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Monday, March 11, 2019

Far from the Madding Crowd Essay

He admits to Bathsheba at the beginning of the novel that, except I pott match you, I exist, in use out my mind upon my tongue. He is not a man of words, distant troy and Boldwood, entirely proves that actions sess speak louder than words. He is ineffective to speak the flattery that troy can, or be as decided and persuasive as Boldwood is, but in his devoted actions to Bathsheba, by beingness the hard and diligent worker that he is, he is rewarded in the end, by giving the opportunity to offer Bathsheba the love that he had talked of to her when he had beginning met her.In contrast to Gabriel, Francis troy is a man who appears to understand just now what he can get out of love. He does not opine in treating women fairly, and which is expressed as he says, treat them fairly and you are a lost man, when referring to women. Hardy also writes about his consistency when verbalize the truth He was moderately truthful towards men, but to women he lie like a cretan. By lyin g to women he found it behind to get what he wanted, as Hardy describes him he spoke fluently and unceasingly. At the beginning, Hardy remarks that a womans greatest sack is her Vanity. Troy, as he possesses such ease with the words he uses, has learnt that a womans weakness is her vanity, and knows that by flattering them he can get what he wants. This is precisely what he did with Bathsheba, and like her, he entangle some sense of triumph when he saw that he had succeeded in weakening the women he flattered, as she did with the men she flirted with. However, instead of making the women he met feel confident, his flattery merely destroyed them, as they became dependent upon him to cave in their vain needs. Troy did not have the emotional sense of love, but instead he felt the physical attraction to the women he met.This meant that he only(prenominal) got involved with beautiful women, as it was their ravisher that attracted them to him. Even after having left Bathsheba for s o long, when he saw her again at Greenhill Sheep Fair, it was her beauty that found unexpected chords of odor, to be stirred again within him The room in which Troy judged by appearances was perhaps inevitably the cause of his failed married couple to Bathsheba, because he had not got to know Bathsheba as a person, but only when looked at her, as a symbol of beauty. In some ship canal it could be said that he looked at the women as trophies that he had won.Troy was also a man driven by wealth. Bathsheba, who had come into wealth after the inheritance of the lease of Weatherbury Farm, would have been even more showy to him as she now had money. We know that he was driven by money, as he used to bet on the horses, which put considerable monetary strain on Bathsheba. This was probably the reason why he did not marry Fanny, due to her financial instability. Money was also the reason why he did not return to Bathsheba initially after landing at Liverpool, as Hardy writes, what a l ife such a future day of poverty would be. This, unlike the love felt by Gabriel, was a self-centred form of love, because he only ever though of himself. He had a very superficial view of love, which required wealth in guild to make him happy. Troys opinions of love did not include the estimate of commitment, and another reason for the failure of his marriage could be due to his womanising and coquettish behaviour. We learn near to the end of the novel that his opinion of marriage is interdict and he gibes it not as the beginning of two peoples lives together, but as he says himself, all romances end at marriage. He also did not believe in the idea of equality, and shared responsibilities in a relationship, as he abandons Fanny with the great burden of an unhatched child to deal with alone. This is probably due to his carefree opinion of sex, which he also valued as much as he did love. Troy did not value love as anything special, and this could be put take in to the fact that he had a very unstable background, and an uncertain upbringing. His trade would also have something to do with his opinion of women, and as a soldier, he probably never had to deal with women and did not understand them.This is why he try to possess them, and this destroyed them. Hardy has some very expel opinions that he wishes to get across to the reader in this novel. He uses the characters as tools, to create a picture for the readers, expressing his personal views on love. He rewards those characters that see love as a simple but precious thing, and he shows how much he admires Gabriel Oak for his actors of endurance, by rewarding him with Bathsheba in the end. In contrast, he punishes those characters that take love too lightly.An example of this is the attitude of Troy which end is death in the end. Hardy warns us of the great power of love and how dangerous it can be. The obsession that Boldwood felt for Bathsheba, is another feeling that he condemns, and shows how life can be ruined because of obsession. This is shown by the lifelong imprisonment of Boldwood. Hardys opinions of love are really receptive at the end of the novel, when he describes his own thoughts about how truelove can develop.He uses Bathsheba and Gabriel as an example of how true love can develop. They were tried friends who enjoyed good-fellowship and comraderie. The main message Hardy is trying to get across to us is that love cannot hide behind a fake face. He writes that in order for a successful relationship to take place, you must know the rougher sides of each others character. This is the love Hardy describes to be the only love which is as strong as death- that love which many wet cannot quench, nor the floods drown.

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