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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Hetty_SorrelHetty Sorrel - Wikipedia

    Hetty Sorrel. Hetty Sorrel is a major character in George Eliot 's novel Adam Bede (1859). Beautiful but thoughtless Hetty lives in the fictional community of Hayslope — a rural, pastoral and close-knit community in 1799. Her home is on Mr. Martin Poyser's dairy farm as she is his niece.

  2. Adam Bede. Hetty Sorrel. Hetty never changes through the book, even after her religious conversion in the jail, and she remains a vain and selfish creature. Hetty only wants what is best for herself. Throughout the novel, Hetty has no concern for how her actions will affect others. Yet because her desires and fears are childlike, it is hard to ...

  3. Hetty Sorrel is a very pretty girl, and an efficient-enough dairymaid. But she isn't particularly accomplished. Or particularly smart. Or particularly nice. You are perfectly within your rights to wonder what a stand-up dude like Adam sees in her. Still, even if you don't think much of Hetty Sorrel as a person, do not underestimate her as a ...

  4. Mar 15, 2015 · Adam Bede, set at the very close of the 18th century, sees young maid Hetty Sorrel (Patsy Kensit) being wooed by two men, the carpenter Adam Bede (Iain Glen) and the caddish army captain and squire Arthur Donnithorne (James Wilby) but after falling pregnant Hetty is destined for tragedy. Adam Bede is convinced that he is to blame for the events that befall Hetty but eventually finds true ...

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Adam_BedeAdam Bede - Wikipedia

    Painting by Edward Henry Corbould (1861) of Hetty Sorrel and Captain Donnithorne in Mrs Poyser's dairy. The Bede family: Adam Bede is described as a tall, stalwart, moral, and unusually competent carpenter. He is 26 years old at the beginning of the novel, and bears an "expression of large-hearted intelligence."

  6. Character Analysis Hetty Sorrel. The characterization of Hetty seems to vary through the novel: In the earlier sections, she is condemned savagely for her vanity and selfishness, while during her period of suffering she is treated sympathetically. But even though Eliot's objectivity is somewhat questionable in places, the personality of Hetty ...

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  8. Ian Adam is the only critic to note how the events of the journey prepare Hetty for confession to Dinah—in addition to the essay cited in note 1, see Adam's “Restoration Through Feeling in ...

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