A Moral Fable
Tess:
A Moral Fable
Introduction
Tess
of the d'Urbervilles is the masterpiece of Thomas Hardy. The writer of the
Wessex novels has not left behind a better novel than this. While writing on
the contemporary fiction he says that the English novel of his times lacks
sincerity or candour. Many people do not express in their words what they feel
to be right. Hardy is a different man. He speaks of what he feels to be right.
That is why he is against the conventional morality or the social code of his
times. The present novel is a record of his first hand impressions of real
life. It is true to life itself. It represents the aspects of life as he sees
them. It bears the hall-mark of truth on its every page. Thus Tess of the
d'Urbervilles is a moral fable: It is the expression of a generalised human
situation in history. But it is neither a purely personal tragedy nor
philosophic comment on life in general and the fate of woman in particular.
Like
"The Woodlanders", the present novel has for its setting the years of
the contemporary agricultural tragedy. Tess of the d'Urbervilles is a flamed
work of art. Here we get not only the tragedy of heroic girl, but the tragedy
of a proud community baffled and defeated by processes beyond its understanding
or control. The present novel has got a very fine or superb opening. The whole
invention is substantial with social and historical perception and quick with
metaphorical life
The
Agents of Destruction
The
coming of three visitors to Marlott during the May dance is ominous. One of
them later becomes an agent of destruction. This visit suggests how the dance
of vitality is jeopardised by the trust of the sophisticated urban life. This
sense of jeopardy is intensified with the entry of Alec d'Urberville. He is the
economic intruder who represents the processes at work destroying the bases of
agricultural security. He stands with Angel Clare who is the spiritual
intruder. Tess herself represents a proud but fallen community. She stands for
the agricultural community in its moment of ruin. In this novel Hardy has
dramatized the defeat of a country girl named Tess who is representative of an
ancient country life. It ends in Stonehenge passively. This place confirms a
sense of doom.
Two
Restorations
Then
there are two places of restoration. The first restoration has for its setting
the lush of Valley and the second restoration takes place among the sterile
expanses of Flintcomb-Ash. The sleep walking scene records the passivity and doom
quite poignantly. It shows how Tess is consciously doing nothing at all. She
makes effort to alter the course of events. This strange passivity is welded
into her strength. Indeed she is the agricultural predicament in metaphor.
Angel Clare the impassioned instrument of some will; some purpose, stemming
forth from the disastrous life of the cities, from the intellectual and
spiritual awareness. The mollifying urban life has defeated the country life.
Flintcomb-Ash directly reflects the new farming, It stands in a bold contrast
with Talbothays. The machine is now the sleepwalker or the impersonal agent of
destruction. Tess is powerless and passive in the face of this machine with its
great noise and speed.
Symbolism
of Moral
Thus
the fate of a pure woman is but the destruction of the English peasantry. This
novel is based on a thesis. This thesis refers to a disintegration of the
peasantry The growth of the capitalist farming wiped off the old system of
farming. The farmers were no longer independent. The old native culture also
began to disappear. Thus the destruction of a proud and deep-rooted class
proves to be very painful and tragic. The parents of Tess belong to the class
of farm-labourers. They have fallen on hard times. Tess tries to solve their
economic problem twice and in so doing she is ruined. She works very hard at
Flintcomb-Ash. She has to face a sort of cruel persuasion and sinful
temptation. It is because of Satan like Alec that she becomes sinful like Eve
in the garden of Eden. The wages of sin is death. Alec who incarnates
measureless grossness and sensuality is stabbed to death for having spoiled
Tess for more than one occasion. When Tess stabs him to death, she is herself
hanged to death. All these things go a long way in proving how Tess of the
d'Urbervilles is a moral fable with a symbolism of its own.
The
Moral Issues in The Story
Tess
Durbeyfield,the daughter of poor and feckless parents and descendant of a proud
and ancient family, was forcibly seduced by a blackguard young man of means. A
child was born, but died in infancy. Some years later, when she was working as
a milkmaid on a large dairy-farm, she became betrothed to a clergyman's son.
Angel Clare, who was learning farming from her employer. On their wedding
night, and not before, Tess confessed to him the past episode of Alec
d'Urberville; and thereupon Clare, himself no more pure than Tess, left her.
Alter a brave fight against poverty and other evils, she was forced by the
needs of her family, into the protection of Alec d'Urberville. In order to be
free to join her husband, Tess murdered her protector. After a brief
concealment with Clare in an empty house in the New Forest, she was arrested,
tried and hanged. That is the skeleton of the story. The gist of it is the
study of a woman with a passion for purity set amid circumstances which compel
the defilement of her body and the starving of her sprit. True, she is weak, in
all but her power of loving and enduring: but that very strength in loving is
the secret of her weakness. If Angel Clare did not want her, if he would never
come back to her, then what did her body matter? D'Urberville might have that,
though her resistance was long and brave. Her spirit her love, remained
unalterably Clare's beyond reach of defilement, and once Clare mas returned to
her, she must free herself for him by the quickest and most thorough means.
In
the spoiling of such a nature, it is bad to play Alec d'Urberville's part; but
is worse to play Angel Clare's. Clare is the most eminent example of that half
development, to which we find Hardy over and over again ascribing the sorrow
and mischief of human life. Clare was half-baked, and therefore unjust and
insincere. He had outgrown the narrow orthodoxy of his family; but he remained
conventional enough to regard Tess as hopelessly soiled, and himself as still
marriageable. His desertion of his wife is perhaps the cruelest action ever
imagined as the result of a false idea of purity; yet it shows no touch of
exaggeration. Tess had broken no moral law; she had fulfilled a natural law;
but in the eyes of society she was a"fallen woman". And the rough and
ready judgement of society, implanted in her own bosom and acting upon her
through other people, wasted her youth, her beauty, her motherhood, her love,
her power of enjoying and of spreading joy, and drove her to misery, crime and
a violent death. The folly and the cruelty of it have wrought the author into
an indignation so passionate that here and there he deserts the strictly
dramatic manner of his preceding novels, and breaks into direct comment flames
which leap suddenly from the furnace of his spirit, so far from breaking or
lessening the force of his creation. revel its intense heat. That moreover, is
the explanation of a sentence in the last paragraph of the novel - a sentence
that has puzzled and pained many of his readers: "Justice' was done, and
the President of the Immortals (in Acschylean phrase) had ended his sport with
Tess."
The
Injustice of The Social Justice
Few
will doubt the profound injustice of the social justice which murdered Tess
after perverting her but the President of the Immortals and his
"sport" do not seem to belong to Hardy's conception of the government
of the world. Nowhere else do we find him suggesting that the Immanent will
takes any pleasure in the sorrows of mankind, or feels any jealousy of their
joy. We are to understand that it is death to the frogs without being sport to
the boys. But perhaps the cry of Gloucester in King Lear, "As flies to
wanton boys so are we to the Gods: They kill us for their sport" chimed in
with Hardy's just anger at the waste and ruin of Tess, and he, so lo speak,
shook his fist at the unheeding power. The phrase certainly differs in tone
from the slow, remorseless quiet with which the story moves on. It"slipped
out". And yet one cannot wish it to stay. If it is not philosophically
consonant with the novel as a whole, it gives the reader's feelings a thrill of
sympathetic relief.
Hardy;
Not A Conventional Moralist
The
business of an artist, as Hardy has more than once pleaded in self-defence, is
to create a world that shall express the world as he sees it. But in the long
run, great art helps to make the actual world, and that is the reason for
suggesting the Practical effect of such a book as Tess of the d'Urbervilles.
Its august and simple beauties of setting, of character, of movement, are
beyond need of discussion but what of its "moral"? It has been called
pessimistic and now and then he himself seems to slip into an indifference very
unlike a counsel to accept. But, quite apart rom the enlarging and vivifying
influence of a great work of art, one cannot find Tess of the d'Urbervilles
anything but an optimistic book Tess was do towering heroine of huge desires; she
was a simple, bumble, homely girl who asked only for a quiet happiness. But if
homely humanity can be so beautiful as this, can such love endure and trust,
may we not feel joy and pride ? To go one step further when we contemplate all
this beauty slowly ruined by causes that man himself has, it in his power to
remove, what results but a determination, ever more clearly and more widely
formed, to remove them as soon as it may be, to let no stupidity or timidity
stand in the way of such virtue as human nature may possess - such happiness as
human nature may realise? It can never be perfect virtue, it can never be
perfect happiness; but here is from what he may here and now achieve because it
can never be perfect, or because, if he shrinks up from imperfect life now, he
will some day enjoy perfect life; but that which proclaims to him his own
strength and beauty, and shows him how, though limited in scope and always
under the shadow of a destiny that cares not whether he be happy, or unhappy,
be may strip away artificial causes of misery and waste. These are the
inferences that some minds cannot avoid drawing from Tess of the d'Urbervilles.
Conclusion
In
this book, Hardy showed a lovely nature tortured by the action of circumstance
circumstance working through the timidity and stupidity of man himself. And
this timidity and stupidity he squarely arraigned. Although she was, in the
common phrase, "ruined" when a very young girl, Tess might have lived
a happy and beneficent life, had it not been for the sense of sin created in
her by the collective timidy of society, and for the conventions that
proclaimed her on outcast. Those conventions bore hard upon her in many ways;
they crushed her when concentrated in her husband, Angel Clare. Hardy brings
definite charges against the collective judgement of society which, in the
belief that it can so protect itself, destroys some of its finest and most
sensitive material. On the beauty of Tess's character there is no need to
dwell. Her fineness and clarity of spirit, her faith and devotion, her strength
and tenacity in love, her essential sweetness make Tess more morally superior
than any stricture imposed by conventional social codes or Victorian morality.
Her moral fineness compels the reader to share the author's anguish of pity for
her sorrows, his passionate indignation at the stupid waste of her lovely
qualities.
As
a critic says: "Her story is a plea for charity, for a larger tolerance,
for a repudiation of social hypocrisy. Its intense moving power led William
Sharp to declare that no man or woman could read Tess of the d'Urbervilles
sympathetically and not thereafter be of broader mind and more charitable
spirit. From this point of view it is to be regarded not merely as Hardy's
greatest novel but as one of the greatest works in English literature.
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