preview

The Development of Bathsheba Everdene in Far from the Madding Crowd

Better Essays

The Development of Bathsheba Everdene in Far from the Madding Crowd

“Far from the Madding Crowd”, by Thomas Hardy is about an immature nineteen-year-old girl called Bathsheba Everdene; she has difficulties throughout the novel. She has some good and bad experiences. These are with three different characters. In the beginning of the novel
Bathsheba is vain, insensitive, egocentric and stubborn. She gradually develops through the novel as she becomes less vain, stubborn, insensitive, and egocentric and becomes more confident, caring and more determined to make her farm work, this shows how her character changes as she looks at the bad things that have happened in her life and tries to put them right. As she progresses through …show more content…

She also shows this when she will not pay for the toll because she wants her own say and wants to stand up for herself. She would not pay Oak went down to the tollgate and paid for Bathsheba, but she just dismissed him. Then she carries on going. Oak was thinking about what had just happened as he was slightly confessed. They met again in the forest when she was riding though in an unladylike way when Oak saw her. She got very angry when she thought Oak was spying on her, which she disliked.

She also was upset as Oak came out and told her that he was watching her while she was riding a horse.

“I found a hat”

“It’s mine”

Before Oak could hand back the hat Bathsheba takes it from is hands and soon after rides off.

They soon after meet again on the hill after Oak had been to
Bathsheda’s aunts house, she follows him to put things right. After talking for a while Oak suddenly proposes to her. He begins by saying how much of a commitment the wedding is going to be and what his dream is. “I should like it very much”

She is getting interested in the newspaper idea, as she will be getting the attention she enjoys.

Bathsheba shows she is insensitive when she sends farmer Boldwood a valentine’s card with a message.

“Roses are red,
The violet blue,
Carnations sweet,
And so are you.”

This was insensitive as Liddy had told Bathsheba about

Get Access