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Tess of the d Urbervilles
-literary analysis-
“Tess of the d Urbervilles†is Hardy s tragic masterpiece. It is
the story of innocence and evil, of man and nature, of history and its
relations to the present, concentrated on the fate of a simple country
girl.
Reading Hardy s novels one can easily recognise the Greek writers view
on man: a being born to endure that which was to befall him. The
English writer conceived almost all his heroes as variants of certain
types, without endowing them with too much inner depth. They only have
to face the essential hypostases of Fate which is the principle around
which all the Hardian stories spin. It is a notion designating the power
that predetermines events.
Tess, the main character of the novel, is a simple innocent country
girl, who tries to escape her social background under the pressure of
exterior circumstances; she is forced to fight the principles of evil,
embodied by Alec, but she cannot resist; she sins, therefore she is
punished.
Alec is the symbol of evil, the embodiment of the wickedness and
unscrupulousness of the implacable world in which man is obliged to
live.
Angel Clare is neither good nor bad; he is not daring and he is
conservative, abandoning Tess in the most difficult moments. Hardy did
not succeed in portraying him very well so he remains a rather vague
character.
Tess of the d Urbervilles is a novel written by a story-teller and
not by a powerful analyst.
The “Stonehenge†fragment begins with Hardy-the-architect s
description of the monoliths. The author s eye for the significant
details is to be mentioned. The atmosphere is set at this stage;
darkness, coldness, wildness, and greatness are supported by the
symbolical paraphrases used by Tess and Angel to denominate Stonehenge :
Forest, pavilion of the night, heathen temple.
The description of the Great Plane and its symbolic stones (the
Stone of Sacrifice and the Sun Stone) follows. From dusk to dawn, whole
nature accompanies Tess. Hardy describes the elements (still or moving,
dark or light, colourful or colourless) in such a way to suggest Tess s
thoughts and emotional states. The communion between character and
nature may be followed throughout the text: when Tess is falling asleep
everything is dark; reserve, taciturnity and hesitation are the
qualities of the landscape at that moment even the night wind has died
out. Then gradually, the reader is prepared for the moment of Tess s
awakening: the light is growing, the stones are no more dark, but they
are glistening green grey. The reader is announced that something is
going to happen through some significant phrases as foe example, the
light is strong or the sunbeam which shines full on Tess s face. The
reader can probably feel as Tess feels, that everything has become
clear, that the heroine does whatever she has to do so the memorable
phrases “It is as it should be†and “I am ready†climax the
whole passage. The Stonehenge scene shows the idea that Hardy s novel s
nature does not help the characters, but only projects the human tragedy
on the primordial axes.
Copyright © 1997-1999 Delta Soft Co. Ltd.
Special thanks to Ion Corina
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