Far from the Madding Crowd

Far from the Madding Crowd
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A level 5 Oxford Bookworms Library graded reader. Retold for Learners of English by Clare West.

Bathsheba Everdene is young, proud, and beautiful. She is an independent woman and can marry any man she chooses – if she chooses. In fact, she likes her independence, and she likes fighting her own battles in a man’s world.

But it is never wise to ignore the power of love. There are three men who would very much like to marry Bathsheba. When she falls in love with one of them, she soon wishes she had kept her independence. She learns that love brings misery, pain, and violent passions that can destroy lives…

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FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD

First published in 1874, this novel was an immediate bestseller. The story takes place in the fields and farms of the quiet English countryside, when harvests were gathered by hand, when carts were pulled by horses, and when people’s lives followed the pattern of the changing seasons.

That quiet rural world has long since gone, of course, but the passions that rule people’s lives have not changed. Within the everlasting circle of springtime and harvest, love burns as fiercely, as uncontrollably, as ever.

The beautiful Bathsheba Everdene has her own farm and does not need to marry. But she cannot fight off love for ever. There is the shepherd, Gabriel Oak, whose love for Bathsheba is quiet and steady. There is Farmer Boldwood, a serious, middle-aged man, who has never been in love before. And there is Sergeant Troy, a handsome young soldier in his bright red coat … Bathsheba is self-confident and independent, but she has much to learn about the violent passions of love.

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First published in Oxford Bookworms 1992
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ISBN 978 0 19 479223 3
A complete recording of this Bookworms edition of Far From The Madding Crowd is available on audio CD ISBN 978 0 19 479204 2
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Illustrated by: Ron Tiner
Word count (main text): 24,490 words
For more information on the Oxford Bookworms Library, visit www.oup.com/bookwormswww.oup.com/bookworms
e-Book ISBN 978 0 19 478634 8
e-Book first published 2012

PEOPLE IN THIS STORY

Bathsheba Everdene

Mrs Hurst, her aunt

Liddy, Bathsheba’s maid

Maryann, the cleaning-woman in Bathsheba’s house

Benjy Pennyways, Bathsheba’s farm manager

Gabriel Oak, a shepherd

Farmer William Boldwood, the owner of a large farm in Weatherbury

Sergeant Frank Troy, a soldier

Fanny Robin, a maidservant

The maltster, in Weatherbury village

Jacob Smallbury, the maltster’s son

Billy Smallbury, Jacob’s son

Joseph Poorgrass, a villager in Weatherbury

Jan Coggan, a villager in Weatherbury

Laban Tall, a villager in Weatherbury

1

Gabriel Oak falls in love


Gabriel Oak was a sensible man of good character, who had been brought up by his father as a shepherd, and then managed to save enough money to rent his own farm on Norcombe Hill, in Dorset. He was twenty-eight, a tall, well-built man, who did not seem, however, to think his appearance was very important.

One winter morning he was in one of his fields on the side of Norcombe Hill. Looking over his gate, Gabriel could see a yellow cart, loaded with furniture and plants, coming up the road. Right on top of the pile sat a handsome young woman. As Gabriel was watching, the cart stopped at the top of the hill, and the driver climbed down to go back and fetch something that had fallen off.

The girl sat quietly in the sunshine for a few minutes. Then she picked up a parcel lying next to her, and looked round to see if the driver was coming back. There was no sign of him. She unwrapped the parcel, and took out the mirror it contained. The sun shone on her lovely face and hair. Although it was December, she looked almost summery, sitting there in her bright red jacket with the fresh green plants around her. She looked at herself in the mirror and smiled, thinking that only the birds could see her. But behind the gate Gabriel Oak was watching too.

‘She must be rather vain,’ he thought. ‘She doesn’t need to look in that mirror at all!’

As the girl smiled and blushed at herself, she seemed to be dreaming, dreaming perhaps of men’s hearts won and lost. When she heard the driver’s footsteps, she packed the mirror away. The cart moved on downhill to the toll-gate. Gabriel followed on foot. As he came closer he could hear the driver arguing with the gatekeeper.



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