FUNNY WOMEN #54: Thomas Hardy Isn’t Jane Austen; Get Over It

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They hated the ending. I knew they would. They always hate the ending. “They” means my university students. “The ending” means the last chapters of Thomas Hardy’s novel Far From the Madding Crowd (1874).

Plot summary of Madding Crowd to follow: please feel free to skip ahead to if you know this story. If you have read the novel but have never seen the 1967 film adaptation, skip ahead only as far as: .

Beautiful and spunky Bathsheba Everdene inherits a farm, which by trial and error she learns to manage. She is loved by three men and must choose the right one, which she fails to do for the first 436 pages. Her choices:

Choice #1: The shepherd; the right choice but initially spurned. He proposes way too soon.

Choice #2: The older, wealthy, bachelor farmer next door; the ostensibly sensible choice, but he proves to be a total wing nut when he shoots…

Choice #3: A rakish soldier; the utter wrong choice whom Bathsheba marries. Conveniently, the rakish soldier dies from the gunshot wound, the wealthy farmer goes to gaol [Victorian for “jail”], and a couple chapters later Bathsheba marries her old pal the shepherd, Gabriel Oak.

I don’t write these books. I just teach them. And I love them, despite—or perhaps because of—the excess skepticism with which I have regarded the possibilities for sustaining long-term, amorous relationships with members of the opposite sex: i.e., men. I say “have regarded” because in this, the post-marital, peri-menopausal stage of life, I am trying very hard to bring into healthier proportions my HDL and LDL levels of romantic skepticism. I recently even ventured into online dating. If you’d like to skip ahead to hear about this new venture of mine, please go to: .

I used to show my students the 1967 film version of Madding Crowd, but they always poked great fun at Alan Bates’s shepherd getup, and the swordplay scene with Terrence Stamp, and Julie Christie’s 1960s modish white lipstick. Their ridiculing of one of my seven-ever favorite films inevitably raised my blood pressure, so I stopped screening it with them. I have similarly been trying to achieve healthier systolic and diasytolic levels in the balancing of my professorial bitterness with my professorial idealism.

Yes, my university students recently and predictably hated the ending of Far From the Madding Crowd. Stephanie G. [students’ names have been changed for my protection] took the lead. She began the class with this little chestnut: “What I didn’t appreciate about the ending was the way Hardy marries Bathsheba off. It’s like, because he’s a man, he can’t imagine her without a man in her life. I really didn’t appreciate that.” Pause; glare. “At all.”

She used “appreciate” to mean “approve of,” as in: “Mother, I didn’t appreciate your embarrassing me that way.” She was deeply—and personally—offended by the novel’s ending, as if Thomas Hardy had composed it in 1874 specifically to irritate Stephanie G. in 2010.

“I agree,” chimed in Kristen S. “I know it’s because he wants to keep his readers happy, but it’s obvious he didn’t want to marry her off—that he just felt an obligation—you know—to end Far From the Maddening Crowd with a marriage.”

I noted her slip—“maddening” for “madding”—but I let it pass. The previous week, I’d corrected Kristen each time she bungled the title, which was every time she said it. I figured, by this point, she’d simply made an executive decision and substituted “maddening” for its antiquated synonym, “madding,” because she thought it was an improvement.

Stephanie and Kristen have been growing increasingly irritated with Thomas Hardy and with me: Hardy because he isn’t Jane Austen, and me because I enjoy making disparaging remarks about Jane Austen.

“Pride” and “Prejudice” [a.k.a.: Stephanie G. and Kristen S.] are also mad at me because when they invited me to speak to their “sisters” at the Very Pretty Girls Sorority on the topic, “The Glass Ceiling: Myth or Reality?” My talking points all led to a single conclusion: “Reality.” The sisters didn’t want to hear this. They wanted to hear that the glass ceiling was definitively broken through by women of my generation. And they wanted to hear that, with the glass ceiling shattered, they could now have it all: the coach, the castle, and the glass.

As if.

Sorry. I retract that. Bad dating karma. And I can’t afford bad dating karma. Because . . .

. . . four and a half weeks ago, I signed up with an online dating site. My online moniker: Bathsheba Everdene.

Yesterday, I got my first hit-on email. It was from Dale, the man you see pictured at that start of the previous paragraph.

The note from Dale did have some charm. He got the literary allusion of my online username [in case you did not, see third paragraph]. And he did not use a single exclamation point or “LOL.” That’s something, I suppose, if you’re content to live in a world of greatly diminished expectations. But he does look like Mr. Potato Head: the mustache, the ears, and the apparent lack of a torso. I know this is jumping ahead, but I don’t think I could have sex with a man without a torso. And I’d very much like to have sex again soon, as in: sometime before the next Chinese year of the dragon [you’ll have to look that one up yourself].

All this leads me to ask:

Q: Is using the online screen name “Bathsheba Everdene” a good idea?

A: Four and a half weeks for a single hit isn’t so long a time.

Right?

Q. Must I really post a photo with my profile?

A: Mr. Potato Head was my first hit in four and a half weeks.

Q: Okay, but must it really be a recent picture of me?

A: Let’s consult a few experts: 1. Jane Austen: “A woman of seven and twenty can never hope to inspire affection again.”
–Sense and Sensibility2. Online Dating for Dummies: Their first, in a series of “Some major do’s,” is: “Avoid even a hint of deception. . . . We online daters are a highly suspicious lot”; 3. Oscar Wilde: “The truth is rarely pure and never simple.”–The Importance of Being Earnest.

 

 

To review and weigh the options:

Austen died when she was forty-one. A virgin. Next.

Dummies uses a “don’t” as their first “major do.” Next.

I’m open to readers’ advice. For the moment, however, I’m putting my money on Wilde.

***

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13 responses

  1. Zak Smith Avatar
    Zak Smith

    This is good but needs to be waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay longer. I need like nine pages on what’s going in this english class.

  2. Zak, Thanks, always happy when reader wants more. There IS more on my blog….do drop by Studio Nightshade. JF

  3. Jeffrey Bennett Avatar
    Jeffrey Bennett

    Thanks JF – this is hilarious.

    On the subject of your woe, I consulted our most modest tome of constructive advice,
    “The Elements of Style” (3rd ed.) by flipping to a random page and putting my finger down.

    The following is where you landed:

    The Elements of Style – Principles of Composition

    Placing Negative and Positive in opposition
    makes for a stronger structure.

    Not charity, but simple justice.
    Not that I loved Caesar less, but that I loved Rome more.

    Good Luck.

  4. RogerbCohen Avatar
    RogerbCohen

    I just hope VS Naipul gets the word.

  5. CWebb Avatar

    Oh, how I love this, especially the maddening. Howver, I hate to break it to you, Bathsheba, but as one who once online-dated as Lily Bart, Mr. Potato Head probably recognized the reference only after Googling, although the lack of LOLs definitely speaks in his favor.

  6. I love this too. I would say LOL but I hate that thing. THANK YOU. My two cents as an over 40 single — online dating is helpful but kind of like a thesaurus is helpful. Real life is better, even when “nothing” is happening. Online dating has helped me get back in the game, recover perspective, get good and pissed off in a motivating way. But the glass ceiling is real, and Egalite is a long way off. Those damn profile pics.

    I like the Wilde. And James Baldwin — “Love does not begin and end the way we seem to think it does; love is a battle, love is a war, love is a growing up.” As my niece says, “I’m too little.”

  7. Wait..so you’re saying you like Hardy more than Austen? I thought I was the only one! Austen is a whole lotta BS…Hardy’s at least telling us like it is.

    “Tess”=the real life version of “P&P”

    PS: I’m around the same age as Stephanie G. Not all students are swimming in pools of surreality laced jello. We’ve got some grounding.

  8. MLM, thanks! i’ve got enough idealism to know that plenty like you are there in my classroom. Honest. And even some like you with real wit: surreality laced jello–great line! JF

  9. Rakish… an adjective so rarely used. Begs the question, can a torso-less man be rakish?

  10. Okay. You need to post a pic. You will get WAY more hits. Then, you will wish you had not posted a pic. Then, you will see what Oscar Wilde means about the truth when all the men you meet used a pic from 1989 to “accurately depict” themselves.

    You might also say to your students that not only is the glass ceiling alive and well, it also seems to get thicker as time passes.

    But, I too, am cynical, and after doing an online dating experiment where I dated 20 men in as many weekends, I can completely understand why Jane Austen died a virgin.

  11. Did this for a while, years ago as I was looking for ladies who could actually read and write, apart from looking stunningly beautiful.
    It was an interesting experience, met lots of peculiar women, a few crazy ones, and a surprising number of good results.
    I eventually married one so maybe I’m biased. She says she enjoyed it too.

  12. You are funny. Hardy is great! Mr. Potato Head is good people. Elevated HDL and LDL levels are no LOL matter.

  13. i find online dating surprisingly fun. at least once i accepted that my soulmate [hands clasped, eyelashes fluttering] isnt right around the corner. i dont contact people without pictures so why would i expect any different from anyone else? i’m all for an accurate picture; i’d rather someone not contact me in the first place than be unpleasantly surprised when i show up. my ego is too fragile for that.
    however, despite acknowledging that she spouts bs, i prefer austen to hardy, and i often type in all lowercase b/c i’m lazy, not b/c i’m aspiring to e.e.cummings-ness. so, what do i know?

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