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Far from the Madding Crowd

Chapter 67: NOTES
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About This Book

A vivid rural drama follows an independent young woman who inherits a farm and must learn to run it while navigating three very different suitors: a steady, trustworthy tenant, a charismatic but unstable newcomer, and a prosperous, brooding neighbor. The novel traces her romantic decisions and their consequences against the practical rhythms of agricultural life, including disasters, market pressures, and community rituals. Through detailed scenes of labor, weather, and village social life, the narrative examines pride, responsibility, chance, and the limits of personal freedom, showing how desire, misjudgment, and social expectation shape lives in a changing countryside.

NOTES

[1] This phrase is a conjectural emendation of the unintelligible expression, “as the Devil said to the Owl,” used by the natives.

[2] The local tower and churchyard do not answer precisely to the foregoing description.

[3] W. Barnes

Transcriber’s note:

[*] Greek word meaning “it is finished”