Abstract

AbstractThis article considers Hardy’s ‘deleted’ sheep-rot scene from Far from the Madding Crowd (1874), which focuses on Troy’s surreptitious scheme to ‘rot’ his wife’s flock of sheep to increase their market profitability. Sheep-rot, a dreaded nineteenth-century ovine disease, occurred when flocks grazed in low-lying, swampy fields: while the condition was fatal, in the early stages it caused its victims to fatten quickly without showing other symptoms. Troy’s efforts to capitalize on the economic advantage of this stage – without regard to the animals’ suffering or to the dangers posed by human consumption of diseased meat – eerily foreshadows the ambivalence shown by proponents of the factory farm today. While the chapter did not survive later drafts, Hardy recycled imagery from it for a scene depicting Bathsheba’s night next to a swamp: in both instances the swamp is a literal (and not solely symbolic) unhealthy environment for its occupants. The fragment also links the swamp with the fern hollow whe...

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