Tuesday, October 1, 2019
Hardys Tess of the dUrbervilles - Talbothay and Tesss Struggle Essa
Tess of the d'Ubervilles - Talbothay and Tess's Struggle       Ã  Ã  Ã   In Tess of the d'Ubervilles,  Tess is spiritually homeless. She wanders from place to place, doomed by her  guilt to suffer personal ruin. Most of her temporary domiciles are backdrops for  unhappiness and uncertainty, but her time at Talbothay's Dairy is ostensibly a  period of bliss. What purpose does this segment of the text - which on the  surface seems so hopeful - serve? When she begins to work for the dairy and is  wooed by Angel Clare, Tess is pulled asunder by two competing forces: nature and  society. The happiness and innocent sexual blush she discovers at the Edenic  Talbothay solidifies Tess's shift toward natural impulses. These impulses are  strong enough to temporarily subdue Tess's crippling shame, and thus establish  the text's central moral conflict.     Ã       The Talbothay interlude allows Tess to put off making the final plunge into  marriage for as long as possible. In a literary limbo, Tess can enjoy her  physical awakening without the stain of sin that her previous consummation with  Alec had imposed. Were it up to Tess, she would remain in this state of  neo-virginity forever, for in it she is anonymous. She is not given the  opportunity to live in this state for very long, of course. Angel's ambitions -  and these are grand in a conventional sense, despite his misleading antipathy  toward social climbing - compel him to make Tess promise to marry him, preparing  in her a channel for natural will that allows her to set aside fear of Angel's  rejection should he find out about her past. While she at first resists his  advances and resigns herself to living without him, she is ultimately vulnerable  to desire. We watch nature subsume Tess's i...              ...    Tess's natural side wins over, but she is then set up for a bitter end  because she abdicates herself to Angel's moral indignation, blind to her own  natural goodness. This is the tragedy of the text. Because the two sides of the  "social chasm that [divide] our heroine's personality" cannot be brought into  accord, Tess must lose everything. The Talbothay period shows what a happy  community might look like - what her life might have been were it not for the  albatross of shame. Talbothay is a shiny foil for the social brutality present  in every other phase of Tess's short life.     Works Cited and Consulted     Beer, Gillian. "Finding a Scale for the Human." Tess of the d'Urbervilles.  Ed. Scott Elledge. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., 1991.      Hardy, Thomas. Tess of the d'Urbervilles. Ed. Scott Elledge. New York: W. W.  Norton & Company, Inc., 1991.                       
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.