Far from the Madding Crowd tells a story: As the young girl Bathsheba Liveting’s parents, she lives with her aunt. Later, she inherits the legacy of her uncle as a farmer of wareba farm. She is young, beautiful, talented, but vain desired the admiration of men. The young Oak had been a farmer of a small ranch. A sudden accident bankrupted him, and he is employed as herdsman on Bathsheba’s farm. Oak falls in love with Bathsheba, but is unable to express his feelings, and the vain Bathsheba rejects him. Meanwhile, another farmer, William Boldwood, who lives next door to Bathsheba, frantically courted her. But the girl is infatuated with the Don Juan-style dissolute Sergeant Troy. He can speak several languages and is a romantic. He had cheated on and then abandoned the innocent Fanny Robin, who became pregnant and died in the poorhouse. Bathsheba soon marries him, but their marriage is not happy. Soon tired of farm life, he runs off to the sea to swim but is in danger. Later he is rescued but there is no his news more than a year. Boldwood asked Bathsheba many times to marry him, and she is forced to agree. When Boldwood is having a party, Troy suddenly appears. Boldwood, disillusioned, shoots Troy and is imprisoned for life. Finally Bathsheba and the hard-working kind-hearted herdsman Oak married. Their wedding is quite quiet, but that evening the farm workers organized a band and came to congratulate them.