This post contains major
spoilers.
Thomas Hardy’s Tess of the D'Urbervilles is the story of the
book’s namesake. Tess is a young peasant girl who comes from a family that is
intellectually and emotionally less advanced than her. As a result of their
somewhat silly pretensions of nobility, Tess sets out in the world, at their
encouragement, to seek out her fortune.
Early on, she is raped by the abusive and narcissistic Alec d’Urberville, and the rape results in a pregnancy.
Hardy seems to have understood the psychology of sexual assault survivors very
well. Tess’s subsequent reaction to the assault plays out very realistically.
She does not reveal the nonconsensual nature of the incident to others. Though not
entirely rejected by society, Tess is an object of shame due to the pregnancy. When her young infant dies, she once again
sets out into the world.
She
meets and falls in love with the seemingly honorable Angel Clare. However, shortly after they marry, Angel
discovers some of the details of Tess’s past. He subsequently shows himself to
be priggish, hypocritical and cold. Despite the fact that he himself engaged in
past indiscretions, he more or less abandons Tess.
Once again,
Tess strikes out into the world to endure great hardships. Alec appears and, in stalker-like fashion, begins to infiltrate Tess’s
life again. Things end badly when she eventually kills him. Though she briefly
reunites with a repentant Angel, the book ends with Tess’s execution.
It
bears noting that the behavior of the male characters in this book is extraordinarily
bad. Tess’s father is an irresponsible drunk. Alec is an abuser and rapist.
Angel, who seems to initially behave decently, is perhaps the most frustrating
character of all. He leaves Tess in a spate of childish hypocrisy, despite the
fact that his own past included a sexual indiscretion. Hardy clearly did not
have a positive image of his male cotemporaries.
Underneath this
pernicious structure of society, something else seems to be going on. The book
is full of hints about something older appearing out of society’s past. The narrative is full of references to a
pagan past and to a spiritual connection to the natural world. Furthermore,
there are numerous references to the fact that society’s disapproval of Tess is
based on something unnatural and contrary to the old ways.
“Walking among the sleeping
birds in the hedges, watching the skipping rabbits on a moonlit warren, or
standing under a pheasant-laden bough, she looked upon herself as a figure of
Guilt intruding into the haunts of Innocence. But all the while she was making
a distinction where there was no difference. Feeling herself in antagonism, she
was quite in accord. She had been made to break an accepted social law, but no
law known to the to the environment in which she fancied herself such an
anomaly."
There is so much to this primeval connection contained in this book. For
instance, fertility is referenced over and over again, often in relation to
Tess herself. Furthermore, Alec seems to represent the dark, satanic forces
inherent in the Universe. The text contains a mixture of Christian and pagan symbolism
when it comes to his character. At one point,
he appears near a bonfire,
"A jester might say
this is just like Paradise. You are Eve,
and I am the old Other One come to tempt you in the disguise of an inferior
animal. “
The work is filled with references to society’s failures, as well as to this
dark, non-Christian foundation. The feminine underpinnings of this Universe seem
to be one of the only positive and bright spots in an otherwise dark Cosmos.
These ancient, naturalistic connections seem to reach their height when,
in one of the final passages in the book, Tess lays upon an altar at the
legendary site of Stonehenge.
Many of
these allusions to the pagan underpinnings of the world in this work remind me
of similar connections made in Charlotte Brontë’s “Jane Eyre.” However, in Bronte’s
work, these ancient and feminine roots seemed to be somewhat triumphant in the
end. In the case of Hardy’s novel, however, they are utterly destroyed by a
malicious society. This is indeed a pessimistic worldview presented in this
novel.