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The Suffering of the Protagonist in Thomas Hardys “Tess of the d’urbenvilles”.
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Subject: Novel
INTAN MAULINA
12.0073/7112220073
1. Discuss The Suffering of the Protagonist in Thomas Hardys
“Tess of the d’urbenvilles”.
Tess of the D'Urbervilles is a tragic novel written by Thomas Hardy. In this novel,
Tess, a poor and lonely young woman, experiences a series of unfortunate events which
shape her character throughout the story. Her most significant tragedies include the death of
her horse, Prince, her rape, the death of her baby, Angel leaving her, and her execution.
She constantly blames herself for these occurrences and rightly should, for she causes
most of her own suffering. Tess is the cause of her own misery, because she puts herself in
dangerous and vulnerable situations, she feels guilty for things she is not wholly responsible
for, and she allows herself to be easily tricked and manipulated by Alec d'Urberville.
Tess of the D’Urbervilles is not a simple novel about a woman’s life. It is a novel that
questions the foundations of Victorian life and culture. Hardy creates the character Tess and
places her within the confines of Victorian England. Her life is intended to raise questions on
the part of the reader and force the reader to reevaluate the world around them.
The main question that Tess of the D’Urbervilles raises for the reader is why must
Tess suffer as much as she does? Hardy proposes five possible answers to this question:
history repeats itself; nature is generally fecund; the loss of faith; the universe does not make
sense; and the involvement of fate.
Hardy’s first proposition is that history repeats itself. Throughout the novel we see
examples of this repetition. There is a history of murder in the D’Urberville family. Angel
tells Tess the legend of the D’Urberville Coach. He says, “A certain d’Urberville of the
sixteenth or seventh century committed a dreadful crime in his family coach; and since that
time member of the family see or hear the coach whenever –“ (Hardy 231). What Angel left
off was that the coach is hear whenever some tragedy is about to occur. The legend is a
beautiful young woman was abducted by one of the D’Urberville family. When she tried to
escape from the coach she was being carried off in, he killed her – or she killed him. Angel
couldn’t remember which. This incident supposedly gives the D’Urbervilles a predisposition
to sudden violent acts. If a member of the D’Urberville family hears the sound of the ill-fated
coach, it is an omen for tragedy. Tess herself hears the coach after her begin married to
Angel. A tragic chain of events is set in motion after she hears the coach, a chain that has
been present throughout the novel. Tess confesses her relationship with Alec to Angel while
at the honeymoon cottage. Angel decides to leave Tess.
Tess repeats this tragic history of the D’Urberville coach again by her murder of
Alec. Earlier in the novel, Alec essentially abducts Tess by taking her deep into the woods
away where he violates her. It can also be said that he killed her – or she killed him, just as in
Angel’s telling of the legend. Alec killed Tess by taking away her maidenhood. That one
action took away any possibility that Tess had for a normal life. Tess murders Alec because
of the misfortune she encounters at his hands. She is a D’Urberville with a predisposition to
murder because of her history.
Death repeats itself quite often throughout the history of the novel. Eachoccurrence leads
to another tragedy in Tess’ life. The story opens with the murder of the Durbyfield’s horse
because Tess falls asleep while driving. This scene could also be considered a parallel to the
legend of the D’Urberville coach because the horse’s death at the hand of a D’Urberville
involving two coaches sets in motion tragic events. The horse is John Durbeyfield’s means
of employment and provider of the family’s income. After the loss of the horse, Tess is sent
to a branch of the D’Urberville family to ask for money. This house of the Stoke-
D’Urbervilles is where Tess first encounters her cousin, Alec.
The next death is Tess’ child, Sorrow, who dies of illness. The child dies without a
proper baptism, only that of her mother’s creation, so is not allowed to have a proper
Christian burial. The importance of death in Victorian society and the deviation of Tess and
her child from the acceptable societal process pushes her further from society and a normal
life. After this death, Tess feels that she must leave Marlott. She goes to Talbothays where
she encounters Angel.
During her travels Tess comes across a group of wounded pheasants left in the wood
by hunters. Tess cannot stand to see their suffering so she ends it by snapping their necks.
Tess wished that someone would end her suffering just as she eased that of the pheasants.
This death wish is part of the repetitious death in the novel. When the Durbeyfields left
Marlott to find a new home after John’s death, they go to the home of their ancestral
D’Urbervilles. Tess enters into the church and stands before the gate to the tombs of her
former family and wonders why she is on the wrong side of the gate. When Angel is
sleepwalking on their wedding night he dreams that Tess is dead then carries Tess to a church
andplaces her into a stone grave. Finally, at the conclusion of the novel, Tess sacrifices
herself to the police at Stonehenge, a historical site for Druidical sacrifices. The sacrifice
leads to her capture and ends in her execution. Throughout the entire novel Tess suffers
because of the pain she must endure while alive.
John Durbeyfield dying of illness places his remaining family, including Tess, into a
state of desperation. Tess is the only one that can provide for the family. Alec reappears and
offers to take care of Tess and her family provided that Tess would return to Alec. During
the Victorian Era there were not many employment opportunities or women that would pay
enough to support an entire family. Tess does not have a choice, due to the continuing
absence of her husband, but to submit to Alec. He violates her again by exploiting her
weakness, he family. His abhorrent treatment of Tess added to her longing for Angel leads to
yet another death. Tess murders Alec to escape.
These repetitions of death pave Tess’ path of misery. If one of these deaths had not
occurred, Tess would not arrive at the end of the novel with her death as the final event of the
novel. The constant repetition of death and the desire for death does not justify or answer the
question of Tess extreme suffering. The repetition of history only provides one part of the
explanation of why Tess must suffer as she does.
The second proposition Hardy makes to answer the question of suffering is also a
repetitious pattern. There is an analogy between Tess’ experiences and the general fecundity
of nature. Tess is a part of nature with the power of reproduction. Her actions with Alec in
the wood are perfectly natural. They are part of the circle of life that is repeated everyday
throughout nature. However, in the human, civilized world there is no room for natural,
savage people. Tess only suffers from her guilt because of societal ideals.
This idea of Tess being part of nature is echoed in the scene where Tess is brought her
child to feed while harvesting grain. Tess is again part of nature. Tess as a field-woman is “a
portion of the field; she has somehow lost her own margin, imbibed the essence of her
surrounding and assimilated herself with it” (Hardy 103). Part of Tess’ misery is that man
is generally distant from nature, while she herself is close to nature. Tess feels more like the
wounded pheasants than the hunters. She is just as much a victim of humanity as the
pheasants. Tess has broken no natural law by losing her maidenhood, but she has broken a
social law and must suffer at the hands of men as punishment. Hardy writes at the end of
Phase the First, “There lay the pity of it. An immeasurable social chasm was to divide our
heroine’s personality thereafter from that previous self of hers who stepped from her
mother’s door to try her fortune at the Trantridge poultry-farm” (Hardy 89). Tess must suffer
because she cannot be a part of acceptable society.
The third proposition is that Tess suffers due to her loss of faith. The moment before Tess
violation Hardy writes, “But, might some say, where was Tess’ guardian angel? where was
the providence of her simple faith? Perhaps, like that other God of whom the ironical
Tishbite spoke, he was talking, or he was pursuing, or he was in a journey, or he was sleeping
and not to be waked” (Hardy 89). We, as readers, hope that Angel will be Tess’ missing
guardian angel. However, Angel is not truly an angel of the Victorian God. He did not join
the clergy as his other brothers did, but chose instead to become a part of nature. Nature does
not always follow the laws of Victorian society because nature does not convict Tess for her
sin on society. Angel questions the old world faith of his father. The irony of his name is
that Angel is not a guardian, but a fallen angel.
The fourth proposition is simply that the universe does not make sense, a model of
analytical philosophy. Analytical philosophy assumes that there exists some underlying order
to the world. The mismatching of men and women throughout the centuries is a strong
argument against the existence of an order to the universe. Hardy writes, “We may wonder
whether at the acme and summit of the human progress these anachronisms will be corrected
by a finer intuition, a closer interaction of the social machinery than that which now jolts us
round and along; but such completeness is not to be prophesied or even conceived possible.
Enough in that present case, as in millions, it was not two halves of a perfect whole that
confronted each other at the perfect moment; a missing counterpart wandered independently
about the earth waiting in crass obtrusness till the late time came. Out of which maladroit
delay sprang anxieties, disappointments, shocks, catastrophes, and passing-strange destinies”
(Hardy 55). There in not a philosophical system that controls the universe.
The fifth proposition is that of the inclusion of fate. Many events in the novel seem to
happen just at the right moment. At the beginning of the novel, Angel encounters Tess by
accident while she is at a May dance. Angel is invited by the girls to dance, but he does not
dance with Tess. If he had chosen Tess to be one of his dancing partners the novel would not
have followed the same course as it does. This is not the only instance of fate. Angel just
happens to be at the very dairy farm at which Tess finds employment later in the novel.
Angel singles her out from other milkmaids because of an unexplained recognition. “And
then he seemed to discern in her something that was familiar, something which carried him
back into the joyous and unforeseeing past, before the necessity of taking thought had made
the heavens grey. He concluded that he had beheld her before; where he could not tell. A
casual encounter during some country ramble it certainly had been, and he was not greatly
curious about it. But the circumstance was enough to lead him to select Tess in preference to
the other pretty milkmaids when he wished to contemplate contiguous womankind” (Hardy
137). The fate of the previous meeting, however brief, and the fate of their both being
employed at the same dairy lead Angel to choose Tess as the object of his affections.
Fate steps in again when Tess tries to inform Angel of her past with Alec. She writes
a letter of confession then slips it under his door. Fate takes the letter and makes sure Angel
never reads it. The letter slides under the carpet where is cannot be seen. If the letter had
been read the wedding probably, judging from Angel’s later reaction, would not have
occurred. Tess would not have been left a bride without a husband. She would not be driven
back to Alec, which leads to his eventual murder and her execution. Fate determines the
course of Tess’ life and leads her on the path of utmost suffering. Tess must suffer because
the “President of the Immortals” enjoys his sport with her.
None of these propositions alone can answer the question of why Tess must suffer as
she does. The answer requires a combination of all five propositions.
2. Do you think that Tess is a Pure woman? Explain!
I think that Tess is a pure woman. Look at the explanation bellow.
Another question raised by the novel is what makes Tess a pure woman? The subtitle
to the novel, The Making of a Pure Woman implies that Tess is not pure at the outset of the
novel, but has become pure by the conclusion. Victorian society was appalled by the
suggestion that a fornicator, bearer of an illegitimate child, religious skeptic, adulterer, and
murder could be a pure woman. In fact, Havelock Ellis wrote on his reservations about Tess
of the D’Urbervilles. He writes, “I was repelled at the outset by the sub-title. It so happens
that I have always regarded the conception of purity, when used in moral discussions, as a
conception sadly in need of analysis. It seems to me doubtful whether anyone is entitled to
use the word “pure” without first defining precisely what he means, and still more doubtful
whether an artist is called upon to define it at all, even in several hundred pages. I can quite
conceive that the artist should take pleasure in the fact that his own creative revelation of life
poured contempt on many old prejudices. But such an effect is neither powerful nor
legitimate unless it is engrained in the texture of the narrative; a label cannot stick it on. To
me that glaring sub0title meant nothing, and I could not see what it should mean to Mr.
Hardy” (Jacobus 45). To those who accept the Christian definition of purity, Hardy’s use of
the term for Tess was an outrage. To those who didn’t accept the definition, its use was
irrelevant. Again, there are multiple answers to the question of Hardy’s use of the term.
The first answer lies in Hardy’s own definition of purity. According to Hardy Tess
should be judged by the rules of nature since she is a part of nature and not of Victorian
society. Tess, at no point in the novel, acts in ways that would not be acceptable in nature. In
fornicating and caring for her child in the manner she does Tess acts as any creature of nature
would. Through the events of the novel Angel Claire, as well as the reader, becomes aware
that, “The beauty of a character lay not in its achievements, but in its aims and impulses; the
true record lay not among things done, but among things achieved” (Jacobus 46). Tess’
intentions during the entire course of the novel are pure. She cares for and attempts to
provide for her child and family. Each of her so-called sins arises from honorable intentions.
Even her final murder of Alec comes about so that she may again join the man to who she is
legally wed. By this definition of purity arising from intent, Tess is honest, innocent and
pure.
The second answers lies within the very religious confines rejecting her purity.
According to Christian religion, purity exists only in women who retain their maidenhood
until after marriage. Tess does not retain her maidenhood and therefore cannot be considered
pure. However, Tess is purified through her suffering. Without going through each of the
trials in her life, Tess would not have become the person she is at the end of the novel. Tess
has become pure because she is willing to act on her most natural instinct, to free herself from
captivity. The closer that Tess gets to nature, the more pure she becomes. The laws, class
systems, and religion of society no longer corrupt her.
Hardy is using Tess of the D’Urbervilles to call for a reevaluation of religion and of
social law. The religion of Victorian England rejects Tess because she acts, not as a pious
member of society, but a creature of the world. Hardy is saying through Tess’ life and trials
that a person can still be good even though they do not follow the Christian god without
question. Because of the hypocritical aspect of Victorian Christian Tess is pushed to the
outskirts of society. Because of the Victorian Christian ideas of what make a good person,
Tess is considered to be worthless. Hardy proposes that simply because fate has acted against
Tess throughout her life, she is not a bad person.
Hardy also calls for a change of society. Most of the events that occur in Tess life
that are tragic involve not only fate, but also societies views. Tess is a migrant farm worker.
She is worthless in Victorian society. She is not of a good class or good breeding. Angel is
relieved when he discovers that Tess comes from the D’Urberville family. She has a
respectable family name and therefore will be acceptable for inclusion into the Claire family.
Hardy again demonstrates through Tess life and trials that a person need not be of good
breeding and respectable family name to be a good person.
When all of these views are combined, we understand why Tess must suffer as she
does and how she is pure. Thomas Hardy required Tess to suffer entirely throughout her life
to prove her worth and value as a person. Her responses demonstrate that Tess in inherently
good. Her goodness, honesty, and innocence are her purity. If someone such as Tess is a
good, pure person no matter what the circumstance, then the systems in place that deem her
worthless and tainted need to be reevaluated.