Tuesday, February 12, 2019
Blaming External Pressure for the Tragic Decline of Tess in Tess of the
Blaming External Pressure for the sad Decline of Tess in Tess of the DUrbervilles From the beginning of the novel Tess of the dUrbervilles by Thomas Hardy, it is make water that the main character, Tess, is not going to have an easy life. She isdeliberately targeted by cruel Immortals as their sadisticplaything. This is symbolized during the club dance, where Tess isone of the white ships company but is the only one to have a bright blushfulribbon in her hair. The mark of blood is on her from the start.Whilst Tess is going to marketplace she accidentally kills the familyshorse. Her own guilt for this accidental final stage is the first set up in along series of incidents leading to Tesss tragic death at the end ofthe novel.Social and environmental pressures rank high on the list of causes ofTesss tragedy. In the late 19th century there were many a(prenominal) changestaking place in rural England. The advances achieved as a publication ofthe Industrial Revolution meant that e ven in the countryside farmingwas becoming motorised and there were fewer manual labour jobs forthe simple peasant commonwealth to do. This meant many people had to leavetheir town where they had spent most of their lives to go and findwork. So, for example, the Durbeyfields departing from Marlott afterthe death of Sir John, was only part of a greater rural upheaval.Tesss search for work to make up for the expiry of her familys horseled her to the sinister and blatantly predatory Alec dUrberville whoshe initially conceit was a relative. The sexual double standardstypical of late Victorian orderliness were also clear at this point.Females who sinned paid a much higher(prenominal) social price for their mistakes.But Tess did not want to sin - she was pres... ... bowl everyplace Stonehenge it is obvious thatTesss life of never ending pain and suffering result soon be over.Stonehenge is significant as it was a place for give ups in pagantimes. The cruel Immortals have at last brought Tess to the place ofsacrifice - they will soon end their sadistic sport.I break up that Hardy wrote this book to show that individuals haveno control over their lives, but are at the mercy of impersonal andinexorable forces, as stated in the resource notes to the Cambridgeedition of the novel. From the beginning Tesss destiny was mappedout. She was born(p) to suffer and eventually die. Tess was in the end avictim of the plenty of late Victorian rural society, with allits cruel discrimination against error-prone females, but even more so ofcruel supernatural forces who had label her out as their victim fromthe beginning.
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