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The Mayor of Casterbridge
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Hardy, The Mayor of Casterbridge > Week 1: November 5 – 11; Chapters 1 – 7

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Tamara Agha-Jaffar | 2320 comments The novel opens with a description of Michael Henchard with his wife, Susan, and their infant girl, Elizabeth-Jane. From the description, we can tell their relationship is strained. At the village fair at Weydon Priors, they order furmity (a porridge). Henchard signals the vendor to add rum to his meal. He becomes increasingly drunk and ignores Susan’s pleas to find lodging. He complains loudly about marriage, lamenting his loss of freedom. He then offers his wife up for auction. A sailor purchases Susan and the baby for five guineas.

Michael wakes up from his drunken stupor the next day, regretting his actions. He enters a church and swears to abstain from alcohol for 21 years. He searches for his family and learns they have emigrated with the sailor.

Eighteen years later, Susan and Elizabeth-Jane return to Weydon Priors. Susan is a widow. She learns Henchard is now the mayor of Casterbridge. They seek him out in Casterbridge and find him hosting a fancy dinner. Susan tells Elizabeth-Jane that Henchard is related to them through marriage, but she is too intimidated by his appearance and authority to approach him. They find lodging in an inn where Elizabeth-Jane serves the customers in exchange for a discounted rate for the room. They later overhear a conversation between Michael and Donald Farfrae, a young man from Scotland. Michael expresses remorse for a past action and offers Farfrae a job to manage his corn business.
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Hardy refers to Michael Henchard as “a man of character.” Nowadays, when we say a person has character, we mean someone who behaves with strong moral and ethical principles. But I’m not sure the word carried the same connotation in Hardy’s time. Maybe it just meant the person had a strong personality—neither good nor bad, just strong. Or maybe Hardy plans to show Henchard developing into a man of character as we understand the word to mean today. It’s something to think about as we move forward with the discussion. But for now, Michael Henchard is not off to a good start.


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Tamara Agha-Jaffar | 2320 comments I posted a wikipedia article on wife-selling in the Historical Context thread for those of you interested to learn more about it.

As shocking as it is to see a man putting his wife up for auction, its occurrence was not totally out of the ordinary. Michael Henchard references it when he says to Susan: I take the money; the sailor takes you. That’s plain enough. It has been done elsewhere—and why not here?

Henchard had tried to sell Susan in the past but had stopped short of doing so. Despite Susan’s pleas to stop his foolishness this time around, Henchard persists with the bidding. What does this say about Henchard’s views towards Susan and towards marriage, in general? And why does Susan agree to be auctioned off?


Tamara Agha-Jaffar | 2320 comments Hardy sets up a contrast between the male and female reactions to the auction:

A buxom stay-laced dealer in voluminous petticoats tries to reassure Susan that her husband doesn’t mean to auction her off. She chastises Henchard, urging him to behave with decency.

Meanwhile, a former groom or coachman sizes up Susan’s appearance as if he were sizing up an animal for breeding. He suggests she may need fattening up. Notice the use of “it” in that sentence, which reinforces his objectification of Susan:

I’ve had my breedings in as good circles, I may say, as any man,’ he added, ‘and I know true cultivation, or nobody do; and I can declare she’s got it—in the bone, mind ye, I say as much as any female in the fair—though it may want a little bringing out.’

It is noteworthy that none of men try to persuade Henchard from proceeding with the sale. Nor do they object to it on moral or legal grounds. Hardy tells us they initially treated the auction as a joke. But once it becomes obvious Henchard is serious, the mirth-wrinkles left the listeners’ faces, and they waited with parting lips.

If the men are upset by the proceedings, why don’t they intervene to stop it?


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Thomas | 5032 comments Tamara wrote: "Despite Susan’s pleas to stop his foolishness this time around, Henchard persists with the bidding. What does this say about Henchard’s views towards Susan and towards marriage, in general? And why does Susan agree to be auctioned off?.."

Henchard initially seems to be a man in a foul mood who has an alcohol problem. His shame and regret in the morning appear sincere, and the fact that he keeps his vow to not drink is evidence of some level of character. He seems to be a different person when Sara and Elizabeth-Jane return. He's done well in business and has the respect of the town. Hardy's description of his laugh in chapter V is wonderful, though rather ambiguous:

That laugh was not encouraging to strangers; and hence it may have been well that it was rarely heard. Many theories might have been built upon it. It fell in well with conjectures of a temperament which would have no pity for weakness, but would be ready to yield ungrudging admiration to greatness and strength. Its producer's personal goodness, if he had any, would be of a very fitful cast -- an occasional almost oppresive generosity rather than a mild and constant kindness.

Living with an alcoholic has never been easy, and I think Susan has just had enough of him. The fact that Henchard blames Susan's "simplicity" for leaving with the sailor is a good indication of what she's had to put up with. She has to be either brave or desperate to agree to this sailor deal. Probably both. Which makes me wonder why she decides to go back and look for Henchard. Is it only poverty? (Not that poverty is nothing, of course.)


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Roger Burk | 1975 comments It looks like Hardy was solidly behind the temperance movement.


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