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The Mayor of Casterbridge
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More by Thomas Hardy
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A clearer way to understand The Mayor of Casterbridge through themes, characters, and key ideas
This reading guide highlights what stands out in The Mayor of Casterbridge through 4 core themes, 5 character profiles. It is meant to help readers decide whether the book fits their taste and deepen the reading once they begin.
About this book
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What the book is doing
Thomas Hardy's "The Mayor of Casterbridge" is a tragic novel chronicling the life of Michael Henchard, a man whose impulsive act of selling his wife and child in a drunken stupor haunts his entire existence. After twenty years of striving, he becomes the respected Mayor of Casterbridge, only for his past and his own character flaws – particularly his pride and stubbornness – to relentlessly dismantle his achievements and relationships. The arrival of his long-lost wife, Susan, and her companion, Donald Farfrae, sets in motion a chain of events that exposes secrets, fuels rivalries, and ultimately leads to Henchard's complete ruin and lonely death. The novel profoundly explores themes of fate, free will, the consequences of actions, and the enduring power of the past.
Key Themes
Consequences of Actions / Regret
This is the central theme of the novel. Henchard's entire life is a direct result of his impulsive, drunken decision to sell his wife and child. Every subsequent event, every relationship, and every downfall can be traced back to this initial act, and his attempts to escape or atone for it. The novel shows how past deeds, even those committed in moments of weakness, can haunt and define a person's future, often with devastating and inescapable repercussions.
Fate vs. Free Will
Hardy explores the extent to which human lives are predetermined by an indifferent universe or shaped by individual choices. While Henchard makes many choices that lead to his downfall, there are also numerous coincidences and external circumstances (like the weather affecting his corn prices, or the timing of Newson's return) that seem to conspire against him, suggesting a powerful, often cruel, hand of fate at play. The novel questions whether Henchard could ever truly escape his 'destiny' or if his character itself was his fate.
“"When I was a poor man, I used to think I'd be a rich man, and I am. But I never thought I'd be a lonely man."”
To what extent is Henchard a victim of fate versus a victim of his own character flaws? Can these two forces be separated?
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