Tess
Tess
Tess
Dont you really know, Durbeyfield, that you are the lineal representative of the
ancient and knightly family of the dUrbervilles . . . ?
(See Important Quotations Explained)
On his way home to the village of Marlott, a middle-aged peddler named John
Durbeyfield encounters an old parson who surprises him by addressing him as
Sir John. The old man, Parson Tringham, claims to be a student of history and
says that he recently came across a record indicating that Durbeyfield descends
from a noble family, the dUrbervilles. Tringham says that Durbeyfields noble
roots come from so far back in history that they are meaningless, but Durbeyfield
becomes quite self-important following the discovery and sends for a horse and
carriage to carry him home.
Summary: Chapter II
At the same moment, Durbeyfields daughter Tess enjoys the May Day festivities
with the other women from her village. Durbeyfield rides by in the carriage, and
though Tess is embarrassed at the spectacle, she defends her father from the
mockery of the other girls. The group goes to the village green for dancing,
where they meet three highborn brothers. Tess notices one of the brothers in
particular, a young man named Angel Clare. While his two brothers want to keep
traveling, Angel cannot pass up the opportunity to dance with these women. The
girls ask him to choose his partner, and he chooses a girl other than Tess. They
dance for a short time, and then Angel leaves, realizing he must catch up with his
determined brothers. Upon leaving, Angel notices Tess and regrets his decision
to dance with someone else.
Summary: Chapter III
When Tess returns home, she receives a twofold alarm from her mother, Joan,
who tells her that her father comes from noble lineage and also that he has been
diagnosed with a serious heart condition. Mrs. Durbeyfield has consulted
the Compleat Fortune-Teller, a large, old book, for guidance. A believer in such
astrology, she keeps the book hidden in the outhouse out of an irrational fear of
keeping it indoors.
Mr. Durbeyfield is not home, but is instead at Rollivers, the local inn and drinking
establishment, probably taking the opportunity to celebrate his newly discovered
heritage. Tess and the family are not surprised to hear of his whereabouts. Tesss
mother goes to fetch her husband from the inn but does not return. The narrator
explains that her failure to return may result from Mrs. Durbeyfields enjoyment in
sitting at Rollivers with her husband, since it is time that they can share alone.
Tess becomes worried and asks her little brother Abraham to go to Rollivers and
see what is taking their mother and father so long to return. Sometime later,
when still no one has returned home, Tess goes after them herself.
Summary: Chapter IV
At the inn, Tesss young brother Abraham overhears Mr. and Mrs. Durbeyfield
discussing their plans for Tess to take the news of her ancestry to the wealthy
Mrs. dUrberville in the hopes that she will make Tesss fortune. When Tess
arrives, she realizes her father will probably be too tired and drunk to take his
load of beehives to the market in a few hours. Her prediction comes true, so she
and her brother Abraham deliver them instead. On the way, Abraham tells Tess of
their parents plans, and then the conversation veers onto the topic of astronomy.
Knowing that stars contain clusters of worlds like their own, Abraham asks Tess if
those worlds are better or worse than the world in which they live. Tess boldly
answers that other stars are better and that their star is a blighted one. Tess
explains that this shortcoming is the reason for all of her and her familys
misfortunes.
Abraham falls asleep, leaving Tess to contemplate. She too eventually falls
asleep and dreams about a gentlemanly suitor who grimaces and laughs at her.
Suddenly, Tess and Abraham are awakened by a calamity. Their carriage has
collided with the local mail cart, and the collision has killed Prince, their old horse.
Realizing that the loss of their horse will be economically devastating for her
family, Tess is overcome with guilt. The surrounding foliage seems to turn pale
and white as Tess does. The carriage is hitched up to the wagon of a local
farmer, who helps them bring the beehives toward the market in Casterbridge.
Later, Tess returns home ashamed, but no one blames Tess more than she does
herself. Tess remains the only one who recognizes the impact that the loss of the
horse will have. The farmer helps them return Princes body back to the
Durbeyfields home. Refusing to scrap or sell the body, Mr. Durbeyfield labors
harder than he has in an entire month to bury his beloved horse.
Summary: Chapter V
In part because of her guilt over the horse, Tess agrees with her mothers plan to
send her to Mrs. dUrberville. When she arrives, she does not find the crumbling
old mansion she expects, but rather a new and fashionable home. She meets
Mrs. dUrbervilles son Alec, who, captivated by Tesss beauty, agrees to try to
help her. Alec says that his mother is unwell, but he says he will see what he can
do for Tess.
Summary: Chapter VI
When Tess returns home, she finds a letter. It is from Mrs. dUrberville, offering
her a job tending the dUrbervilles fowls. Tess looks for other jobs closer to
home, but she cannot find anything. Hoping to earn enough money to buy a new
horse for her family, Tess accepts the dUrbervilles job and decides to go back to
Trantridge.
future returns. Several months later, she goes to the market and discovers that
her visit has coincided with a local fair. That evening, she waits for some friends
to walk her home and declines Alecs offer to take her himself. When her friends
are ready to leave, Tess finds that some of them are drunk, and they express
their irritation that she has Alecs attention all to herself. The scene grows
unpleasant. Suddenly Alec arrives on his horse, and Tess finally agrees to let him
carry her away.
Summary: Chapter XI
Alec lets the horse wander off the path and deep into the woods, where he tries
to convince Tess to take him as a lover. Tess is reticent, and Alec realizes that
they have become lost in the fog. He gives Tess his coat and goes to look for a
landmark. Still trying to win her favor as a lover, he tells Tess that he has bought
her father a new horse. When he returns, Tess is asleep, and Alec uses the
opportunity to take advantage of her sexually.
Analysis: Chapters VIIIXI
These chapters mark the second half of Phase the First, which is subtitled The
Maiden, and establishes several of the major characters. Structurally, the main
plot follows a linear progression, depicting the direct progress of Tesss life from
the time her father learns of their noble heritage to her falling prey to Alec
dUrbervilles advances. This event is truly a catastrophe for her, because in
Victorian England any kind of sexual encounter would earn a young woman
moral rebuke and social condemnation, regardless of how the man involved
conducted himself. In a way, Tesss fall can be seen as a direct result of her
fathers discovery of their noble descent. Tess is sent to take advantage of the
familial connection, but instead, Alec takes advantage of her.
The plot hinges on a great many unfortunate coincidences, including Simon
Stokess fortuitous decision to call himself dUrberville, the accidental death of
old Prince, and Tesss bad luck in being held up with her drunken friends after the
fair. Throughout the novel, many events actually hinge on improbable
coincidences. Hardy uses this technique to convey the sense that the universe
itself, in the guise of fate, opposes Tess and foreordains her tragedy. Some
critics, however, have accused these coincidences of straining the bounds of
credulity, making the novel less believable.
Summary: Chapter XII
After a few weeks of confused dalliance with Alec, Tess realizes she feels no love
for him, and decides to flee from the dUrberville mansion to her home during the
early morning hours. Alec discovers her on the road, questions her early
departure, and tries to convince her to return with him. When she refuses, he
offers to drive her the rest of the way home, but she refuses even this offer. Alec
tells Tess to let him know should she ever need help.
Tess continues on her way home, randomly passing by a sign painter who is
busy painting Bible passages onto random walls and gates throughout the
countryside. He interrupts his conversation with Tess to paint a sign, which says
T H Y
D A M N A TI O N S L U M B E R E T H N O T.
she asks the painter if he believes the words he paints. He answers affirmatively.
She tries to ask him for advice about her plight, but he tells her to go see a
clergyman at a nearby church. She continues home, where her mother is
surprised to see her. Her mother is frustrated with her for refusing to marry Alec,
but she softens when Tess reminds her mother that she never warned Tess of the
danger she faced.
Summary: Chapter XIII
Some of Tesss friends come to visit, and in their high-spirited company Tess
feels cheered. But in the morning she lapses back into her depression: to her, the
future seems endless and bleak. She tries to attend church but hears the crowd
whispering about her. Shaken, she falls into the habit of only going out after dark.
Summary: Chapter XIV
The following August, Tess decides the time has come to stop pitying herself, and
she helps her village with the harvest. Her baby boy, conceived with Alec, falls ill,
and Tess becomes worried that he will die without a proper christening. She
decides to christen him herself and names him Sorrow. When he dies the
following morning, Tess asks the parson if her christening was sufficient to earn
her baby a Christian burial. Moved, the parson replies that though he cannot bury
the child himself, Tess may do so. That night Tess lays Sorrow to rest in a corner
of the churchyard, and makes a little cross for his grave.
Summary: Chapter XV
Tess realizes she can never be happy in Marlott and longs to begin a new life in a
place where her past is unknown. The next year, the chance arises for Tess to
become a milkmaid at the Talbothays Dairy. She seizes the opportunity, in part
drawn by the fact that the dairy lies near the ancestral estate of the dUrbervilles
and spurred on by the invincible instinct towards self-delight.
Analysis: Chapters XIIXV
Phase the Second, subtitled Maiden No More, lays out the consequences of
Tesss fall in Phase the First. Tess flees Trantridge, pledging violence to Alec in
an uncharacteristic manner, which proves that she does not remain complicit with
fate and instead promises to be proactive in changing it. At home, she incurs her
mothers disappointment, fueling the need to fulfill her familial obligations. Later,
she bears her doomed son Sorrow and buries him, against the precepts of the
church and proper society. She is miserably unhappy throughout this period, but
her unhappiness seems to stem at least as much from her fall from the grace of
society and from her own troubled conscience as from her childs birth and death,
which are treated almost tangentially. Tess is sad when he dies, but she seems
just as upset when villagers whisper about her in churchshe even begins
shunning daylight to avoid prying eyes. Tesss early one-sidedness gives way to
an identity crisis in which she is torn apart by her hatred of Alec, her guilt toward
her family, her shame within society, and her disappointment in herself.
Summary: Chapter XX
As the months pass, Angel and Tess grow closer, and Tess finds herself in the
happiest phase of her life. They wake up early, before the others, and feel as if
they are the only people on Earth. Indeed, the dairy seems to be an Eden, where
Angel is Adam and Tess is Eve. Tess is Angels visionary essence of woman,
and he playfully nicknames her Artemis and Demeter. Tess does not
understand these nicknames and simply tells him to call her Tess. They continue
to enjoy the morning, as the summer fog slowly lifts and birds swoop and play in
the misty air.
Summary: Chapter XXI
Life on the dairy begins to change. There is worry about the butter, which is not
churning properly. Mrs. Crick jokes that this sort of thing happens only when
someone on the farm falls in love. Indeed, there are two people who are in love,
and the milkmaids often discuss Angels noticeable love for Tess and imagine
what the future will hold for them. Tess does not want to marry, though, because
she is still ashamed of her past. After some further churning, the butter begins to
set and everyones fears melt awayexcept for Tesss.
Summary: Chapter XXII
Early in the morning, the Cricks receive a letter from a customer who complains
that the butter he has bought from them had a twang, or a sharp taste. Mr. Crick
realizes that this taste must be the result of the cows eating from garlic weeds.
The dairymaids go out to the pasture to search for these disastrous weeds. Tess
feels faint, and Mr. Crick encourages Tess to take a moment to rest. Angel stops
with her, and she makes a point of mentioning the virtues of two of her close
milkmaid friends, Izz and Retty. Angel agrees that they are nice women and
capable dairymaids, but indicates that he has no romantic interest in them.
Summary: Chapter XXIII
Two months after her arrival at the dairy, Tess sets out with her friends to attend
the Mellstock Church. There has been a torrential downpour the day before, and
the girls come to a long stretch of flooded road. Angel offers to carry them
across, and they agree. All the girls notice that Angel takes the longest with Tess,
and they each realize that he prefers her.
Tess begins to avoid Angel, but she notices from afar his grace and self-discipline
in the company of the girls who dote on him. One night, Marian, Izz, and Retty
each confess to feeling love for Angel, and Tess feels guilty, since she too loves
Angel but has already decided never to marry. She wonders if she is wrong to
take so much of his time.
Summary: Chapter XXIV
Later that summer, Angel and Tess are milking cows, and Angel is overcome with
his feeling for Tess. He embraces her, and she gives way to her feelings for a
moment before trying to pull away. Angel tells Tess he loves her and is surprised
to hear the words come out of his mouth. No one has noticed their encounter,
and the two return to their milking, shaken.
1.
2.
3.
Next
5. Angel is distraught by Tesss confession. He begs her to deny it, but she
cannot. He flees the house, and Tess follows after him. For hours, they
walk the grounds of the mansion. Tess tells her husband that she will do
anything he asks and even offers to drown herself. Angel orders her to go
back to the house. When he returns, Tess is asleep. After an
uncomfortable moment looking at the dUrberville ladies portraits, Angel
goes to sleep in a different room.
6. Summary: Chapter XXXVI
7. Three miserable days go by, during which Angel spends his time at the mill
or with his studies. Tess wonders if they should get a divorce, but she
learns that the law does not allow divorces. Finally, Tess offers to go home,
and Angel tells her she should go.
8. Summary: Chapter XXXVII
9. Clare came close, and bent over her. Dead, dead, dead! he
murmured.
10.
The couple makes a brief stop at the dairy on their way to Marlott.
They behave awkwardly together in public. Angel leaves Tess near her
village, telling her that he will try to accept her past, but that she should not
try to come to him until he comes for her.
13.
14.
Tess returns home dolefully and confesses to her mother what has
happened. Mrs. Durbeyfield calls her a fool, and Mr. Durbeyfield finds it
hard to believe Tess is even married. Tess is miserable at home, and when
a letter arrives from Angel informing Tess that he has begun looking for a
farm in the north, Tess seizes the excuse to leave and tells her family that
she is going to join her husband. She gives them half of the fifty pounds
Angel gave her and leaves her home.
15.
16.
Three weeks after their marriage, Angel visits his parents and tells
them he is traveling to Brazil and not taking Tess. His parents are alarmed
and disappointed, but Angel tells them they will meet Tess in a year, when
he returns.