae. Late in the novel, when he returns to
account of his marriage to Susan, it is also clear Susan saw the Weydon-Priors, Henchard refers to his "cursed pride."
two men, former and present husbands, as rivals.
Like Henchard, Lucetta has a complex past and a deep anxiety
about maintaining her pride and dignity. Her love letters to
Henchard pose the most serious threat, and this accounts for
Deception the importance attached to them in the plot. When the letters'
content becomes public knowledge and Lucetta is publicly
mocked in the skimmity-ride, her pride is dealt, quite literally, a
mortal blow.
Many characters in The Mayor of Casterbridge engage in
deception; lies and half-truths come to dominate life in Hardy's On the other side of the coin, three important characters seem
fictional world. The results of such behavior are nearly always immune to the pitfalls posed by pride. First is Elizabeth-Jane,
damaging. who copes with her displacement by Lucetta in Farfrae's
affections with equanimity. Second is Farfrae, whose
Susan, for example, deceives Henchard into thinking he is
pragmatism and inherent good nature keep him from
Elizabeth-Jane's natural father. She also deceives Elizabeth-
succumbing to fits of pride, even when he becomes mayor.
Jane, during their initial search for Henchard, telling the young
Finally, Richard Newson is patient and sympathetic enough to
woman they are trying to locate a relative or "connection by
step aside in Susan's life so she can resume her relationship
marriage." Toward the end of the novel, Henchard lies to
with Henchard.
Newson, telling him Elizabeth-Jane is dead.
Finally, the townsfolk who organize and participate in the Miller, J. Hillis. Thomas Hardy: Distance and Desire. Harvard UP,
skimmity-ride are masters of deception, frustrating the "rusty- 1970.
jointed executors of the law." In Hardy's fictional world,
Millgate, Michael. Thomas Hardy: A Biography Revisited. Oxford
deception is so rife it appears to be an integral part of human
UP, 2004.
nature.
Pride