[Far from the Madding Crowd by Thomas Hardy]@TWC D-Link book
Far from the Madding Crowd

CHAPTER XVIII
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He saw no absurd sides to the follies of life, and thus, though not quite companionable in the eyes of merry men and scoffers, and those to whom all things show life as a jest, he was not intolerable to the earnest and those acquainted with grief.

Being a man who read all the dramas of life seriously, if he failed to please when they were comedies, there was no frivolous treatment to reproach him for when they chanced to end tragically.
Bathsheba was far from dreaming that the dark and silent shape upon which she had so carelessly thrown a seed was a hotbed of tropic intensity.

Had she known Boldwood's moods, her blame would have been fearful, and the stain upon her heart ineradicable.

Moreover, had she known her present power for good or evil over this man, she would have trembled at her responsibility.

Luckily for her present, unluckily for her future tranquillity, her understanding had not yet told her what Boldwood was.


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